- All Implemented Interfaces:
Serializable
- Direct Known Subclasses:
MethodExpression,ValueExpression
ValueExpression and MethodExpression, implementing
characteristics common to both.
All expressions must implement the equals() and hashCode() methods so that two expressions
can be compared for equality. They are redefined abstract in this class to force their implementation in subclasses.
All expressions must also be Serializable so that they can be saved and restored.
Expressions are also designed to be immutable so that only one instance needs to be created for any
given expression String / FunctionMapper. This allows a container to pre-create expressions and not have to
re-parse them each time they are evaluated.
- Since:
- Jakarta Server Pages 2.1
- See Also:
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Constructor Summary
Constructors -
Method Summary
Modifier and TypeMethodDescriptionabstract booleanDetermines whether the specified object is equal to thisExpression.abstract StringReturns the original String used to create thisExpression, unmodified.abstract inthashCode()Returns the hash code for thisExpression.abstract booleanReturns whether this expression was created from only literal text.
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Constructor Details
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Expression
public Expression()
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Method Details
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getExpressionString
Returns the original String used to create thisExpression, unmodified.This is used for debugging purposes but also for the purposes of comparison (e.g. to ensure the expression in a configuration file has not changed).
This method does not provide sufficient information to re-create an expression. Two different expressions can have exactly the same expression string but different function mappings. Serialization should be used to save and restore the state of an
Expression.- Returns:
- The original expression String.
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equals
Determines whether the specified object is equal to thisExpression.The result is
trueif and only if the argument is notnull, is anExpressionobject that is the of the same type (ValueExpressionorMethodExpression), and has an identical parsed representation.Note that two expressions can be equal if their expression Strings are different. For example,
${fn1:foo()}and${fn2:foo()}are equal if their correspondingFunctionMappers mappedfn1:fooandfn2:footo the same method. -
hashCode
public abstract int hashCode()Returns the hash code for thisExpression.See the note in the
equals(java.lang.Object)method on how two expressions can be equal if their expression Strings are different. Recall that if two objects are equal according to theequals(Object)method, then calling thehashCodemethod on each of the two objects must produce the same integer result. Implementations must take special note and implementhashCodecorrectly. -
isLiteralText
public abstract boolean isLiteralText()Returns whether this expression was created from only literal text.This method must return
trueif and only if the expression string this expression was created from contained no unescaped Jakarta Expression Language delimeters (${...}or#{...}).- Returns:
trueif this expression was created from only literal text;falseotherwise.
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