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gnu.java.awt.peer.gtk
Class GtkCheckboxGroupPeer  view GtkCheckboxGroupPeer download GtkCheckboxGroupPeer.java

java.lang.Object
  extended bygnu.java.awt.peer.gtk.GtkGenericPeer
      extended bygnu.java.awt.peer.gtk.GtkCheckboxGroupPeer

public class GtkCheckboxGroupPeer
extends GtkGenericPeer


Field Summary
private static java.util.WeakHashMap map
           
 
Fields inherited from class gnu.java.awt.peer.gtk.GtkGenericPeer
awtWidget, native_state
 
Constructor Summary
private GtkCheckboxGroupPeer()
           
 
Method Summary
 void dispose()
          Dispose of our native state.
protected  void finalize()
          Called on an object by the Virtual Machine at most once, at some point after the Object is determined unreachable but before it is destroyed.
static GtkCheckboxGroupPeer getCheckboxGroupPeer(java.awt.CheckboxGroup group)
           
 void remove(GtkCheckboxPeer box)
           
 
Methods inherited from class gnu.java.awt.peer.gtk.GtkGenericPeer
getUniqueInteger, gtkWidgetModifyFont, gtkWidgetModifyFont, postActionEvent, printCurrentThread, q
 
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object
clone, equals, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait
 

Field Detail

map

private static java.util.WeakHashMap map
Constructor Detail

GtkCheckboxGroupPeer

private GtkCheckboxGroupPeer()
Method Detail

getCheckboxGroupPeer

public static GtkCheckboxGroupPeer getCheckboxGroupPeer(java.awt.CheckboxGroup group)

dispose

public void dispose()
Description copied from class: GtkGenericPeer
Dispose of our native state. Calls gtk_widget_destroy on the native widget and removes the awtWidget from the native state tables. Should be overridden by subclasses if this is not (all) that needs to be done.

Overrides:
dispose in class GtkGenericPeer

remove

public void remove(GtkCheckboxPeer box)

finalize

protected void finalize()
Description copied from class: java.lang.Object
Called on an object by the Virtual Machine at most once, at some point after the Object is determined unreachable but before it is destroyed. You would think that this means it eventually is called on every Object, but this is not necessarily the case. If execution terminates abnormally, garbage collection does not always happen. Thus you cannot rely on this method to always work. For finer control over garbage collection, use references from the java.lang.ref package.

Virtual Machines are free to not call this method if they can determine that it does nothing important; for example, if your class extends Object and overrides finalize to do simply super.finalize().

finalize() will be called by a java.lang.Thread that has no locks on any Objects, and may be called concurrently. There are no guarantees on the order in which multiple objects are finalized. This means that finalize() is usually unsuited for performing actions that must be thread-safe, and that your implementation must be use defensive programming if it is to always work.

If an Exception is thrown from finalize() during garbage collection, it will be patently ignored and the Object will still be destroyed.

It is allowed, although not typical, for user code to call finalize() directly. User invocation does not affect whether automatic invocation will occur. It is also permitted, although not recommended, for a finalize() method to "revive" an object by making it reachable from normal code again.

Unlike constructors, finalize() does not get called for an object's superclass unless the implementation specifically calls super.finalize().

The default implementation does nothing.