net.sourceforge.pmd
Enum RulePriority

java.lang.Object
  extended by java.lang.Enum<RulePriority>
      extended by net.sourceforge.pmd.RulePriority
All Implemented Interfaces:
Serializable, Comparable<RulePriority>

public enum RulePriority
extends Enum<RulePriority>

These are the possible Rule priority values. For backward compatibility, priorities range in value from 1 to 5, with 5 being the lowest priority. This means the ordinal value of the Enum should be avoided in favor of getPriority() and valueOf(int)

See Also:
How to define rules priority

Enum Constant Summary
HIGH
          High: Change absolutely required.
LOW
          Low: Change highly optional.
MEDIUM
          Medium: Change recommended.
MEDIUM_HIGH
          Medium to high: Change highly recommended.
MEDIUM_LOW
          Medium to low: Change optional.
 
Method Summary
 String getName()
          Get the descriptive name of this priority.
 int getPriority()
          Get the priority value as a number.
 String toString()
          Returns the descriptive name of the priority.
static RulePriority valueOf(int priority)
          Get the priority which corresponds to the given number as returned by getPriority().
static RulePriority valueOf(String name)
          Returns the enum constant of this type with the specified name.
static RulePriority[] values()
          Returns an array containing the constants of this enum type, in the order they are declared.
 
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Enum
clone, compareTo, equals, finalize, getDeclaringClass, hashCode, name, ordinal, valueOf
 
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object
getClass, notify, notifyAll, wait, wait, wait
 

Enum Constant Detail

HIGH

public static final RulePriority HIGH
High: Change absolutely required. Behavior is critically broken/buggy


MEDIUM_HIGH

public static final RulePriority MEDIUM_HIGH
Medium to high: Change highly recommended. Behavior is quite likely to be broken/buggy.


MEDIUM

public static final RulePriority MEDIUM
Medium: Change recommended. Behavior is confusing, perhaps buggy, and/or against standards/best practices.


MEDIUM_LOW

public static final RulePriority MEDIUM_LOW
Medium to low: Change optional. Behavior is not likely to be buggy, but more just flies in the face of standards/style/good taste.


LOW

public static final RulePriority LOW
Low: Change highly optional. Nice to have, such as a consistent naming policy for package/class/fields...

Method Detail

values

public static RulePriority[] values()
Returns an array containing the constants of this enum type, in the order they are declared. This method may be used to iterate over the constants as follows:
for (RulePriority c : RulePriority.values())
    System.out.println(c);

Returns:
an array containing the constants of this enum type, in the order they are declared

valueOf

public static RulePriority valueOf(String name)
Returns the enum constant of this type with the specified name. The string must match exactly an identifier used to declare an enum constant in this type. (Extraneous whitespace characters are not permitted.)

Parameters:
name - the name of the enum constant to be returned.
Returns:
the enum constant with the specified name
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if this enum type has no constant with the specified name
NullPointerException - if the argument is null

getPriority

public int getPriority()
Get the priority value as a number. This is the value to be used in the externalized form of a priority (e.g. in RuleSet XML).

Returns:
The int value of the priority.

getName

public String getName()
Get the descriptive name of this priority.

Returns:
The descriptive name.

toString

public String toString()
Returns the descriptive name of the priority.

Overrides:
toString in class Enum<RulePriority>
Returns:
descriptive name of the priority
See Also:
getName()

valueOf

public static RulePriority valueOf(int priority)
Get the priority which corresponds to the given number as returned by getPriority(). If the number is an invalid value, then LOW will be returned.

Parameters:
priority - The numeric priority value.
Returns:
The priority.


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