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mobile/bind/testdata/ignore.java.golden

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// Java class ignore.S is a proxy for talking to a Go program.
// gobind -lang=java ignore
//
// File is generated by gobind. Do not edit.
package ignore;
import go.Seq;
bind: remove error wrappers to preserve error instance identity CL 24800 changed the error representation from strings to objects. However, since native errors types are not immediately compatible across languages, wrapper types were introduced to bridge the gap. This CL remove those wrappers and instead special case the error proxy types to conform to their language error protocol. Specifically: - The ObjC proxy for Go errors now extends NSError and calls initWithDomain to store the error message. - The Go proxy for ObjC NSError return the localizedDescription property for calls to Error. - The Java proxy for Go errors ow extends Exception and overrides getMessage() to return the error message. - The Go proxy for Java Exceptions returns getMessage whenever Error is called. The end result is that error values behave more like normal objects across the language boundary. In particular, instance identity is now preserved: an error passed across the boundary and back will result in the same instance. There are two semantic changes that followed this change: - The domain for wrapped Go errors is now always "go". The domain wasn't useful before this CL: the domains were set to the package name of function or method where the error happened to cross the language boundary. - If a Go method that returns an error is implemented in ObjC, the implementation must now both return NO _and_ set the error result for the calling Go code to receive a non-nil error. Before this CL, because errors were always wrapped, a nil ObjC could be represented with a non-nil wrapper. Change-Id: Idb415b6b13ecf79ccceb60f675059942bfc48fec Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/29298 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2016-09-19 12:44:13 +02:00
public final class S implements Seq.Proxy, I {
static { Ignore.touch(); }
bind: remove error wrappers to preserve error instance identity CL 24800 changed the error representation from strings to objects. However, since native errors types are not immediately compatible across languages, wrapper types were introduced to bridge the gap. This CL remove those wrappers and instead special case the error proxy types to conform to their language error protocol. Specifically: - The ObjC proxy for Go errors now extends NSError and calls initWithDomain to store the error message. - The Go proxy for ObjC NSError return the localizedDescription property for calls to Error. - The Java proxy for Go errors ow extends Exception and overrides getMessage() to return the error message. - The Go proxy for Java Exceptions returns getMessage whenever Error is called. The end result is that error values behave more like normal objects across the language boundary. In particular, instance identity is now preserved: an error passed across the boundary and back will result in the same instance. There are two semantic changes that followed this change: - The domain for wrapped Go errors is now always "go". The domain wasn't useful before this CL: the domains were set to the package name of function or method where the error happened to cross the language boundary. - If a Go method that returns an error is implemented in ObjC, the implementation must now both return NO _and_ set the error result for the calling Go code to receive a non-nil error. Before this CL, because errors were always wrapped, a nil ObjC could be represented with a non-nil wrapper. Change-Id: Idb415b6b13ecf79ccceb60f675059942bfc48fec Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/29298 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2016-09-19 12:44:13 +02:00
private final Seq.Ref ref;
@Override public final int incRefnum() {
int refnum = ref.refnum;
Seq.incGoRef(refnum);
return refnum;
}
S(Seq.Ref ref) { this.ref = ref; }
public S() { this.ref = __New(); }
private static native Seq.Ref __New();
// skipped field S.F with unsupported type: *types.Interface
// skipped method S.Argument with unsupported parameter or return types
// skipped method S.Result with unsupported parameter or return types
@Override public boolean equals(Object o) {
if (o == null || !(o instanceof S)) {
return false;
}
S that = (S)o;
// skipped field S.F with unsupported type: *types.Interface
return true;
}
@Override public int hashCode() {
return java.util.Arrays.hashCode(new Object[] {});
}
@Override public String toString() {
StringBuilder b = new StringBuilder();
b.append("S").append("{");
return b.append("}").toString();
}
}
// Java class ignore.I is a proxy for talking to a Go program.
// gobind -lang=java ignore
//
// File is generated by gobind. Do not edit.
package ignore;
import go.Seq;
public interface I {
// skipped method I.Argument with unsupported parameter or return types
// skipped method I.Result with unsupported parameter or return types
}
// Java class ignore.Ignore is a proxy for talking to a Go program.
// gobind -lang=java ignore
//
// File is generated by gobind. Do not edit.
package ignore;
import go.Seq;
public abstract class Ignore {
static {
Seq.touch(); // for loading the native library
_init();
}
private Ignore() {} // uninstantiable
// touch is called from other bound packages to initialize this package
public static void touch() {}
private static native void _init();
bind: remove error wrappers to preserve error instance identity CL 24800 changed the error representation from strings to objects. However, since native errors types are not immediately compatible across languages, wrapper types were introduced to bridge the gap. This CL remove those wrappers and instead special case the error proxy types to conform to their language error protocol. Specifically: - The ObjC proxy for Go errors now extends NSError and calls initWithDomain to store the error message. - The Go proxy for ObjC NSError return the localizedDescription property for calls to Error. - The Java proxy for Go errors ow extends Exception and overrides getMessage() to return the error message. - The Go proxy for Java Exceptions returns getMessage whenever Error is called. The end result is that error values behave more like normal objects across the language boundary. In particular, instance identity is now preserved: an error passed across the boundary and back will result in the same instance. There are two semantic changes that followed this change: - The domain for wrapped Go errors is now always "go". The domain wasn't useful before this CL: the domains were set to the package name of function or method where the error happened to cross the language boundary. - If a Go method that returns an error is implemented in ObjC, the implementation must now both return NO _and_ set the error result for the calling Go code to receive a non-nil error. Before this CL, because errors were always wrapped, a nil ObjC could be represented with a non-nil wrapper. Change-Id: Idb415b6b13ecf79ccceb60f675059942bfc48fec Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/29298 Reviewed-by: David Crawshaw <crawshaw@golang.org>
2016-09-19 12:44:13 +02:00
private static final class proxyI implements Seq.Proxy, I {
private final Seq.Ref ref;
@Override public final int incRefnum() {
int refnum = ref.refnum;
Seq.incGoRef(refnum);
return refnum;
}
proxyI(Seq.Ref ref) { this.ref = ref; }
// skipped method I.Argument with unsupported parameter or return types
// skipped method I.Result with unsupported parameter or return types
}
// skipped const NamedConst with unsupported type: *types.Const
// skipped variable V with unsupported type: *types.Interface
// skipped variable Var with unsupported type: *types.Interface
// skipped function Argument with unsupported parameter or return types
// skipped function Result with unsupported parameter or return types
}