public class MutableDouble extends Number implements Comparable<MutableDouble>, Mutable<Number>
double
wrapper.
Note that as MutableDouble does not extend Double, it is not treated by String.format as a Double parameter.
Double
,
Serialized FormConstructor and Description |
---|
MutableDouble()
Constructs a new MutableDouble with the default value of zero.
|
MutableDouble(double value)
Constructs a new MutableDouble with the specified value.
|
MutableDouble(Number value)
Constructs a new MutableDouble with the specified value.
|
MutableDouble(String value)
Constructs a new MutableDouble parsing the given string.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
void |
add(double operand)
Adds a value to the value of this instance.
|
void |
add(Number operand)
Adds a value to the value of this instance.
|
int |
compareTo(MutableDouble other)
Compares this mutable to another in ascending order.
|
void |
decrement()
Decrements the value.
|
double |
doubleValue()
Returns the value of this MutableDouble as a double.
|
boolean |
equals(Object obj)
Compares this object against the specified object.
|
float |
floatValue()
Returns the value of this MutableDouble as a float.
|
Double |
getValue()
Gets the value as a Double instance.
|
int |
hashCode()
Returns a suitable hash code for this mutable.
|
void |
increment()
Increments the value.
|
int |
intValue()
Returns the value of this MutableDouble as an int.
|
boolean |
isInfinite()
Checks whether the double value is infinite.
|
boolean |
isNaN()
Checks whether the double value is the special NaN value.
|
long |
longValue()
Returns the value of this MutableDouble as a long.
|
void |
setValue(double value)
Sets the value.
|
void |
setValue(Number value)
Sets the value from any Number instance.
|
void |
subtract(double operand)
Subtracts a value from the value of this instance.
|
void |
subtract(Number operand)
Subtracts a value from the value of this instance.
|
Double |
toDouble()
Gets this mutable as an instance of Double.
|
String |
toString()
Returns the String value of this mutable.
|
byteValue, shortValue
public MutableDouble()
public MutableDouble(double value)
value
- the initial value to storepublic MutableDouble(Number value)
value
- the initial value to store, not nullNullPointerException
- if the object is nullpublic MutableDouble(String value) throws NumberFormatException
value
- the string to parse, not nullNumberFormatException
- if the string cannot be parsed into a doublepublic void setValue(double value)
value
- the value to setpublic void setValue(Number value)
setValue
in interface Mutable<Number>
value
- the value to set, not nullNullPointerException
- if the object is nullpublic boolean isNaN()
public boolean isInfinite()
public void increment()
public void decrement()
public void add(double operand)
operand
- the value to addpublic void add(Number operand)
operand
- the value to add, not nullNullPointerException
- if the object is nullpublic void subtract(double operand)
operand
- the value to subtract, not nullpublic void subtract(Number operand)
operand
- the value to subtract, not nullNullPointerException
- if the object is nullpublic int intValue()
public long longValue()
public float floatValue()
floatValue
in class Number
public double doubleValue()
doubleValue
in class Number
public Double toDouble()
public boolean equals(Object obj)
true
if and only if the argument
is not null
and is a Double
object that represents a double that has the identical
bit pattern to the bit pattern of the double represented by this object. For this purpose, two
double
values are considered to be the same if and only if the method
Double.doubleToLongBits(double)
returns the same long value when applied to each.
Note that in most cases, for two instances of class Double
,d1
and d2
,
the value of d1.equals(d2)
is true
if and only if
d1.doubleValue() == d2.doubleValue()
also has the value true
. However, there are two exceptions:
d1
and d2
both represent Double.NaN
, then the
equals
method returns true
, even though Double.NaN==Double.NaN
has
the value false
.
d1
represents +0.0
while d2
represents -0.0
,
or vice versa, the equal
test has the value false
, even though
+0.0==-0.0
has the value true
. This allows hashtables to operate properly.
public int hashCode()
public int compareTo(MutableDouble other)
compareTo
in interface Comparable<MutableDouble>
other
- the other mutable to compare to, not nullCopyright © 2001–2014 The Apache Software Foundation. All rights reserved.