T
- type of the target object to extract the value fromA
- type of the extraction argument object passed to the extract() methodpublic abstract class ValueExtractor<T,A> extends Object
MapAttributeConfig attributeConfig = new MapAttributeConfig();
extractorConfig.setName("currency");
extractorConfig.setExtractor("com.bank.CurrencyExtractor");
How to register the newly-defined attribute in a configuration of a Map?
MapConfig mapConfig = (...);
mapConfig.addMapAttributeConfig(attributeConfig);
Extractors may be also defined in the XML configuration.
< map name="trades"> < attributes> < attribute extractor="com.bank.CurrencyExtractor">currency< /attribute> < /attributes> < /map>Please, bear in mind that an extractor may not be added after a map has been instantiated. All extractors have to be defined upfront in the map's initial configuration. A ValueExtractor may use a custom argument if it is specified in the query. The custom argument may be passed within the square brackets located after the name of the attribute that uses a ValueExtractor, like: customAttribute[argumentString] Let's have a look at the following query: 'currency[incoming] == EUR' Let's assume that currency is an custom attribute that uses com.test.CurrencyExtractor for extraction. The string "incoming" is an argument that will be passed to the
ArgumentParser
during the extraction.
The parser will parse the string according to the parser's custom logic and it will return a parsed object.
The parsed object may be a single object, array, collection, etc. It's up to the ValueExtractor implementor's
to understand the semantics of the parsed argument object.
Reflection-based extraction is the default mechanism - ValueExtractors are an alternative way of extracting
attribute values from an object.Constructor and Description |
---|
ValueExtractor() |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
abstract void |
extract(T target,
A argument,
ValueCollector collector)
Extracts a value from the given target object.
|
public abstract void extract(T target, A argument, ValueCollector collector)
class Motorbike {
Wheel wheel[2];
}
class Wheel {
String name;
}
Let's assume that we want to extract the names of all wheels from a single motorbike object. Each motorbike has
two wheels so there are two names too. In order to return both values from the extraction operation just collect
them separately using the ValueCollector. Collecting multiple values in such a way allows operating on these
multiple values as if they were single-values during the evaluation of the predicates.
Let's assume that we registered a custom extractor to under the name 'wheelName' and executed the following query:
'wheelName = front-wheel'.
The extraction may return up to two wheel names for each Motorbike since each Motorbike has up to two wheels.
In such a case, it is enough if a single value evaluates the predicate's condition to true to return a match, so
it will return a Motorbike if 'any' of the wheels matches the expression.target
- object to extract the value fromargument
- extraction argumentcollector
- collector of the extracted value(s)ValueCollector
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