/*- * Copyright (C) 2002, 2017, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. * * This file was distributed by Oracle as part of a version of Oracle Berkeley * DB Java Edition made available at: * * http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/database/database-technologies/berkeleydb/downloads/index.html * * Please see the LICENSE file included in the top-level directory of the * appropriate version of Oracle Berkeley DB Java Edition for a copy of the * license and additional information. */ package collections.ship.sentity; import java.io.Serializable; /** * A Supplier represents the combined key/data pair for a supplier entity. * *
In this sample, Supplier is created from the stored key/data entry * using TupleSerialEntityBinding. See {@link SampleViews.PartBinding} for * details. *
* *The binding is "tricky" in that it uses this class for both the stored * data entry and the combined entity object. To do this, the key field(s) are * transient and are set by the binding after the data object has been * deserialized. This avoids the use of a SupplierData class completely.
* *Since this class is used directly for data storage, it must be * Serializable.
* * @author Mark Hayes */ public class Supplier implements Serializable { private transient String number; private String name; private int status; private String city; public Supplier(String number, String name, int status, String city) { this.number = number; this.name = name; this.status = status; this.city = city; } /** * Set the transient key fields after deserializing. This method is only * called by data bindings. */ void setKey(String number) { this.number = number; } public final String getNumber() { return number; } public final String getName() { return name; } public final int getStatus() { return status; } public final String getCity() { return city; } public String toString() { return "[Supplier: number=" + number + " name=" + name + " status=" + status + " city=" + city + ']'; } }