Drools bytecode generates these beans without generating java source code (if you are using the declare, not the data modeller). Having said that, it is very simple:declare Here
location: String @key
endGenerates a java class roughly equivalent to:
public class Here implements Serializable {private String location;public Here() {}public Here( String location ) {this.location = location;}public String getLocation() { return location; }public void setLocation(String location) { this.location = location; }// generates a toString()// generates a hashCode()/equals() method that use the location's hashcode()/equals()}I did this from memory, but it is pretty much all it does. Nothing complex there, just a javabean really.The difference to not using @key is that the hashCode()/equals() methods would not take "location" in consideration, and in this case, since there are no other attributes, would then rely on system identity.Edson
On Wed, Feb 26, 2014 at 2:23 PM, profversaggi <profversaggi@gmail.com> wrote:I was looking for something along the lines of a method of inspecting the
resulting code of any arbitrary @key declarations I might want to deploy. Is
there such a way?
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--Edson Tirelli
Principal Software EngineerRed Hat Business Systems and Intelligence Group
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