public interface IIOMetadataController
IIOMetadata
object, either by putting
up a GUI to obtain values from a user, or by other means. This
interface merely specifies a generic activate
method
that invokes the controller, without regard for how the controller
obtains values (i.e., whether the controller puts up a GUI
or merely computes a set of values is irrelevant to this
interface).
Within the activate
method, a controller obtains
initial values by querying the IIOMetadata
object's
settings, either using the XML DOM tree or a plug-in specific
interface, modifies values by whatever means, then modifies the
IIOMetadata
object's settings, using either the
setFromTree
or mergeTree
methods, or a
plug-in specific interface. In general, applications may expect
that when the activate
method returns
true
, the IIOMetadata
object is ready for
use in a write operation.
Vendors may choose to provide GUIs for the
IIOMetadata
subclasses they define for a particular
plug-in. These can be set up as default controllers in the
corresponding IIOMetadata
subclasses.
Alternatively, an algorithmic process such as a database lookup
or the parsing of a command line could be used as a controller, in
which case the activate
method would simply look up or
compute the settings, call methods on IIOMetadata
to
set its state, and return true
.
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
boolean |
activate(IIOMetadata metadata)
Activates the controller.
|
boolean activate(IIOMetadata metadata)
true
is returned,
all settings in the IIOMetadata
object should be
ready for use in a write operation. If false
is
returned, no settings in the IIOMetadata
object
will be disturbed (i.e., the user canceled the
operation).metadata
- the IIOMetadata
object to be modified.true
if the IIOMetadata
has been
modified, false
otherwise.IllegalArgumentException
- if metadata
is
null
or is not an instance of the correct class. Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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