Hi Nicolas,
On 30 Mar 2011, at 23:44, Nicolas Anquetil wrote: > Speaking of that, I have a doubt: > > If I have a declaration: Map<String,Object> anAttribute; > > I will create a ParameterizedType (named Map) with TypeParameters String and Object; and pointing to its ParameterizableClass Map (this time the generic definition). > > What should be the container of the ParameterizedType? This is a very good question. > At first, I thought I would define it as an internal type of the class owning 'anAttribute' because the parameterizedType is actually created at this very moment. Yes, I prefer this solution. > But then it could also be owned by 'java.lang' the package that owns the ParameterizableClass Map. > > Having 'anAttribute' appearing in moose with: > > "DeclaredType: some::package::A_Class::Map<java::lang::String,java::lang::Object>" > > can be confusing. And it would get even worst if we were considering a method's parameter, whereas: > > "DeclaredType: java::util::Map<java::lang::String,java::lang::Object>" > > seems to be more intuitive. > But on the other hand, we loose some information in the second case. This is printing problem and can be solved at that level. ParameterizedType also has a parameterizableClass property, and this can be used for pretty printing. Cheers, Doru > nicolas > > ----- Mail original ----- >> De: "Tudor Girba" <[hidden email]> >> À: "Moose-related development" <[hidden email]> >> Envoyé: Mercredi 30 Mars 2011 19:59:55 >> Objet: [Moose-dev] Re: FAMIX and Java Generics >> Hi Diego, >> >> This part is under works. >> >> First, FAMIX now supports Java Generics with ParameterizedType and >> ParameterizableClass. Second, both inFusion and VerveineJ will >> populate this information in the actual models. >> >> Cheers, >> Doru >> >> >> On 30 Mar 2011, at 16:43, Diego Fernandez wrote: >> >>> Hi all, using inFusion to get an MSE model from Java, I saw that the >>> tool generates a FAMIX.Class for generic types used in parameters, >>> for example: >>> >>> public interface AnInterface<T> { >>> void doSomething(T param); >>> } >>> >>> Will generate a FAMIX.Class for T, and a reference to that class for >>> the declaredType of "param". >>> >>> Is this the way to describe generic parameters in an MSE file or is >>> a bug? >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Diego >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Moose-dev mailing list >>> [hidden email] >>> https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev >> >> -- >> www.tudorgirba.com >> >> "Value is always contextual." >> >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Moose-dev mailing list >> [hidden email] >> https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev > > _______________________________________________ > Moose-dev mailing list > [hidden email] > https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev -- www.tudorgirba.com "Every thing should have the right to be different." _______________________________________________ Moose-dev mailing list [hidden email] https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev |
Doru thanks for the info.
Where I can find information about the FAMIX representation of each code entity (in docs or in smalltalk code)?
On Thu, Mar 31, 2011 at 4:09 AM, Tudor Girba <[hidden email]> wrote: Hi Nicolas, _______________________________________________ Moose-dev mailing list [hidden email] https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev |
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