public class StartsWithFunction extends java.lang.Object implements Function
4.2 boolean starts-with(string,string)
The starts-with function returns true if the first argument string starts with the second argument string, and otherwise returns false.
| Constructor and Description |
|---|
StartsWithFunction()
Create a new
StartsWithFunction object. |
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
java.lang.Object |
call(Context context,
java.util.List args)
Returns true if the string-value of the first item in
args
starts with the string-value of the second item in args. |
static java.lang.Boolean |
evaluate(java.lang.Object strArg,
java.lang.Object matchArg,
Navigator nav)
Returns true if the string-value of
strArg
starts with the string-value of matchArg. |
public StartsWithFunction()
StartsWithFunction object.public java.lang.Object call(Context context, java.util.List args) throws FunctionCallException
args
starts with the string-value of the second item in args.
Otherwise it returns false.call in interface Functioncontext - the context at the point in the
expression when the function is calledargs - a list that contains two itemsBoolean.TRUE if the first item in args
starts with the string-value of the second item in args;
otherwise Boolean.FALSEFunctionCallException - if args does not have length twopublic static java.lang.Boolean evaluate(java.lang.Object strArg,
java.lang.Object matchArg,
Navigator nav)
strArg
starts with the string-value of matchArg.
Otherwise it returns false.strArg - the object whose string-value searched for the prefixmatchArg - the object whose string-value becomes the prefix string to compare againstnav - the navigator used to calculate the string-values of the argumentsBoolean.TRUE if the string-value of strArg
starts with the string-value of matchArg;
otherwise Boolean.FALSE