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guava-testlib/src/com/google/common/collect/testing/google/MultimapPutIterableTester.java
/* * In principle, a Multimap implementation could add e3 first before failing on the null. But * that seems unlikely enough to be worth complicating the test over, especially if there's any * chance that a permissive test could mask a bug. */ expectUnchanged(); // Be extra thorough in case internal state was corrupted by the expected null.Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Tue May 13 17:27:14 UTC 2025 - 7.4K bytes - Viewed (0) -
android/guava/src/com/google/common/collect/ForwardingObject.java
* such custom interfaces directly; they are implemented only in subclasses. Therefore, forwarding * {@code equals} would break symmetry, as the forwarding object might consider itself equal to the * object being tested, but the reverse could not be true. This behavior is consistent with the * JDK's collection wrappers, such as {@link java.util.Collections#unmodifiableCollection}. Use anRegistered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sat Dec 21 03:10:51 UTC 2024 - 3K bytes - Viewed (0) -
android/guava/src/com/google/common/base/Platform.java
* won't be cleared as long as the enum constant is referenced somewhere, and the enum constant * is referenced somewhere for as long as the enum class is loaded. *Maybe in theory* the enum * class could be unloaded after the above call to `getEnumConstants` but before we call * `get()`, but that is vanishingly unlikely. */ return ref == null ? Optional.absent() : Optional.fromNullable(enumClass.cast(ref.get())); }
Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Thu Aug 07 16:05:33 UTC 2025 - 4.1K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/advanced/response-headers.md
And then you can set headers in that *temporal* response object. {* ../../docs_src/response_headers/tutorial002.py hl[1, 7:8] *} And then you can return any object you need, as you normally would (a `dict`, a database model, etc). And if you declared a `response_model`, it will still be used to filter and convert the object you returned.Registered: Sun Sep 07 07:19:17 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sun Aug 31 09:15:41 UTC 2025 - 2.3K bytes - Viewed (0) -
android/guava/src/com/google/common/collect/UnmodifiableSortedMultiset.java
// TODO(b/418181860): This method creates retain cycles in J2ObjC. In order to break the cycle, // there needs to be separate classes for primary and descending multiset, where the primary one // would hold {@code @LazyInit @RetainedWith @Nullable} reference to its descending multiset, and // the other {@code final} reference. @Override public SortedMultiset<E> descendingMultiset() {
Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Thu Aug 07 16:05:33 UTC 2025 - 4K bytes - Viewed (0) -
android/guava/src/com/google/common/base/Supplier.java
import org.jspecify.annotations.Nullable; /** * A class that can supply objects of a single type; a pre-Java-8 version of {@link * java.util.function.Supplier java.util.function.Supplier}. Semantically, this could be a factory, * generator, builder, closure, or something else entirely. No guarantees are implied by this * interface. * * <p>The {@link Suppliers} class provides common suppliers and related utilities. *Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Thu Jun 19 17:20:48 UTC 2025 - 3K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/advanced/websockets.md
### In production { #in-production } In your production system, you probably have a frontend created with a modern framework like React, Vue.js or Angular. And to communicate using WebSockets with your backend you would probably use your frontend's utilities. Or you might have a native mobile application that communicates with your WebSocket backend directly, in native code.Registered: Sun Sep 07 07:19:17 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sun Aug 31 09:15:41 UTC 2025 - 5.7K bytes - Viewed (0) -
futures/listenablefuture1/src/com/google/common/util/concurrent/ListenableFuture.java
* the beginning, thanks to using different `-source -target` values for compiling our `-jre` and * `-android` "flavors.") * * (We could consider releasing a listenablefuture:1.0.1 someday. But we would want to look into how * that affects users, especially users of the Android Gradle Plugin, since the plugin developers * put in a special hack for us: https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/131431257) */
Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Mon Mar 17 20:26:29 UTC 2025 - 8K bytes - Viewed (0) -
guava/src/com/google/common/util/concurrent/ListenableFuture.java
* the beginning, thanks to using different `-source -target` values for compiling our `-jre` and * `-android` "flavors.") * * (We could consider releasing a listenablefuture:1.0.1 someday. But we would want to look into how * that affects users, especially users of the Android Gradle Plugin, since the plugin developers * put in a special hack for us: https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/131431257) */
Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Mon Mar 17 20:26:29 UTC 2025 - 8K bytes - Viewed (0) -
okhttp/src/commonJvmAndroid/kotlin/okhttp3/internal/tls/BasicCertificateChainCleaner.kt
val toVerify = result[result.size - 1] as X509Certificate // If this cert has been signed by a trusted cert, use that. Add the trusted certificate to // the end of the chain unless it's already present. (That would happen if the first // certificate in the chain is itself a self-signed and trusted CA certificate.) val trustedCert = trustRootIndex.findByIssuerAndSignature(toVerify) if (trustedCert != null) {
Registered: Fri Sep 05 11:42:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Wed Mar 19 19:25:20 UTC 2025 - 4.8K bytes - Viewed (0)