public final class JobHoldUntil extends DateTimeSyntax implements PrintRequestAttribute, PrintJobAttribute
If the value of this attribute specifies a date-time that is in the future,
the printer should add the JobStateReason
value of
JOB_HOLD_UNTIL_SPECIFIED to the job's JobStateReasons
attribute, must move the job to the PENDING_HELD state, and must not schedule
the job for printing until the specified date-time arrives.
When the specified date-time arrives, the printer must remove the JobStateReason
value of JOB_HOLD_UNTIL_SPECIFIED from the
job's JobStateReasons
attribute, if present. If there
are no other job state reasons that keep the job in the PENDING_HELD state,
the printer must consider the job as a candidate for processing by moving the
job to the PENDING state.
If the specified date-time has already passed, the job must be a candidate for processing immediately. Thus, one way to make the job immediately become a candidate for processing is to specify a JobHoldUntil attribute constructed like this (denoting a date-time of January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 GMT):
JobHoldUntil immediately = new JobHoldUntil (new Date (0L));
If the client does not supply this attribute in a Print Request and the printer supports this attribute, the printer must use its (implementation-dependent) default JobHoldUntil value at job submission time (unlike most job template attributes that are used if necessary at job processing time).
To construct a JobHoldUntil attribute from separate values of the year,
month, day, hour, minute, and so on, use a Calendar
object to construct a Date
object, then use
the Date
object to construct the JobHoldUntil
attribute. To convert a JobHoldUntil attribute to separate values of the
year, month, day, hour, minute, and so on, create a Calendar
object and set it to the Date
from the
JobHoldUntil attribute.
IPP Compatibility: Although IPP supports a "job-hold-until" attribute
specified as a keyword, IPP does not at this time support a "job-hold-until"
attribute specified as a date and time. However, the date and time can be
converted to one of the standard IPP keywords with some loss of precision;
for example, a JobHoldUntil value with today's date and 9:00pm local time
might be converted to the standard IPP keyword "night". The category name
returned by getName()
gives the IPP attribute name.
Constructor and Description |
---|
JobHoldUntil(Date dateTime)
Construct a new job hold until date-time attribute with the given
Date value. |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
boolean |
equals(Object object)
Returns whether this job hold until attribute is equivalent to the
passed in object.
|
Class<? extends Attribute> |
getCategory()
Get the printing attribute class which is to be used as the "category"
for this printing attribute value.
|
String |
getName()
Get the name of the category of which this attribute value is an
instance.
|
getValue, hashCode, toString
public JobHoldUntil(Date dateTime)
Date
value.dateTime
- Date
value.NullPointerException
- (unchecked exception) Thrown if dateTime
is null.public boolean equals(Object object)
equals
in class DateTimeSyntax
object
- Object to compare to.object
is equivalent to this job hold
until attribute, false otherwise.Object.hashCode()
,
HashMap
public final Class<? extends Attribute> getCategory()
For class JobHoldUntil, the category is class JobHoldUntil itself.
getCategory
in interface Attribute
java.lang.Class
. 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.