/******************************************************************************* * Copyright (c) 2000, 2008 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.che.ide.ext.java.jdt.core.dom; /** * A variable binding represents either a field of a class or interface, or a local variable declaration (including formal * parameters, local variables, and exception variables). * * @noimplement This interface is not intended to be implemented by clients. * @see ITypeBinding#getDeclaredFields() * @since 2.0 */ public interface IVariableBinding extends IBinding { /** * Returns whether this binding is for a field. Note that this method returns <code>true</code> for constants, including enum * constants. This method returns <code>false</code> for local variables. * * @return <code>true</code> if this is the binding for a field, and <code>false</code> otherwise */ public boolean isField(); /** * Returns whether this binding is for an enum constant. Note that this method returns <code>false</code> for local variables * and for fields other than enum constants. * * @return <code>true</code> if this is the binding for an enum constant, and <code>false</code> otherwise * @since 3.1 */ public boolean isEnumConstant(); /** * Returns whether this binding corresponds to a parameter. * * @return <code>true</code> if this is the binding for a parameter, and <code>false</code> otherwise * @since 3.2 */ public boolean isParameter(); /** * Returns the name of the field or local variable declared in this binding. The name is always a simple identifier. * * @return the name of this field or local variable */ public String getName(); /** * Returns the type binding representing the class or interface that declares this field. * <p> * The declaring class of a field is the class or interface of which it is a member. Local variables have no declaring class. * The field length of an array type has no declaring class. * </p> * * @return the binding of the class or interface that declares this field, or <code>null</code> if none */ public ITypeBinding getDeclaringClass(); /** * Returns the binding for the type of this field or local variable. * * @return the binding for the type of this field or local variable */ public ITypeBinding getType(); /** * Returns a small integer variable id for this variable binding. * <p> * <b>Local variables inside methods:</b> Local variables (and parameters) declared within a single method are assigned * ascending ids in normal code reading order; var1.getVariableId()<var2.getVariableId() means that var1 is declared before * var2. * </p> * <p> * <b>Local variables outside methods:</b> Local variables declared in a type's static initializers (or initializer expressions * of static fields) are assigned ascending ids in normal code reading order. Local variables declared in a type's instance * initializers (or initializer expressions of non-static fields) are assigned ascending ids in normal code reading order. * These ids are useful when checking definite assignment for static initializers (JLS 16.7) and instance initializers (JLS * 16.8), respectively. * </p> * <p> * <b>Fields:</b> Fields declared as members of a type are assigned ascending ids in normal code reading order; * field1.getVariableId()<field2.getVariableId() means that field1 is declared before field2. * </p> * * @return a small non-negative variable id */ public int getVariableId(); /** * Returns this binding's constant value if it has one. Some variables may have a value computed at compile-time. If the type * of the value is a primitive type, the result is the boxed equivalent (i.e., int returned as an <code>Integer</code>). If the * type of the value is <code>String</code>, the result is the string itself. If the variable has no compile-time computed * value, the result is <code>null</code>. (Note: compile-time constant expressions cannot denote <code>null</code>; JLS2 * 15.28.). The result is always <code>null</code> for enum constants. * * @return the constant value, or <code>null</code> if none * @since 3.0 */ public Object getConstantValue(); /** * Returns the method binding representing the method containing the scope in which this local variable is declared. * <p> * The declaring method of a method formal parameter is the method itself. For a local variable declared somewhere within the * body of a method, the declaring method is the enclosing method. When local or anonymous classes are involved, the declaring * method is the innermost such method. There is no declaring method for a field, or for a local variable declared in a static * or instance initializer; this method returns <code>null</code> in those cases. * </p> * * @return the binding of the method or constructor that declares this local variable, or <code>null</code> if none * @since 3.1 */ public IMethodBinding getDeclaringMethod(); /** * Returns the binding for the variable declaration corresponding to this variable binding. For a binding for a field * declaration in an instance of a generic type, this method returns the binding for the corresponding field declaration in the * generic type. For other variable bindings, including all ones for local variables and parameters, this method returns the * same binding. * * @return the variable binding for the originating declaration * @since 3.1 */ public IVariableBinding getVariableDeclaration(); }