Methods Summary |
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protected final java.lang.Object | clone()Throws CloneNotSupportedException. This guarantees that enums
are never cloned, which is necessary to preserve their "singleton"
status.
throw new CloneNotSupportedException();
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public final int | compareTo(E o)Compares this enum with the specified object for order. Returns a
negative integer, zero, or a positive integer as this object is less
than, equal to, or greater than the specified object.
Enum constants are only comparable to other enum constants of the
same enum type. The natural order implemented by this
method is the order in which the constants are declared.
Enum other = (Enum)o;
Enum self = this;
if (self.getClass() != other.getClass() && // optimization
self.getDeclaringClass() != other.getDeclaringClass())
throw new ClassCastException();
return self.ordinal - other.ordinal;
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public final boolean | equals(java.lang.Object other)Returns true if the specified object is equal to this
enum constant.
return this==other;
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protected final void | finalize()enum classes cannot have finalize methods.
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public final java.lang.Class | getDeclaringClass()Returns the Class object corresponding to this enum constant's
enum type. Two enum constants e1 and e2 are of the
same enum type if and only if
e1.getDeclaringClass() == e2.getDeclaringClass().
(The value returned by this method may differ from the one returned
by the {@link Object#getClass} method for enum constants with
constant-specific class bodies.)
Class clazz = getClass();
Class zuper = clazz.getSuperclass();
return (zuper == Enum.class) ? clazz : zuper;
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public final int | hashCode()Returns a hash code for this enum constant.
return super.hashCode();
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public final java.lang.String | name()Returns the name of this enum constant, exactly as declared in its
enum declaration.
Most programmers should use the {@link #toString} method in
preference to this one, as the toString method may return
a more user-friendly name. This method is designed primarily for
use in specialized situations where correctness depends on getting the
exact name, which will not vary from release to release.
return name;
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public final int | ordinal()Returns the ordinal of this enumeration constant (its position
in its enum declaration, where the initial constant is assigned
an ordinal of zero).
Most programmers will have no use for this method. It is
designed for use by sophisticated enum-based data structures, such
as {@link java.util.EnumSet} and {@link java.util.EnumMap}.
return ordinal;
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private void | readObject(java.io.ObjectInputStream in)prevent default deserialization
throw new InvalidObjectException("can't deserialize enum");
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private void | readObjectNoData()
throw new InvalidObjectException("can't deserialize enum");
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public java.lang.String | toString()Returns the name of this enum constant, as contained in the
declaration. This method may be overridden, though it typically
isn't necessary or desirable. An enum type should override this
method when a more "programmer-friendly" string form exists.
return name;
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public static T | valueOf(java.lang.Class enumType, java.lang.String name)Returns the enum constant of the specified enum type with the
specified name. The name must match exactly an identifier used
to declare an enum constant in this type. (Extraneous whitespace
characters are not permitted.)
T result = enumType.enumConstantDirectory().get(name);
if (result != null)
return result;
if (name == null)
throw new NullPointerException("Name is null");
throw new IllegalArgumentException(
"No enum const " + enumType +"." + name);
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