/* * Copyright 2000-2015 JetBrains s.r.o. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package com.intellij.codeInsight.lookup; import com.intellij.codeInsight.completion.InsertionContext; import com.intellij.navigation.PsiElementNavigationItem; import com.intellij.openapi.util.ClassConditionKey; import com.intellij.openapi.util.UserDataHolderBase; import com.intellij.psi.PsiElement; import com.intellij.psi.ResolveResult; import com.intellij.psi.SmartPsiElementPointer; import org.jetbrains.annotations.NotNull; import org.jetbrains.annotations.Nullable; import java.util.Collections; import java.util.Set; /** * A typical way to create lookup element is to use {@link LookupElementBuilder}. * Another way is to subclass it. Use the latter way only if you need it to implement some additional interface, to modify equals/hashCode * or other advanced logic. * * @see com.intellij.codeInsight.completion.PrioritizedLookupElement * @author peter */ public abstract class LookupElement extends UserDataHolderBase { public static final LookupElement[] EMPTY_ARRAY = new LookupElement[0]; @NotNull public abstract String getLookupString(); public Set<String> getAllLookupStrings() { return Collections.singleton(getLookupString()); } @NotNull public Object getObject() { return this; } @Nullable public PsiElement getPsiElement() { Object o = getObject(); if (o instanceof PsiElement) { return (PsiElement)o; } if (o instanceof ResolveResult) { return ((ResolveResult)o).getElement(); } if (o instanceof PsiElementNavigationItem) { return ((PsiElementNavigationItem)o).getTargetElement(); } if (o instanceof SmartPsiElementPointer) { return ((SmartPsiElementPointer)o).getElement(); } return null; } public boolean isValid() { final Object object = getObject(); if (object instanceof PsiElement) { return ((PsiElement)object).isValid(); } return true; } public void handleInsert(InsertionContext context) { } public AutoCompletionPolicy getAutoCompletionPolicy() { return AutoCompletionPolicy.SETTINGS_DEPENDENT; } @Override public String toString() { return getLookupString(); } public void renderElement(LookupElementPresentation presentation) { presentation.setItemText(getLookupString()); } /** * use {@link #as(ClassConditionKey)} instead */ @Deprecated @Nullable public final <T> T as(Class<T> aClass) { return as(ClassConditionKey.create(aClass)); } @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") @Nullable public <T> T as(ClassConditionKey<T> conditionKey) { return conditionKey.isInstance(this) ? (T) this : null; } public boolean isCaseSensitive() { return true; } /** * Invoked when the completion autopopup contains only the items that exactly match the user-entered prefix to determine * whether the popup should be closed to not get in the way when navigating through the code. * Should return true if there's some meaningful information in this item's presentation that the user will miss * if the autopopup is suddenly closed automatically. Java method parameters are a good example. For simple variables, * there's nothing else interesting besides the variable name which is already entered in the editor, so the autopopup may be closed. */ public boolean isWorthShowingInAutoPopup() { final LookupElementPresentation presentation = new LookupElementPresentation(); renderElement(presentation); return !presentation.getTailFragments().isEmpty(); } }