public class Binding extends NameClassPair
A context consists of name-to-object bindings.
The Binding class represents such a binding. It consists
of a name and an object. The Context.listBindings()
method returns an enumeration of Binding.
Use subclassing for naming systems that generate contents of a binding dynamically.
A Binding instance is not synchronized against concurrent access by multiple threads. Threads that need to access a Binding concurrently should synchronize amongst themselves and provide the necessary locking.
Constructor and Description |
---|
Binding(String name,
Object obj)
Constructs an instance of a Binding given its name and object.
|
Binding(String name,
Object obj,
boolean isRelative)
Constructs an instance of a Binding given its name, object, and whether
the name is relative.
|
Binding(String name,
String className,
Object obj)
Constructs an instance of a Binding given its name, class name, and object.
|
Binding(String name,
String className,
Object obj,
boolean isRelative)
Constructs an instance of a Binding given its
name, class name, object, and whether the name is relative.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
String |
getClassName()
Retrieves the class name of the object bound to the name of this binding.
|
Object |
getObject()
Retrieves the object bound to the name of this binding.
|
void |
setObject(Object obj)
Sets the object associated with this binding.
|
String |
toString()
Generates the string representation of this binding.
|
getName, getNameInNamespace, isRelative, setClassName, setName, setNameInNamespace, setRelative
public Binding(String name, Object obj)
getClassName() will return the class name of obj (or null if obj is null) unless the class name has been explicitly set using setClassName()
name
- The non-null name of the object. It is relative
to the target context (which is
named by the first parameter of the listBindings()
method)obj
- The possibly null object bound to name.NameClassPair.setClassName(java.lang.String)
public Binding(String name, Object obj, boolean isRelative)
getClassName() will return the class name of obj (or null if obj is null) unless the class name has been explicitly set using setClassName()
name
- The non-null string name of the object.obj
- The possibly null object bound to name.isRelative
- true if name
is a name relative
to the target context (which is named by
the first parameter of the listBindings()
method);
false if name
is a URL string.NameClassPair.isRelative()
,
NameClassPair.setRelative(boolean)
,
NameClassPair.setClassName(java.lang.String)
public Binding(String name, String className, Object obj)
name
- The non-null name of the object. It is relative
to the target context (which is
named by the first parameter of the listBindings()
method)className
- The possibly null class name of the object
bound to name. If null, the class name of obj is
returned by getClassName(). If obj is also
null, getClassName() will return null.obj
- The possibly null object bound to name.NameClassPair.setClassName(java.lang.String)
public Binding(String name, String className, Object obj, boolean isRelative)
name
- The non-null string name of the object.className
- The possibly null class name of the object
bound to name. If null, the class name of obj is
returned by getClassName(). If obj is also
null, getClassName() will return null.obj
- The possibly null object bound to name.isRelative
- true if name
is a name relative
to the target context (which is named by
the first parameter of the listBindings()
method);
false if name
is a URL string.NameClassPair.isRelative()
,
NameClassPair.setRelative(boolean)
,
NameClassPair.setClassName(java.lang.String)
public String getClassName()
getClassName
in class NameClassPair
getObject()
,
getClassName()
,
NameClassPair.setClassName(java.lang.String)
public Object getObject()
setObject(java.lang.Object)
public void setObject(Object obj)
obj
- The possibly null object to use.getObject()
public String toString()
toString
in class NameClassPair
Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
Copyright © 1993, 2024, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Also see the documentation redistribution policy.