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/*
 * Copyright 2007 Daniel Spiewak
 * 
 * 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.
 */
package net.java.ao.schema;

import net.java.ao.EntityManager;

import java.lang.reflect.Method;

/**
 * 

Superinterface to all field name converters; designed to impose conventions * upon the auto-conversion of method names to database fields. The idea * behind this is to allow user-specified field name conventions and standards * rather than always enforcing ActiveObjects's idea of "good naming".

* *

Every {@link EntityManager} contains a single field name converter which * the entire library uses when performing operations. Any third-party code which * interacts with database fields can also make use of this class. However, it's * significantly harder to do so because Java doesn't support method literals.

* *

Most new implementations of field name converters should extend * {@link AbstractFieldNameConverter} rather than implementing this interface * directly. This allows third-party converters to take advantage of boiler-plate * conversion code which would otherwise have to be duplicated in every converter.

* * @author Daniel Spiewak */ public interface FieldNameConverter { /** * Generates a field name to correspond with the specified method. The * algorithm used must not only be aware of the defined conventions (such as * getters and setters) but also the annotations sometimes used to override * the field name explicitly. AO will not test for these annotations * separately from the field name converter. * * @param method The method for which a corresponding field name must be * generated. * @return A database field name which corresponds to the given method. */ public String getName(Method method); /** *

Generates a secondary field name which corresponds with the polymorphic * type flag for the field corresponding to the specified method. If the * method in question does not represent a polymorphic field, this method * may return any value, or null. For most use-cases, the * return value of this method will be identical to that of the * {@link #getName(Method)} method with a conventional suffix (usually "Type" * or "_type") to indicate that it is a polymorphic flag. Polymorphic * fields are the only scenario in which two fields will correspond to a * single method.

* *

An example of a table with a polymorphic flagging field could be taken * as follows (MySQL DDL):

* *
CREATE TABLE comments (
     *     id INTEGER NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
     *     title VARCHAR(45),
     *     text TEXT,
     *     commentableID INTEGER,
     *     commentableType VARCHAR(255),
     *     PRIMARY KEY(id)
     * );
* *

Notice the absence of foreign key constraint on the commentableID * field. This is because this table has a one-to-many mapping with potentially * numerous tables which can be described as "commentable". Thus, * commentableID and commentableType describe a * polymorphic one-to-many relationship within the database.

* * @param method The method for which a corresponding field name must be * generated. * @return A database field name which corresponds to the given method. */ public String getPolyTypeName(Method method); }




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