com.google.api.services.datastore.model.Key Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright 2010 Google Inc.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except
* in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License
* is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express
* or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
* the License.
*/
/*
* This code was generated by https://github.com/google/apis-client-generator/
* (build: 2016-01-08 17:48:37 UTC)
* on 2016-02-11 at 06:02:36 UTC
* Modify at your own risk.
*/
package com.google.api.services.datastore.model;
/**
* A unique identifier for an entity.
*
* This is the Java data model class that specifies how to parse/serialize into the JSON that is
* transmitted over HTTP when working with the Google Cloud Datastore API. For a detailed
* explanation see:
* https://developers.google.com/api-client-library/java/google-http-java-client/json
*
*
* @author Google, Inc.
*/
@SuppressWarnings("javadoc")
public final class Key extends com.google.api.client.json.GenericJson {
/**
* Entities are partitioned into subsets, currently identified by a dataset (usually implicitly
* specified by the project) and namespace ID. Queries are scoped to a single partition.
* The value may be {@code null}.
*/
@com.google.api.client.util.Key
private PartitionId partitionId;
/**
* The entity path. An entity path consists of one or more elements composed of a kind and a
* string or numerical identifier, which identify entities. The first element identifies a root
* entity, the second element identifies a child of the root entity, the third element a child of
* the second entity, and so forth. The entities identified by all prefixes of the path are called
* the element's ancestors. An entity path is always fully complete: ALL of the entity's ancestors
* are required to be in the path along with the entity identifier itself. The only exception is
* that in some documented cases, the identifier in the last path element (for the entity) itself
* may be omitted. A path can never be empty. The path can have at most 100 elements.
* The value may be {@code null}.
*/
@com.google.api.client.util.Key
private java.util.List path;
/**
* Entities are partitioned into subsets, currently identified by a dataset (usually implicitly
* specified by the project) and namespace ID. Queries are scoped to a single partition.
* @return value or {@code null} for none
*/
public PartitionId getPartitionId() {
return partitionId;
}
/**
* Entities are partitioned into subsets, currently identified by a dataset (usually implicitly
* specified by the project) and namespace ID. Queries are scoped to a single partition.
* @param partitionId partitionId or {@code null} for none
*/
public Key setPartitionId(PartitionId partitionId) {
this.partitionId = partitionId;
return this;
}
/**
* The entity path. An entity path consists of one or more elements composed of a kind and a
* string or numerical identifier, which identify entities. The first element identifies a root
* entity, the second element identifies a child of the root entity, the third element a child of
* the second entity, and so forth. The entities identified by all prefixes of the path are called
* the element's ancestors. An entity path is always fully complete: ALL of the entity's ancestors
* are required to be in the path along with the entity identifier itself. The only exception is
* that in some documented cases, the identifier in the last path element (for the entity) itself
* may be omitted. A path can never be empty. The path can have at most 100 elements.
* @return value or {@code null} for none
*/
public java.util.List getPath() {
return path;
}
/**
* The entity path. An entity path consists of one or more elements composed of a kind and a
* string or numerical identifier, which identify entities. The first element identifies a root
* entity, the second element identifies a child of the root entity, the third element a child of
* the second entity, and so forth. The entities identified by all prefixes of the path are called
* the element's ancestors. An entity path is always fully complete: ALL of the entity's ancestors
* are required to be in the path along with the entity identifier itself. The only exception is
* that in some documented cases, the identifier in the last path element (for the entity) itself
* may be omitted. A path can never be empty. The path can have at most 100 elements.
* @param path path or {@code null} for none
*/
public Key setPath(java.util.List path) {
this.path = path;
return this;
}
@Override
public Key set(String fieldName, Object value) {
return (Key) super.set(fieldName, value);
}
@Override
public Key clone() {
return (Key) super.clone();
}
}
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