R
- the type returned from the query@FunctionalInterface public interface TemporalQuery<R>
Queries are a key tool for extracting information from temporal objects. They exist to externalize the process of querying, permitting different approaches, as per the strategy design pattern. Examples might be a query that checks if the date is the day before February 29th in a leap year, or calculates the number of days to your next birthday.
The TemporalField
interface provides another mechanism for querying
temporal objects. That interface is limited to returning a long
.
By contrast, queries can return any type.
There are two equivalent ways of using a TemporalQuery
.
The first is to invoke the method on this interface directly.
The second is to use TemporalAccessor.query(TemporalQuery)
:
// these two lines are equivalent, but the second approach is recommended temporal = thisQuery.queryFrom(temporal); temporal = temporal.query(thisQuery);It is recommended to use the second approach,
query(TemporalQuery)
,
as it is a lot clearer to read in code.
The most common implementations are method references, such as
LocalDate::from
and ZoneId::from
.
Additional common queries are provided as static methods in TemporalQueries
.
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
R |
queryFrom(TemporalAccessor temporal)
Queries the specified temporal object.
|
R queryFrom(TemporalAccessor temporal)
This queries the specified temporal object to return an object using the logic encapsulated in the implementing class. Examples might be a query that checks if the date is the day before February 29th in a leap year, or calculates the number of days to your next birthday.
There are two equivalent ways of using this method.
The first is to invoke this method directly.
The second is to use TemporalAccessor.query(TemporalQuery)
:
// these two lines are equivalent, but the second approach is recommended temporal = thisQuery.queryFrom(temporal); temporal = temporal.query(thisQuery);It is recommended to use the second approach,
query(TemporalQuery)
,
as it is a lot clearer to read in code.TemporalAccessor
to determine the result.
The input object must not be altered.
The input temporal object may be in a calendar system other than ISO.
Implementations may choose to document compatibility with other calendar systems,
or reject non-ISO temporal objects by querying the chronology
.
This method may be called from multiple threads in parallel. It must be thread-safe when invoked.
temporal
- the temporal object to query, not nullDateTimeException
- if unable to queryArithmeticException
- if numeric overflow occurs Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
Copyright © 1993, 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.