public static final class DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo.Builder extends GeneratedMessage.Builder <DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo .Builder > implements DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfoOrBuilder
google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo
Encapsulates information about the original source file from which a FileDescriptorProto was generated.
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
DescriptorProtos |
addAllLocation(Iterable
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
addLocation(DescriptorProtos
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
addLocation(DescriptorProtos
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
addLocation(int index, DescriptorProtos
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
addLocation(int index, DescriptorProtos
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
addLocationBuilder()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
addLocationBuilder(int index)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
build()
Constructs the message based on the state of the Builder.
|
DescriptorProtos |
buildPartial()
Like
MessageLite, but does not throw an exception if the message is missing required fields.
|
DescriptorProtos |
clear()
Called by the initialization and clear code paths to allow subclasses to reset any of their builtin fields back to the initial values.
|
DescriptorProtos |
clearLocation()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
clone()
Clones the Builder.
|
DescriptorProtos |
getDefaultInstanceForType()
Get an instance of the type with no fields set.
|
static Descriptors |
getDescriptor()
|
Descriptors |
getDescriptorForType()
Get the message's type's descriptor.
|
DescriptorProtos |
getLocation(int index)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
getLocationBuilder(int index)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
List |
getLocationBuilderList()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
int |
getLocationCount()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
List |
getLocationList()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
getLocationOrBuilder(int index)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
List |
getLocationOrBuilderList()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
protected GeneratedMessage |
internalGetFieldAccessorTable()
Get the FieldAccessorTable for this type.
|
boolean |
isInitialized()
Returns true if all required fields in the message and all embedded messages are set, false otherwise.
|
DescriptorProtos |
mergeFrom(CodedInputStream
Like
MessageLite, but also parses extensions.
|
DescriptorProtos |
mergeFrom(DescriptorProtos
|
DescriptorProtos |
mergeFrom(Message
Merge
other into the message being built.
|
DescriptorProtos |
removeLocation(int index)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
setLocation(int index, DescriptorProtos
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
DescriptorProtos |
setLocation(int index, DescriptorProtos
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
|
addRepeatedField, clearField, clearOneof, getAllFields, getField, getFieldBuilder, getOneofFieldDescriptor, getParentForChildren, getRepeatedField, getRepeatedFieldCount, getUnknownFields, hasField, hasOneof, isClean, markClean, mergeUnknownFields, newBuilderForField, onBuilt, onChanged, parseUnknownField, setField, setRepeatedField, setUnknownFieldsfindInitializationErrors, getInitializationErrorString, mergeDelimitedFrom, mergeDelimitedFrom, mergeFrom, mergeFrom, mergeFrom, mergeFrom, mergeFrom, mergeFrom, mergeFrom, mergeFrom, mergeFrom, newUninitializedMessageException, toStringaddAll, newUninitializedMessageExceptionequals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, wait, wait, waitfindInitializationErrors, getAllFields, getField, getInitializationErrorString, getOneofFieldDescriptor, getRepeatedField, getRepeatedFieldCount, getUnknownFields, hasField, hasOneofpublic static final Descriptors.Descriptor getDescriptor()
protected GeneratedMessage.FieldAccessorTable internalGetFieldAccessorTable()
GeneratedMessage.Builder
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder clear()
GeneratedMessage.Builder
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder clone()
MessageLite.Builder
clone in interface
Message.Builder
clone in interface
MessageLite.Builder
clone in class
GeneratedMessage.Builder <DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo.Builder >
Object.clone()
public Descriptors.Descriptor getDescriptorForType()
Message.Builder
MessageOrBuilder.getDescriptorForType() .
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo getDefaultInstanceForType()
MessageLiteOrBuilder
getDefaultInstance() method of generated message classes in that this method is an abstract method of the
MessageLite interface whereas
getDefaultInstance() is a static method of a specific class. They return the same thing.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo build()
MessageLite.Builder
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo buildPartial()
MessageLite.Builder
MessageLite.Builder.build() , but does not throw an exception if the message is missing required fields. Instead, a partial message is returned. Subsequent changes to the Builder will not affect the returned message.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder mergeFrom(Message other)
Message.Builder
other into the message being built.
other must have the exact same type as
this (i.e.
getDescriptorForType() == other.getDescriptorForType()). Merging occurs as follows. For each field:
other, then
other's value overwrites the value in this message.
other, it is merged into the corresponding sub-message of this message using the same merging rules.
other are concatenated with the elements in this message. This is equivalent to the
Message::MergeFrom method in C++.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder mergeFrom(DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo other)
public final boolean isInitialized()
MessageLiteOrBuilder
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder mergeFrom(CodedInputStream input, ExtensionRegistryLite extensionRegistry) throws IOException
MessageLite.Builder
MessageLite.Builder.mergeFrom(CodedInputStream) , but also parses extensions. The extensions that you want to be able to parse must be registered in
extensionRegistry. Extensions not in the registry will be treated as unknown fields.
mergeFrom in interface
Message.Builder
mergeFrom in interface
MessageLite.Builder
mergeFrom in class
AbstractMessage.Builder <DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo.Builder >
IOException
public List<DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo .Location > getLocationList()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public int getLocationCount()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Location getLocation(int index)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder setLocation(int index, DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo .Location value)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder setLocation(int index, DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo .Location .Builder builderForValue)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder addLocation(DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo .Location value)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder addLocation(int index, DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo .Location value)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder addLocation(DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo .Location .Builder builderForValue)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder addLocation(int index, DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo .Location .Builder builderForValue)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder addAllLocation(Iterable <? extends DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo .Location > values)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder clearLocation()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Builder removeLocation(int index)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Location .Builder getLocationBuilder(int index)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .LocationOrBuilder getLocationOrBuilder(int index)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public List<? extends DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo .LocationOrBuilder > getLocationOrBuilderList()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Location .Builder addLocationBuilder()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public DescriptorProtos.SourceCodeInfo .Location .Builder addLocationBuilder(int index)
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.
public List<DescriptorProtos .SourceCodeInfo .Location .Builder > getLocationBuilderList()
repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1;
A Location identifies a piece of source code in a .proto file which
corresponds to a particular definition. This information is intended
to be useful to IDEs, code indexers, documentation generators, and similar
tools.
For example, say we have a file like:
message Foo {
optional string foo = 1;
}
Let's look at just the field definition:
optional string foo = 1;
^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
a bc de f ghi
We have the following locations:
span path represents
[a,i) [ 4, 0, 2, 0 ] The whole field definition.
[a,b) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 4 ] The label (optional).
[c,d) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 5 ] The type (string).
[e,f) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 1 ] The name (foo).
[g,h) [ 4, 0, 2, 0, 3 ] The number (1).
Notes:
- A location may refer to a repeated field itself (i.e. not to any
particular index within it). This is used whenever a set of elements are
logically enclosed in a single code segment. For example, an entire
extend block (possibly containing multiple extension definitions) will
have an outer location whose path refers to the "extensions" repeated
field without an index.
- Multiple locations may have the same path. This happens when a single
logical declaration is spread out across multiple places. The most
obvious example is the "extend" block again -- there may be multiple
extend blocks in the same scope, each of which will have the same path.
- A location's span is not always a subset of its parent's span. For
example, the "extendee" of an extension declaration appears at the
beginning of the "extend" block and is shared by all extensions within
the block.
- Just because a location's span is a subset of some other location's span
does not mean that it is a descendent. For example, a "group" defines
both a type and a field in a single declaration. Thus, the locations
corresponding to the type and field and their components will overlap.
- Code which tries to interpret locations should probably be designed to
ignore those that it doesn't understand, as more types of locations could
be recorded in the future.