src.it.unimi.dsi.fastutil.chars.AbstractChar2ObjectFunction Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/* Generic definitions */
/* Assertions (useful to generate conditional code) */
/* Current type and class (and size, if applicable) */
/* Value methods */
/* Interfaces (keys) */
/* Interfaces (values) */
/* Abstract implementations (keys) */
/* Abstract implementations (values) */
/* Static containers (keys) */
/* Static containers (values) */
/* Implementations */
/* Synchronized wrappers */
/* Unmodifiable wrappers */
/* Other wrappers */
/* Methods (keys) */
/* Methods (values) */
/* Methods (keys/values) */
/* Methods that have special names depending on keys (but the special names depend on values) */
/* Equality */
/* Object/Reference-only definitions (keys) */
/* Primitive-type-only definitions (keys) */
/* Object/Reference-only definitions (values) */
/*
* Copyright (C) 2002-2013 Sebastiano Vigna
*
* 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 it.unimi.dsi.fastutil.chars;
/** An abstract class providing basic methods for functions implementing a type-specific interface.
*
* Optional operations just throw an {@link
* UnsupportedOperationException}. Generic versions of accessors delegate to
* the corresponding type-specific counterparts following the interface rules
* (they take care of returning null
on a missing key).
*
*
This class handles directly a default return
* value (including {@linkplain #defaultReturnValue() methods to access
* it}). Instances of classes inheriting from this class have just to return
* defRetValue
to denote lack of a key in type-specific methods. The value
* is serialized.
*
*
Implementing subclasses have just to provide type-specific get()
,
* type-specific containsKey()
, and size()
methods.
*
*/
public abstract class AbstractChar2ObjectFunction implements Char2ObjectFunction , java.io.Serializable {
private static final long serialVersionUID = -4940583368468432370L;
protected AbstractChar2ObjectFunction() {}
/**
* The default return value for get()
, put()
and
* remove()
.
*/
protected V defRetValue;
public void defaultReturnValue( final V rv ) {
defRetValue = rv;
}
public V defaultReturnValue() {
return defRetValue;
}
public V put( char key, V value ) {
throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
}
public V remove( char key ) {
throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
}
public void clear() {
throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
}
public boolean containsKey( final Object ok ) {
return containsKey( ((((Character)(ok)).charValue())) );
}
/** Delegates to the corresponding type-specific method, taking care of returning null
on a missing key.
*
* This method must check whether the provided key is in the map using containsKey()
. Thus,
* it probes the map twice. Implementors of subclasses should override it with a more efficient method.
*/
public V get( final Object ok ) {
final char k = ((((Character)(ok)).charValue()));
return containsKey( k ) ? (get( k )) : null;
}
/** Delegates to the corresponding type-specific method, taking care of returning null
on a missing key.
*
*
This method must check whether the provided key is in the map using containsKey()
. Thus,
* it probes the map twice. Implementors of subclasses should override it with a more efficient method.
*/
public V put( final Character ok, final V ov ) {
final char k = ((ok).charValue());
final boolean containsKey = containsKey( k );
final V v = put( k, (ov) );
return containsKey ? (v) : null;
}
/** Delegates to the corresponding type-specific method, taking care of returning null
on a missing key.
*
*
This method must check whether the provided key is in the map using containsKey()
. Thus,
* it probes the map twice. Implementors of subclasses should override it with a more efficient method.
*/
public V remove( final Object ok ) {
final char k = ((((Character)(ok)).charValue()));
final boolean containsKey = containsKey( k );
final V v = remove( k );
return containsKey ? (v) : null;
}
}