diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'plugins/org.eclipse.jem.proxy/proxy/org/eclipse/jem/internal/proxy/core/IMethodProxyFactory.java')
-rw-r--r-- | plugins/org.eclipse.jem.proxy/proxy/org/eclipse/jem/internal/proxy/core/IMethodProxyFactory.java | 83 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 83 deletions
diff --git a/plugins/org.eclipse.jem.proxy/proxy/org/eclipse/jem/internal/proxy/core/IMethodProxyFactory.java b/plugins/org.eclipse.jem.proxy/proxy/org/eclipse/jem/internal/proxy/core/IMethodProxyFactory.java deleted file mode 100644 index 216cdcc1a..000000000 --- a/plugins/org.eclipse.jem.proxy/proxy/org/eclipse/jem/internal/proxy/core/IMethodProxyFactory.java +++ /dev/null @@ -1,83 +0,0 @@ -/******************************************************************************* - * Copyright (c) 2001, 2005 IBM Corporation and others. - * All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials - * are made available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License v1.0 - * which accompanies this distribution, and is available at - * http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html - * - * Contributors: - * IBM Corporation - initial API and implementation - *******************************************************************************/ -/* - - - */ -package org.eclipse.jem.internal.proxy.core; - -/** - * Factory for creating method proxies. - * - * The factory exists for use, but generally it is better to go through the bean type proxy to get a method proxy. This is useful for setting up a - * bunch of method proxies in initialization routines so you don't need to have a bean type proxy for each. - * - * Creation date: (12/3/99 6:21:52 PM) - * - * @author: Joe Winchester - */ -public interface IMethodProxyFactory extends IBeanProxyFactory { - - /** - * Return a method proxy for the specified name, arguments from the class. - * - * @param className - * @param methodName - * @param parameterTypes - * parameter type names or <code>null</code> for parameterTypes means no parameters. - * @return a method proxy or null if can't be found. - * @since 1.0.0 - */ - IMethodProxy getMethodProxy(String className, String methodName, String[] parameterTypes); - - /** - * Return an IProxyMethod for the specified name, arguments from the given class. - * @param expression - * @param className - * @param methodName - * @param parameterTypes - * @return - * - * @since 1.1.0 - */ - IProxyMethod getMethodProxy(IExpression expression, String className, String methodName, String[] parameterTypes); - - /** - * Return an IProxyField for the specified name, arguments from the given class. - * @param expression - * @param className - * @param fieldName - * @return - * - * @since 1.1.0 - */ - IProxyField getFieldProxy(IExpression expression, String className, String fieldName); - - - /** - * Return an invokable for the specified name, arguments from the class. The method proxy is not retrieved. Instead the method will be looked up - * each time on the vm. Because of this these are suitable only for one-shot invokations. If it is to be invoked often, then a method proxy should - * be retrieved instead. - * <p> - * Though typical for one-shot deal the invokable can be used over and over. There is just overhead because the method is looked up each time. So a reasonable compromise - * would be if using it infrequently or is used closely together once or twice it is better to use a Invokable instead of a method proxy. - * <p> - * Note there is no guarantee that the method is available. This won't be known until the actual invoke is done. - * - * @param className - * @param methodName - * @param parameterTypes - * parameter type names or <code>null</code> for parameterTypes means no parameters. - * @return an invokable - * @since 1.0.0 - */ - IInvokable getInvokable(String className, String methodName, String[] parameterTypes); -} |