NamespaceBinding
The class NamespaceBinding
represents namespace bindings and scopes. The binding for the default namespace is treated as a null prefix. the absent namespace is represented with the null uri. Neither prefix nor uri may be empty, which is not checked.
Attributes
Members list
Value members
Concrete methods
Attributes
- Definition Classes
Returns some prefix that is mapped to the URI.
Returns some prefix that is mapped to the URI.
Value parameters
- _uri
-
the input URI
Attributes
- Returns
-
the prefix that is mapped to the input URI, or null if no prefix is mapped to the URI.
Inherited methods
Compares the receiver object (this
) with the argument object (that
) for equivalence.
Compares the receiver object (this
) with the argument object (that
) for equivalence.
Any implementation of this method should be an equivalence relation:
- It is reflexive: for any instance
x
of typeAny
,x.equals(x)
should returntrue
. - It is symmetric: for any instances
x
andy
of typeAny
,x.equals(y)
should returntrue
if and only ify.equals(x)
returnstrue
. - It is transitive: for any instances
x
,y
, andz
of typeAny
ifx.equals(y)
returnstrue
andy.equals(z)
returnstrue
, thenx.equals(z)
should returntrue
.
If you override this method, you should verify that your implementation remains an equivalence relation. Additionally, when overriding this method it is usually necessary to override hashCode
to ensure that objects which are "equal" (o1.equals(o2)
returns true
) hash to the same scala.Int. (o1.hashCode.equals(o2.hashCode)
).
Value parameters
- that
-
the object to compare against this object for equality.
Attributes
- Returns
-
true
if the receiver object is equivalent to the argument;false
otherwise. - Definition Classes
- Inherited from:
- Equality
It's be nice to make these final, but there are probably people out there subclassing the XML types, especially when it comes to equals. However WE at least can pretend they are final since clearly individual classes cannot be trusted to maintain a semblance of order.
It's be nice to make these final, but there are probably people out there subclassing the XML types, especially when it comes to equals. However WE at least can pretend they are final since clearly individual classes cannot be trusted to maintain a semblance of order.
Attributes
Attributes
- Inherited from:
- Product
Attributes
- Inherited from:
- Product