true iff there are no more elements in this reader (except for trailing EofCh's)
true iff there are no more elements in this reader (except for trailing EofCh's)
Returns an abstract reader consisting of all elements except the first
n
elements
Returns an abstract reader consisting of all elements except the first
n
elements.
This method is used to compare the receiver object (this
)
with the argument object (arg0
) for equivalence
This method is used to compare the receiver object (this
)
with the argument object (arg0
) for equivalence.
The default implementations of this method is an equivalence relation:
x
of type Any
,
x.equals(x)
should return true
.x
and y
of type
Any
, x.equals(y)
should return true
if and only
if y.equals(x)
returns true
.x
, y
, and z
of type AnyRef
if x.equals(y)
returns true
and
y.equals(z)
returns
true
, then x.equals(z)
should return true
.
If you override this method, you should verify that
your implementation remains an equivalence relation.
Additionally, when overriding this method it is often necessary to
override hashCode
to ensure that objects that are
"equal" (o1.equals(o2)
returns true
)
hash to the same Int
(o1.hashCode.equals(o2.hashCode)
).
the object to compare against this object for equality.
true
if the receiver object is equivalent to the argument; false
otherwise.
Returns the first element of the reader, or EofCh if reader is at its end
Returns the first element of the reader, or EofCh if reader is at its end
Returns a hash code value for the object
Returns a hash code value for the object.
The default hashing algorithm is platform dependent.
Note that it is allowed for two objects to have identical hash
codes (o1.hashCode.equals(o2.hashCode)
) yet not be
equal (o1.equals(o2)
returns false
). A
degenerate implementation could always return 0
.
However, it is required that if two objects are equal
(o1.equals(o2)
returns true
) that they
have identical hash codes
(o1.hashCode.equals(o2.hashCode)
). Therefore, when
overriding this method, be sure to verify that the behavior is
consistent with the equals
method.
The position of the first element in the reader
The position of the first element in the reader
Returns a PagedSeqReader consisting of all elements except the first
Returns a PagedSeqReader consisting of all elements except the first
If this is a reader over character sequences, the underlying char sequence
If not, throws a NoSuchMethodError
exception
If this is a reader over character sequences, the underlying char sequence
If not, throws a NoSuchMethodError
exception.
Returns a string representation of the object
Returns a string representation of the object.
The default representation is platform dependent.
Construct a PagedSeqReader
with its first element at
source(0)
and position (1,1)
Construct a PagedSeqReader
with its first element at
source(0)
and position (1,1)
.
A StreamReader reads from a character sequence, typically created as a PagedSeq from a java.io.Reader
NOTE: StreamReaders do not really fulfill the new contract for readers, which requires a
source' CharSequence representing the full input. Instead source is treated line by line. As a consequence, regex matching cannot extend beyond a single line when a StreamReader are used for input. If you need to match regexes spanning several lines you should consider class
PagedSeqReader
instead.