Class StatefulExample.ImportTimestamp

    • Constructor Detail

      • ImportTimestamp

        public ImportTimestamp()
    • Method Detail

      • getName

        public String getName()
        Description copied from interface: QDLVariable
        The name of the variable. This may be a simple name for a scalar, like "a", or it may represent a stem, like "a." (yes, include the period for a stem). You may even set specific stem values by passing in the indexed stem, e.g. "a.3". It might make sense, if e.g. you had a stem that modelled String Theory where the stem is an 11 dimensional object that required a great deal of computation only do-able in Java (such as a specialized scientific library which would be a hugely complex job to expose in QDL). You could then just set each component of the stem.

        A note on extrinsic values

        Extrinsic values start with a $$ (VariableState.EXTRINSIC_MARKER) and when the module is loaded, these are put into the workspace -- not at import. This lets you have module constants in advance of configuration the module.

        Specified by:
        getName in interface QDLVariable
        Returns:
      • getValue

        public Object getValue()
        Description copied from interface: QDLVariable
        The value. The basic Java types that QDL knows are Boolean, String, Long, BigDecimal, edu.uiuc.ncsa.qdl.variables.QDLSet and QDLStem. Again, this class sets the value and is used to create a single instance of this variable in the workspace, so there should be no state to manage in this class -- just return the value it should have.
        Specified by:
        getValue in interface QDLVariable
        Returns: