public final class JobName extends TextSyntax implements PrintRequestAttribute, PrintJobAttribute
DocumentName attribute of the first (or
 only) doc in the job, (2) the URL of the first (or only) doc in the job, if
 the doc's print data representation object is a URL, or (3) any other piece
 of Print Job specific and/or document content information.
 
 IPP Compatibility: The string value gives the IPP name value. The
 locale gives the IPP natural language. The category name returned by
 getName() gives the IPP attribute name.
 
| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
| JobName(String jobName,
       Locale locale)Constructs a new job name attribute with the given job name and locale. | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| boolean | equals(Object object)Returns whether this job name attribute is equivalent to the passed in
 object. | 
| Class<? extends Attribute> | getCategory()Get the printing attribute class which is to be used as the "category"
 for this printing attribute value. | 
| String | getName()Get the name of the category of which this attribute value is an
 instance. | 
getLocale, getValue, hashCode, toStringpublic JobName(String jobName, Locale locale)
jobName - Job name.locale - Natural language of the text string. null
 is interpreted to mean the default locale as returned
 by Locale.getDefault()NullPointerException - (unchecked exception) Thrown if jobName is null.public boolean equals(Object object)
object is not null.
 object is an instance of class JobName.
 object's
 underlying string are equal.
 object's locale are
 equal.
 equals in class TextSyntaxobject - Object to compare to.object is equivalent to this job name
          attribute, false otherwise.Object.hashCode(), 
HashMappublic final Class<? extends Attribute> getCategory()
For class JobName, the category is class JobName itself.
getCategory in interface Attributejava.lang.Class. 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.
 Copyright © 1993, 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates.  All rights reserved.