private static final class Equivalence.EquivalentToPredicate<T> extends java.lang.Object implements Predicate<T>, java.io.Serializable
| Modifier and Type | Field and Description |
|---|---|
private Equivalence<T> |
equivalence |
private static long |
serialVersionUID |
private T |
target |
| Constructor and Description |
|---|
EquivalentToPredicate(Equivalence<T> equivalence,
T target) |
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
boolean |
apply(T input)
Returns the result of applying this predicate to
input (Java 8 users, see notes in the
class documentation above). |
boolean |
equals(java.lang.Object obj)
Indicates whether another object is equal to this predicate.
|
int |
hashCode() |
java.lang.String |
toString() |
private final Equivalence<T> equivalence
@Nullable private final T target
private static final long serialVersionUID
EquivalentToPredicate(Equivalence<T> equivalence, @Nullable T target)
public boolean apply(@Nullable
T input)
Predicateinput (Java 8 users, see notes in the
class documentation above). This method is generally expected, but not absolutely
required, to have the following properties:
Objects.equal(a, b) implies that predicate.apply(a) ==
predicate.apply(b)).
public boolean equals(@Nullable
java.lang.Object obj)
PredicateMost implementations will have no reason to override the behavior of Object.equals(java.lang.Object).
However, an implementation may also choose to return true whenever object is a
Predicate that it considers interchangeable with this one. "Interchangeable"
typically means that this.apply(t) == that.apply(t) for all t of type
T). Note that a false result from this method does not imply that the
predicates are known not to be interchangeable.
public int hashCode()
hashCode in class java.lang.Objectpublic java.lang.String toString()
toString in class java.lang.Object