An Encoder is a class which can be used to create
files or streams that encode the state of a collection of
JavaBeans in terms of their public APIs. The Encoder,
in conjunction with its persistence delegates, is responsible for
breaking the object graph down into a series of Statementss
and Expressions which can be used to create it.
A subclass typically provides a syntax for these expressions
using some human readable form - like Java source code or XML.
Write the specified object to the output stream.
The serialized form will denote a series of
expressions, the combined effect of which will create
an equivalent object when the input stream is read.
By default, the object is assumed to be a JavaBean
with a nullary constructor, whose state is defined by
the matching pairs of "setter" and "getter" methods
returned by the Introspector.
Returns the persistence delegate for the given type.
The persistence delegate is calculated
by applying the following of rules in order:
If the type is an array, an internal persistence
delegate is returned which will instantiate an
array of the appropriate type and length, initializing
each of its elements as if they are properties.
If the type is a proxy, an internal persistence
delegate is returned which will instantiate a
new proxy instance using the static
"newProxyInstance" method defined in the
Proxy class.
If the BeanInfo for this type has a BeanDescriptor
which defined a "persistenceDelegate" property, this
value is returned.
In all other cases the default persistence delegate
is returned. The default persistence delegate assumes
the type is a JavaBean, implying that it has a default constructor
and that its state may be characterized by the matching pairs
of "setter" and "getter" methods returned by the Introspector.
The default constructor is the constructor with the greatest number
of parameters that has the ConstructorProperties annotation.
If none of the constructors have the ConstructorProperties annotation,
then the nullary constructor (constructor with no parameters) will be used.
For example, in the following the nullary constructor
for Foo will be used, while the two parameter constructor
for Bar will be used.
public class Foo {
public Foo() { ... }
public Foo(int x) { ... }
}
public class Bar {
public Bar() { ... }
Returns a tentative value for oldInstance in
the environment created by this stream. A persistence
delegate can use its mutatesTo method to
determine whether this value may be initialized to
form the equivalent object at the output or whether
a new object must be instantiated afresh. If the
stream has not yet seen this value, null is returned.
Parameters:
oldInstance - The instance to be looked up.
Returns:
The object, null if the object has not been seen before.
Writes statement oldStm to the stream.
The oldStm should be written entirely
in terms of the callers environment, i.e. the
target and all arguments should be part of the
object graph being written. These expressions
represent a series of "what happened" expressions
which tell the output stream how to produce an
object graph like the original.
The implementation of this method will produce
a second expression to represent the same expression in
an environment that will exist when the stream is read.
This is achieved simply by calling writeObject
on the target and all the arguments and building a new
expression with the results.
Parameters:
oldStm - The expression to be written to the stream.
The implementation first checks to see if an
expression with this value has already been written.
If not, the expression is cloned, using
the same procedure as writeStatement,
and the value of this expression is reconciled
with the value of the cloned expression
by calling writeObject.
Parameters:
oldExp - The expression to be written to the stream.
Submit a bug or feature For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Developer Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.