public class PropertyChangeEvent extends EventObject
Normally PropertyChangeEvents are accompanied by the name and the old and new value of the changed property. If the new value is a primitive type (such as int or boolean) it must be wrapped as the corresponding java.lang.* Object type (such as Integer or Boolean).
Null values may be provided for the old and the new values if their true values are not known.
An event source may send a null object as the name to indicate that an arbitrary set of if its properties have changed. In this case the old and new values should also be null.
source
Constructor and Description |
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PropertyChangeEvent(Object source,
String propertyName,
Object oldValue,
Object newValue)
Constructs a new
PropertyChangeEvent . |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
Object |
getNewValue()
Gets the new value for the property, expressed as an Object.
|
Object |
getOldValue()
Gets the old value for the property, expressed as an Object.
|
Object |
getPropagationId()
The "propagationId" field is reserved for future use.
|
String |
getPropertyName()
Gets the programmatic name of the property that was changed.
|
void |
setPropagationId(Object propagationId)
Sets the propagationId object for the event.
|
String |
toString()
Returns a string representation of the object.
|
getSource
public PropertyChangeEvent(Object source, String propertyName, Object oldValue, Object newValue)
PropertyChangeEvent
.source
- The bean that fired the event.propertyName
- The programmatic name of the property
that was changed.oldValue
- The old value of the property.newValue
- The new value of the property.public String getPropertyName()
public Object getNewValue()
public Object getOldValue()
public void setPropagationId(Object propagationId)
propagationId
- The propagationId object for the event.public Object getPropagationId()
public String toString()
toString
in class EventObject
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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.
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