@Singleton @Named public class ValueConverterToPattern extends AbstractSimpleValueConverter<CharSequence,Pattern>
ValueConverter interface that converts a
CharSequence to a Pattern.| Constructor and Description |
|---|
ValueConverterToPattern()
The constructor.
|
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
<T extends Pattern> |
convert(CharSequence value,
Object valueSource,
Class<T> targetClass)
This method converts the given
pojo to the <TARGET>-type. |
Class<CharSequence> |
getSourceType()
This the type of the value accepted by this converter.
|
Class<Pattern> |
getTargetType()
Is the guaranteed return-type of the
conversion. |
convertcreateLogger, doInitialize, getLoggerdoInitialized, getInitializationState, initializepublic Class<CharSequence> getSourceType()
ValueConverterObject if you want to accept any
value. A very common source-type is String.public Class<Pattern> getTargetType()
ValueConverterconversion. This
information is used externally to choose the most specific ValueConverter that is
appropriate for the conversion. Object as target-type while a specific
converter may have Collection as target-type. Now if an object
(compliant with the source-type) needs to be converted to a
Collection or List, the specific converter is used while for other
objects the generic converter is chosen. target-type is often more general than the actual
returned result. So a ValueConverter that converts
a comma-separated String to an ArrayList will typically declare
List as target-type.public <T extends Pattern> T convert(CharSequence value, Object valueSource, Class<T> targetClass)
ValueConverterpojo to the <TARGET>-type.T - is the generic type of targetClass.value - is the value to convert.valueSource - describes the source of the value. This may be the filename where the value was read
from, an XPath where the value was located in an XML document, etc. It is used in exceptions
thrown if something goes wrong. This will help to find the problem easier.targetClass - is the type to convert the value to.value or null if the conversion is NOT possible. The returned value
has to be an instance of the given targetType.ValueConverter.convert(Object, Object, GenericType)Copyright © 2001–2016 mmm-Team. All rights reserved.