com.google.common.collect.ImmutableMapEntry Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright (C) 2013 The Guava Authors
*
* 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 com.google.common.collect;
import static com.google.common.collect.CollectPreconditions.checkEntryNotNull;
import com.google.common.annotations.GwtIncompatible;
import javax.annotation.CheckForNull;
/**
* Implementation of {@code Entry} for {@link ImmutableMap} that adds extra methods to traverse hash
* buckets for the key and the value. This allows reuse in {@link RegularImmutableMap} and {@link
* RegularImmutableBiMap}, which don't have to recopy the entries created by their {@code Builder}
* implementations.
*
* This base implementation has no key or value pointers, so instances of ImmutableMapEntry (but
* not its subclasses) can be reused when copied from one ImmutableMap to another.
*
* @author Louis Wasserman
*/
@GwtIncompatible // unnecessary
@ElementTypesAreNonnullByDefault
class ImmutableMapEntry extends ImmutableEntry {
/**
* Creates an {@code ImmutableMapEntry} array to hold parameterized entries. The result must never
* be upcast back to ImmutableMapEntry[] (or Object[], etc.), or allowed to escape the class.
*
* The returned array has all its elements set to their initial null values. However, we don't
* declare it as {@code @Nullable ImmutableMapEntry[]} because our checker doesn't require newly
* created arrays to have a {@code @Nullable} element type even when they're created directly with
* {@code new ImmutableMapEntry[...]}, so it seems silly to insist on that only here.
*/
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked") // Safe as long as the javadocs are followed
static ImmutableMapEntry[] createEntryArray(int size) {
return new ImmutableMapEntry[size];
}
ImmutableMapEntry(K key, V value) {
super(key, value);
checkEntryNotNull(key, value);
}
ImmutableMapEntry(ImmutableMapEntry contents) {
super(contents.getKey(), contents.getValue());
// null check would be redundant
}
@CheckForNull
ImmutableMapEntry getNextInKeyBucket() {
return null;
}
@CheckForNull
ImmutableMapEntry getNextInValueBucket() {
return null;
}
/**
* Returns true if this entry has no bucket links and can safely be reused as a terminal entry in
* a bucket in another map.
*/
boolean isReusable() {
return true;
}
static class NonTerminalImmutableMapEntry extends ImmutableMapEntry {
/*
* Yes, we sometimes set nextInKeyBucket to null, even for this "non-terminal" entry. We don't
* do that with a plain NonTerminalImmutableMapEntry, but we do do it with the BiMap-specific
* subclass below. That's because the Entry might be non-terminal in the key bucket but terminal
* in the value bucket (or vice versa).
*/
@CheckForNull private final transient ImmutableMapEntry nextInKeyBucket;
NonTerminalImmutableMapEntry(
K key, V value, @CheckForNull ImmutableMapEntry nextInKeyBucket) {
super(key, value);
this.nextInKeyBucket = nextInKeyBucket;
}
@Override
@CheckForNull
final ImmutableMapEntry getNextInKeyBucket() {
return nextInKeyBucket;
}
@Override
final boolean isReusable() {
return false;
}
}
static final class NonTerminalImmutableBiMapEntry
extends NonTerminalImmutableMapEntry {
@CheckForNull private final transient ImmutableMapEntry nextInValueBucket;
NonTerminalImmutableBiMapEntry(
K key,
V value,
@CheckForNull ImmutableMapEntry nextInKeyBucket,
@CheckForNull ImmutableMapEntry nextInValueBucket) {
super(key, value, nextInKeyBucket);
this.nextInValueBucket = nextInValueBucket;
}
@Override
@CheckForNull
ImmutableMapEntry getNextInValueBucket() {
return nextInValueBucket;
}
}
}