A mapping from a (source) set of XContentIdentifiers to
another (target) set of XContentIdentifiers.
For convenience and performance, mapping between the string
representations of source/target XContentIdentifiers, as well as mapping
between XContents identified by source/target
XContentIdentifiers is also supported.
This interface can be useful in cases where the identifieres (and
associated contents) returned by the various methods of an
XContentAccess need to be mapped to some other space of
identifiers (and associated contents).
The string representation of an XContentIdentifier
from the source set.
Returns
The string representation of the target set's
XContentIdentifier corresponding to the source identifier. The
returned string may be empty if either Source was empty already, or if
there's no applicable target to map to.
The target set's XContentIdentifier corresponding to the
source identifier. The returned XContentIdentifier may be null if
either Source was null already, or if there's no applicable target to
map to.
The XContent identified by an XContentIdentifier from
the source set.
Returns
The XContent identified by the target set's
XContentIdentifier corresponding to the source identifier. The
returned XContent may be null if either Source was null already, or if
there's no applicable target to map to.
Map the content identifiers (or related data) contained in the columns
of a ::com::sun::star::sdbc::XRow.
Parameter Value
On input, a sequence of anys corresponding to the columns
of the XRow (the first column goes into the zeroth position of the
sequence, and so on). On output, the same sequence, but with the
entries mapped as necessary. This is an inout parameter rather than a
comination of in parameter and return value for performance reasons
(assuming that in most cases most elements in the input sequence will
be returned unmodified).
Returns
true if any of the columns contain data that (potentially)
needs mapping (though maybe no mapping occured for the concrete input
data of this call). This information can be useful to decide whether,
for another row, a call to this function is at all necessary.