All Downloads are FREE. Search and download functionalities are using the official Maven repository.

java.beans.PropertyChangeEvent Maven / Gradle / Ivy

There is a newer version: 1.3.1
Show newest version
/*

NOTICE


(c) 2005-2007 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Neither this file nor any files generated from it describe a complete specification, and they may only be used as described below. For example, no permission is given for you to incorporate this file, in whole or in part, in an implementation of a Java specification.

Sun Microsystems Inc. owns the copyright in this file and it is provided to you for informative, as opposed to normative, use. The file and any files generated from it may be used to generate other informative documentation, such as a unified set of documents of API signatures for a platform that includes technologies expressed as Java APIs. The file may also be used to produce "compilation stubs," which allow applications to be compiled and validated for such platforms.

Any work generated from this file, such as unified javadocs or compiled stub files, must be accompanied by this notice in its entirety.

This work corresponds to the API signatures of JSR 217: Personal Basis Profile 1.1. In the event of a discrepency between this work and the JSR 217 specification, which is available at http://www.jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=217, the latter takes precedence. */ package java.beans; /** * A "PropertyChange" event gets delivered whenever a bean changes a "bound" * or "constrained" property. A PropertyChangeEvent object is sent as an * argument to the PropertyChangeListener and VetoableChangeListener methods. *

* Normally PropertyChangeEvents are accompanied by the name and the old * and new value of the changed property. If the new value is a primitive * type (such as int or boolean) it must be wrapped as the * corresponding java.lang.* Object type (such as Integer or Boolean). *

* Null values may be provided for the old and the new values if their * true values are not known. *

* An event source may send a null object as the name to indicate that an * arbitrary set of if its properties have changed. In this case the * old and new values should also be null. */ public class PropertyChangeEvent extends java.util.EventObject { /** * name of the property that changed. May be null, if not known. * @serial */ private String propertyName; /** * New value for property. May be null if not known. * @serial */ private Object newValue; /** * Previous value for property. May be null if not known. * @serial */ private Object oldValue; /** * Propagation ID. May be null. * @serial */ private Object propagationId; /** * Constructs a new PropertyChangeEvent. * * @param source The bean that fired the event. * @param propertyName The programmatic name of the property * that was changed. * @param oldValue The old value of the property. * @param newValue The new value of the property. */ public PropertyChangeEvent(Object source, String propertyName, Object oldValue, Object newValue) {super(null); } /** * Gets the programmatic name of the property that was changed. * * @return The programmatic name of the property that was changed. * May be null if multiple properties have changed. */ public String getPropertyName() {return null; } /** * Sets the new value for the property, expressed as an Object. * * @return The new value for the property, expressed as an Object. * May be null if multiple properties have changed. */ public Object getNewValue() {return null; } /** * Gets the old value for the property, expressed as an Object. * * @return The old value for the property, expressed as an Object. * May be null if multiple properties have changed. */ public Object getOldValue() { return null;} /** * Sets the propagationId object for the event. * * @param propagationId The propagationId object for the event. */ public void setPropagationId(Object propagationId) { } /** * The "propagationId" field is reserved for future use. In Beans 1.0 * the sole requirement is that if a listener catches a PropertyChangeEvent * and then fires a PropertyChangeEvent of its own, then it should * make sure that it propagates the propagationId field from its * incoming event to its outgoing event. * * @return the propagationId object associated with a bound/constrained * property update. */ public Object getPropagationId() { return null;} }





© 2015 - 2024 Weber Informatics LLC | Privacy Policy