From 554fd8c5195424bdbcabf5de30fdc183aba391bd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: upstream source tree Date: Sun, 15 Mar 2015 20:14:05 -0400 Subject: obtained gcc-4.6.4.tar.bz2 from upstream website; verified gcc-4.6.4.tar.bz2.sig; imported gcc-4.6.4 source tree from verified upstream tarball. downloading a git-generated archive based on the 'upstream' tag should provide you with a source tree that is binary identical to the one extracted from the above tarball. if you have obtained the source via the command 'git clone', however, do note that line-endings of files in your working directory might differ from line-endings of the respective files in the upstream repository. --- libjava/classpath/java/beans/PropertyEditor.java | 209 +++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 209 insertions(+) create mode 100644 libjava/classpath/java/beans/PropertyEditor.java (limited to 'libjava/classpath/java/beans/PropertyEditor.java') diff --git a/libjava/classpath/java/beans/PropertyEditor.java b/libjava/classpath/java/beans/PropertyEditor.java new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5fba014ea --- /dev/null +++ b/libjava/classpath/java/beans/PropertyEditor.java @@ -0,0 +1,209 @@ +/* java.beans.PropertyEditor + Copyright (C) 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + +This file is part of GNU Classpath. + +GNU Classpath is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify +it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by +the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) +any later version. + +GNU Classpath is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but +WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU +General Public License for more details. + +You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License +along with GNU Classpath; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the +Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA +02110-1301 USA. + +Linking this library statically or dynamically with other modules is +making a combined work based on this library. Thus, the terms and +conditions of the GNU General Public License cover the whole +combination. + +As a special exception, the copyright holders of this library give you +permission to link this library with independent modules to produce an +executable, regardless of the license terms of these independent +modules, and to copy and distribute the resulting executable under +terms of your choice, provided that you also meet, for each linked +independent module, the terms and conditions of the license of that +module. An independent module is a module which is not derived from +or based on this library. If you modify this library, you may extend +this exception to your version of the library, but you are not +obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do so, delete this +exception statement from your version. */ + + +package java.beans; + +/** + ** PropertyEditors are custom GUI editors for specific types of values. + ** + ** A PropertyEditor can be used, for example, if you are editing a type of value + ** that can be more easily represented graphically, such as a Point, or one that + ** can be more easily represented by a list, such as a boolean (true/false).

+ ** + ** A PropertyEditor must be able to display its contents when asked to and + ** be able to allow the user to change its underlying field value. However, it + ** is not the PropertyEditor's responsibility to make the change to the + ** underlying Object; in fact, the PropertyEditor does not even know about the + ** Object it is actually editing--only about the property it is currently + ** editing. When a change is made to the property, the PropertyEditor must + ** simply fire a PropertyChangeEvent and allow the RAD tool to actually set + ** the property in the underlying Bean.

+ ** + ** PropertyEditors should not change the Objects they are given by setValue(). + ** These Objects may or may not be the actual Objects which are properties of + ** the Bean being edited. Instead, PropertyEditors should create a new Object + ** and fire a PropertyChangeEvent with the old and new values.

+ ** + ** PropertyEditors also must support the ability to return a Java + ** initialization string. See the getJavaInitializationString() method for + ** details.

+ ** + ** There are several different ways a PropertyEditor may display and control + ** editing of its value. When multiple types of input and display are + ** given by a single PropertyEditor, the RAD tool may decide which of the call + ** to support. Some RAD tools may even be text-only, so even if you support + ** a graphical set and get, it may choose the text set and get whenever it can. + **

    + **
  1. Every PropertyEditor must support getValue() and setValue(). For + ** setValue(), the component must only support it when the argument is + ** the same type that the PropertyEditor supports.
  2. + **
  3. Every PropertyEditor must support getJavaInitializationString().
  4. + **
  5. You may support painting the value yourself if you wish. To do this, + ** have isPaintable() return true and implement the paintValue() method. + ** This method does not determine in any way how the value is edited; + ** merely how it is displayed.
  6. + **
  7. Let the caller of the PropertyEditor give the user a text input. Do + ** this by returning a non-null String from getAsText(). If you support + ** text input, you *must* support setAsText().
  8. + **
  9. Give the caller a set of possible values, such as "true"/"false", that + ** the user must select from. To do this, return the list of Strings + ** from the getTags() method. The RAD tool may choose to implement the + ** user input any way it wishes, and only guarantees that setAsText() will + ** only be called with one of the Strings returned from getTags().
  10. + **
  11. You may support a whole custom editing control by supporting + ** getCustomEditor(). To do this, return true from supportsCustomEditor() + ** and return a Component that does the job. It is the component's job, + ** or the PropertyEditor's job, to make sure that when the editor changes + ** its value, the PropertyChangeEvent is thrown.
  12. + **
+ ** + ** The PropertyEditor for a particular Bean can be found using the + ** PropertyEditorManager class, which goes through a series of different + ** checks to find the appropriate class.

+ ** + ** A PropertyChangeEvent should be thrown from the PropertyEditor whenever a + ** bound property (a property PropertyDescriptor.isBound() set to true) + ** changes. When this happens, the editor itself should *not* change the value + ** itself, but rather allow the RAD tool to call setValue() or setAsText(). + ** + ** @author John Keiser + ** @since JDK1.1 + ** @version 1.1.0, 30 June 1998 + ** @see java.beans.PropertyEditorManager + ** @see java.beans.PropertyEditorSupport + **/ + +public interface PropertyEditor { + /** Called by the RAD tool to set the value of this property for the PropertyEditor. + ** If the property type is native, it should be wrapped in the appropriate + ** wrapper type. + ** @param value the value to set this property to. + **/ + void setValue(Object value); + + /** Accessor method to get the current value the PropertyEditor is working with. + ** If the property type is native, it will be wrapped in the appropriate + ** wrapper type. + ** @return the current value of the PropertyEditor. + **/ + Object getValue(); + + + /** Set the value of this property using a String. + ** Whether or not this PropertyEditor is editing a String type, this converts + ** the String into the type of the PropertyEditor. + ** @param text the text to set it to. + ** @exception IllegalArgumentException if the String is in the wrong format or setAsText() is not supported. + **/ + void setAsText(String text) throws IllegalArgumentException; + + /** Get the value of this property in String format. + ** Many times this can simply use Object.toString().

+ ** Return null if you do not support getAsText()/setAsText(). + ** setAsText(getAsText()) should be valid; i.e. the stuff you spit out in + ** getAsText() should be able to go into setAsText(). + ** @return the value of this property in String format. + **/ + String getAsText(); + + /** Get a list of possible Strings which this property type can have. + ** The value of these will be used by the RAD tool to construct some sort + ** of list box or to check text box input, and the resulting String passed + ** to setAsText() should be one of these. Note, however, that like most things + ** with this mammoth, unwieldy interface, this is not guaranteed. Thus, you + ** must check the value in setAsText() anyway. + ** @return the list of possible String values for this property type. + **/ + String[] getTags(); + + + /** The RAD tool calls this to find out whether the PropertyEditor can paint itself. + ** @return true if it can paint itself graphically, false if it cannot. + **/ + boolean isPaintable(); + + /** The RAD tool calls this to paint the actual value of the property. + ** The Graphics context will have the same current font, color, etc. as the + ** parent Container. You may safely change the font, color, etc. and not + ** change them back.

+ ** This method should do a silent no-op if isPaintable() is false. + ** @param g the Graphics context to paint on + ** @param bounds the rectangle you have reserved to work in + **/ + void paintValue(java.awt.Graphics g, java.awt.Rectangle bounds); + + + /** The RAD tool calls this to find out whether the PropertyEditor supports a custom component to edit and display itself. + ** @return true if getCustomEditor() will return a component, false if not. + **/ + boolean supportsCustomEditor(); + + /** The RAD tool calls this to grab the component that can edit this type. + ** The component may be painted anywhere the RAD tool wants to paint it-- + ** even in its own window.

+ ** The component must hook up with the PropertyEditor and, whenever a + ** change to the value is made, fire a PropertyChangeEvent to the source.

+ ** @return the custom editor for this property type. + **/ + java.awt.Component getCustomEditor(); + + + /** Adds a property change listener to this PropertyEditor. + ** @param listener the listener to add + **/ + void addPropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener listener); + + /** Removes a property change listener from this PropertyEditor. + ** @param listener the listener to remove + **/ + void removePropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener listener); + + /** Get a Java language-specific String which could be used to create an Object + ** of the specified type. Every PropertyEditor must support this.

+ ** The reason for this is that while most RAD tools will serialize the Beans + ** and deserialize them at runtime, some RAD tools will generate code that + ** creates the Beans. Examples of Java initialization strings would be:

+ **

    + **
  1. 2
  2. + **
  3. "I am a String"
  4. + **
  5. new MyObject(2, "String", new StringBuffer())
  6. + **
+ ** @return the initialization string for this object in Java. + **/ + String getJavaInitializationString(); +} -- cgit v1.2.3