| Methods |
public __construct( $data = NULL) - param array $data { Optional. Data for populating the Message object.
@type \Google\Protobuf\Internal\SourceCodeInfo\Location[] $location 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 descendant. 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. }
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| public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::__debugInfo() |
| public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::byteSize() |
public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::clear() Clear all containing fields. |
public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::discardUnknownFields() Clear all unknown fields previously parsed. |
public getLocation() 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 descendant. 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.
Generated from protobuf field repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1; - return \RepeatedField<\Google\Protobuf\Internal\SourceCodeInfo\Location>
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| public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::jsonByteSize( $options = 0) |
public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::mergeFrom( $msg) Merges the contents of the specified message into current message. This method merges the contents of the specified message into the current message. Singular fields that are set in the specified message overwrite the corresponding fields in the current message. Repeated fields are appended. Map fields key-value pairs are overwritten. Singular/Oneof sub-messages are recursively merged. All overwritten sub-messages are deep-copied. - param object $msg Protobuf message to be merged from.
- return null
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public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::mergeFromJsonString( $data, $ignore_unknown = false) Parses a json string to protobuf message. This function takes a string in the json wire format, matching the encoding output by serializeToJsonString(). See mergeFrom() for merging behavior, if the field is already set in the specified message. - param string $data Json protobuf data.
- param bool $ignore_unknown
- return null
- throws \Exception Invalid data.
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public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::mergeFromString( $data) Parses a protocol buffer contained in a string. This function takes a string in the (non-human-readable) binary wire format, matching the encoding output by serializeToString(). See mergeFrom() for merging behavior, if the field is already set in the specified message. - param string $data Binary protobuf data.
- return null
- throws \Exception Invalid data.
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| public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::parseFromJsonStream( $input, $ignore_unknown) |
| public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::parseFromStream( $input) |
| public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::serializeToJsonStream( $output) |
public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::serializeToJsonString( $options = 0) Serialize the message to json string. - return string Serialized json protobuf data.
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| public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::serializeToStream( $output) |
public Google\Protobuf\Internal\Message::serializeToString() Serialize the message to string. - return string Serialized binary protobuf data.
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public setLocation( $var) 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 descendant. 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.
Generated from protobuf field repeated .google.protobuf.SourceCodeInfo.Location location = 1; - param \Google\Protobuf\Internal\SourceCodeInfo\Location[] $var
- return $this
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