| // Copyright 2014 The Bazel Authors. All rights reserved. |
| // |
| // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| // You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| // |
| // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| // |
| // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| // limitations under the License. |
| package com.google.devtools.common.options; |
| |
| import javax.annotation.Nullable; |
| |
| /** |
| * A converter is a little helper object that can take a String and turn it into an instance of type |
| * T (the type parameter to the converter). A context object is optionally provided. |
| */ |
| public interface Converter<T> { |
| |
| /** |
| * Convert a string into type T, using the given conversion context. Please note that we assume |
| * that converting the same string (if successful) will produce objects which are equal ({@link |
| * Object#equals}). |
| */ |
| T convert(String input, @Nullable Object conversionContext) throws OptionsParsingException; |
| |
| /** |
| * The type description appears in usage messages. E.g.: "a string", |
| * "a path", etc. |
| */ |
| String getTypeDescription(); |
| |
| /** A converter that never reads its context parameter. */ |
| abstract class Contextless<T> implements Converter<T> { |
| |
| /** |
| * Actual implementation of {@link #convert(String, Object)} that just ignores the context |
| * parameter. |
| */ |
| public abstract T convert(String input) throws OptionsParsingException; |
| |
| @Override |
| public final T convert(String input, @Nullable Object conversionContext) |
| throws OptionsParsingException { |
| return convert(input); |
| } |
| } |
| } |