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Wed, 27 Jul 2005 12:41:56 -0400 |
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On Jul 27, 2005, at 10:57 AM, Steve Butcher (Steve-O) wrote:
> String alphabet = state.parameters.getStringWithDefault
> ( p, "aAbBcCdDeEfFgG");
To be forward-compatable with the next version of ECJ, you should write
String alphabet = state.parameters.getStringWithDefault(
p, null, "aAbBcCdDeEfFgG");
> However, when MyProblem goes to access the alphabet parameter, it's
> going to want to access it as "eval.problem.alphabet", isn't it?
Only if MyProblem specified the parameter name that way, one of:
new Parameter("eval.problem.alphabet");
new Parameter("eval").push("problem").push("alphabet");
base.push("alphabet"); // assuming base passed in was "eval.problem"
> So can I just name the parameter "eval.problem.alphabet" in the 1st
> line
> of resetNode()
Absolutely. In reset() you could write:
new Parameter("eval.problem.alphabet");
Or if you'd like to just use "alphabet" as your parameter, in MyProblem
you can just ignore the base and do:
new Parameter("alphabet");
Keep in mind that the ONLY function of parameter bases is to provide a
way of handling name-spacing. In fact you can specify whatever the
heck parameter names you'd like.
Sean
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