public interface Name extends CharSequence
Name objects from the same
 implementation are usable in collections while Names from
 different implementations may not work properly in collections.
 An empty Name has a length of zero.
 
In the context of annotation processing, the guarantees for "the same" implementation must include contexts where the API mediated side effects of processors could be visible to each other, including successive annotation processing rounds.
Elements.getName(java.lang.CharSequence)| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| boolean | contentEquals(CharSequence cs)Compares this name to the specified  CharSequence. | 
| boolean | equals(Object obj)Returns  trueif the argument represents the same
 name asthis, andfalseotherwise. | 
| int | hashCode()Obeys the general contract of  Object.hashCode. | 
charAt, chars, codePoints, length, subSequence, toStringboolean equals(Object obj)
true if the argument represents the same
 name as this, and false otherwise.
 Note that the identity of a Name is a function both
 of its content in terms of a sequence of characters as well as
 the implementation which created it.
equals in class Objectobj - the object to be compared with this elementtrue if the specified object represents the same
          name as thisElement.equals(java.lang.Object)int hashCode()
Object.hashCode.hashCode in class Objectequals(java.lang.Object)boolean contentEquals(CharSequence cs)
CharSequence. The result
 is true if and only if this name represents the same sequence
 of char values as the specified sequence.cs - The sequence to compare this name againsttrue if this name represents the same sequence
 of char values as the specified sequence, false
 otherwiseString.contentEquals(CharSequence) 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.
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