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java.lang.Objectjavax.sound.sampled.Control.Type
public static class Control.Type
This describes a single control.
| Constructor Summary | |
|---|---|
protected |
Control.Type(String name)
Create a new Type given its name. |
| Method Summary | |
|---|---|
boolean |
equals(Object o)
Determine whether this Object is semantically equal to another Object. |
int |
hashCode()
Get a value that represents this Object, as uniquely as possible within the confines of an int. |
String |
toString()
Return the name of this Type. |
| Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object |
|---|
clone, finalize, getClass, notify, notifyAll, wait, wait, wait |
| Constructor Detail |
|---|
protected Control.Type(String name)
name - the name of the type| Method Detail |
|---|
public final boolean equals(Object o)
ObjectThere are some fairly strict requirements on this
method which subclasses must follow:
a.equals(b) and
b.equals(c), then a.equals(c)
must be true as well.a.equals(b) and
b.equals(a) must have the same value.a.equals(a) must
always be true.a.equals(null) must be false.a.equals(b) must imply
a.hashCode() == b.hashCode().
The reverse is not true; two objects that are not
equal may have the same hashcode, but that has
the potential to harm hashing performance.This is typically overridden to throw a ClassCastException
if the argument is not comparable to the class performing
the comparison, but that is not a requirement. It is legal
for a.equals(b) to be true even though
a.getClass() != b.getClass(). Also, it
is typical to never cause a NullPointerException.
In general, the Collections API (java.util) use the
equals method rather than the ==
operator to compare objects. However, IdentityHashMap
is an exception to this rule, for its own good reasons.
The default implementation returns this == o.
equals in class Objecto - the Object to compare to
Object.hashCode()public final int hashCode()
ObjectThere are some requirements on this method which
subclasses must follow:
a.equals(b) is true, then
a.hashCode() == b.hashCode() must be as well.
However, the reverse is not necessarily true, and two
objects may have the same hashcode without being equal.Notice that since hashCode is used in
Hashtable and other hashing classes,
a poor implementation will degrade the performance of hashing
(so don't blindly implement it as returning a constant!). Also,
if calculating the hash is time-consuming, a class may consider
caching the results.
The default implementation returns
System.identityHashCode(this)
hashCode in class ObjectObject.equals(Object),
System.identityHashCode(Object)public final String toString()
toString in class ObjectObject.getClass(),
Object.hashCode(),
Class.getName(),
Integer.toHexString(int)
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