org.codehaus.jackson.format.MatchStrength Maven / Gradle / Ivy
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package org.codehaus.jackson.format;
/**
* Enumeration used to indicate strength of match between data format
* and piece of data (typically beginning of a data file).
* Values are in increasing match strength; and detectors should return
* "strongest" value: that is, it should start with strongest match
* criteria, and downgrading if criteria is not fulfilled.
*
* @since 1.8
*/
public enum MatchStrength
{
/**
* Value that indicates that given data can not be in given format.
*/
NO_MATCH,
/**
* Value that indicates that detector can not find out whether could
* be a match or not.
* This can occur for example for textual data formats t
* when there are so many leading spaces that detector can not
* find the first data byte (because detectors typically limit lookahead
* to some smallish value).
*/
INCONCLUSIVE,
/**
* Value that indicates that given data could be of specified format (i.e.
* it can not be ruled out). This can occur for example when seen data
* is both not in canonical formats (for example: JSON data should be a JSON Array or Object
* not a scalar value, as per JSON specification) and there are known use case
* where a format detected is actually used (plain JSON Strings are actually used, even
* though specification does not indicate that as valid usage: as such, seeing a leading
* double-quote could indicate a JSON String, which plausibly could indicate
* non-standard JSON usage).
*/
WEAK_MATCH,
/**
* Value that indicates that given data conforms to (one of) canonical form(s) of
* the data format.
*
* For example, when testing for XML data format,
* seeing a less-than character ("<") alone (with possible leading spaces)
* would be a strong indication that data could
* be in xml format (but see below for {@link #FULL_MATCH} description for more)
*/
SOLID_MATCH,
/**
* Value that indicates that given data contains a signature that is deemed
* specific enough to uniquely indicate data format used.
*
* For example, when testing for XML data format,
* seing "<xml" as the first data bytes ("XML declaration", as per XML specification)
* could give full confidence that data is indeed in XML format.
* Not all data formats have unique leading identifiers to allow full matches; for example,
* JSON only has heuristic matches and can have at most {@link #SOLID_MATCH}) match.
*/
FULL_MATCH
;
}