DynValue objects support the manipulation of IDL non-boxed value types.
The DynValue interface can represent both null and non-null value types.
For a DynValue representing a non-null value type, the DynValue's components comprise
the public and private members of the value type, including those inherited from concrete base value types,
in the order of definition. A DynValue representing a null value type has no components
and a current position of -1.
Warning: Indiscriminantly changing the contents of private value type members can cause the value type
implementation to break by violating internal constraints. Access to private members is provided to support
such activities as ORB bridging and debugging and should not be used to arbitrarily violate
the encapsulation of the value type.
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.