public static class Float2IntFunctions.EmptyFunction extends AbstractFloat2IntFunction implements java.io.Serializable, java.lang.Cloneable
This class may be useful to implement your own in case you subclass a type-specific function.
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
void |
clear()
Removes all associations from this function (optional operation).
|
java.lang.Object |
clone() |
boolean |
containsKey(float k) |
int |
defaultReturnValue()
Gets the default return value.
|
void |
defaultReturnValue(int defRetValue)
Sets the default return value.
|
int |
get(float k)
Returns the value to which the given key is mapped.
|
java.lang.Integer |
get(java.lang.Object k)
Deprecated.
Please use the corresponding type-specific method instead.
|
int |
size()
Returns the intended number of keys in this function, or -1 if no such number exists.
|
containsKey, put, put, remove, removepublic int get(float k)
Float2IntFunctionget in interface Float2IntFunctionk - the key.Function.get(Object)public boolean containsKey(float k)
containsKey in interface Float2IntFunctionFunction.containsKey(Object)public int defaultReturnValue()
Float2IntFunctiondefaultReturnValue in interface Float2IntFunctiondefaultReturnValue in class AbstractFloat2IntFunctionpublic void defaultReturnValue(int defRetValue)
Float2IntFunctionget(), put() and remove() to
denote that the map does not contain the specified key. It must be
0/false/null by default.defaultReturnValue in interface Float2IntFunctiondefaultReturnValue in class AbstractFloat2IntFunctiondefRetValue - the new default return value.Float2IntFunction.defaultReturnValue()@Deprecated public java.lang.Integer get(java.lang.Object k)
null on a missing key.
This method must check whether the provided key is in the map using containsKey(). Thus,
it probes the map twice. Implementors of subclasses should override it with a more efficient method.
get in interface Function<java.lang.Float,java.lang.Integer>get in class AbstractFloat2IntFunctionk - the key.null if no value was present for the given key.Map.get(Object)public int size()
FunctionMost function implementations will have some knowledge of the intended number of keys in their domain. In some cases, however, this might not be possible.
public void clear()
Functionclear in interface Function<java.lang.Float,java.lang.Integer>clear in class AbstractFloat2IntFunctionMap.clear()public java.lang.Object clone()
clone in class java.lang.Object