Class PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder (3.19.4)

public static final class PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder extends GeneratedMessageV3.Builder<PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder> implements PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.FileOrBuilder

Represents a single generated file.

Protobuf type google.protobuf.compiler.CodeGeneratorResponse.File

Static Methods

getDescriptor()

public static final Descriptors.Descriptor getDescriptor()
Returns
TypeDescription
Descriptors.Descriptor

Methods

addRepeatedField(Descriptors.FieldDescriptor field, Object value)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder addRepeatedField(Descriptors.FieldDescriptor field, Object value)
Parameters
NameDescription
fieldDescriptors.FieldDescriptor
valueObject
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder
Overrides

build()

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File build()
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File

buildPartial()

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File buildPartial()
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File

clear()

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder clear()

Called by the initialization and clear code paths to allow subclasses to reset any of their builtin fields back to the initial values.

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder
Overrides

clearContent()

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder clearContent()

The file contents.

optional string content = 15;

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

This builder for chaining.

clearField(Descriptors.FieldDescriptor field)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder clearField(Descriptors.FieldDescriptor field)
Parameter
NameDescription
fieldDescriptors.FieldDescriptor
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder
Overrides

clearGeneratedCodeInfo()

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder clearGeneratedCodeInfo()

Information describing the file content being inserted. If an insertion point is used, this information will be appropriately offset and inserted into the code generation metadata for the generated files.

optional .google.protobuf.GeneratedCodeInfo generated_code_info = 16;

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

clearInsertionPoint()

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder clearInsertionPoint()

If non-empty, indicates that the named file should already exist, and the content here is to be inserted into that file at a defined insertion point. This feature allows a code generator to extend the output produced by another code generator. The original generator may provide insertion points by placing special annotations in the file that look like: @@protoc_insertion_point(NAME) The annotation can have arbitrary text before and after it on the line, which allows it to be placed in a comment. NAME should be replaced with an identifier naming the point -- this is what other generators will use as the insertion_point. Code inserted at this point will be placed immediately above the line containing the insertion point (thus multiple insertions to the same point will come out in the order they were added). The double-@ is intended to make it unlikely that the generated code could contain things that look like insertion points by accident. For example, the C++ code generator places the following line in the .pb.h files that it generates: // @@protoc_insertion_point(namespace_scope) This line appears within the scope of the file's package namespace, but outside of any particular class. Another plugin can then specify the insertion_point "namespace_scope" to generate additional classes or other declarations that should be placed in this scope. Note that if the line containing the insertion point begins with whitespace, the same whitespace will be added to every line of the inserted text. This is useful for languages like Python, where indentation matters. In these languages, the insertion point comment should be indented the same amount as any inserted code will need to be in order to work correctly in that context. The code generator that generates the initial file and the one which inserts into it must both run as part of a single invocation of protoc. Code generators are executed in the order in which they appear on the command line. If |insertion_point| is present, |name| must also be present.

optional string insertion_point = 2;

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

This builder for chaining.

clearName()

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder clearName()

The file name, relative to the output directory. The name must not contain "." or ".." components and must be relative, not be absolute (so, the file cannot lie outside the output directory). "/" must be used as the path separator, not "\". If the name is omitted, the content will be appended to the previous file. This allows the generator to break large files into small chunks, and allows the generated text to be streamed back to protoc so that large files need not reside completely in memory at one time. Note that as of this writing protoc does not optimize for this -- it will read the entire CodeGeneratorResponse before writing files to disk.

optional string name = 1;

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

This builder for chaining.

clearOneof(Descriptors.OneofDescriptor oneof)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder clearOneof(Descriptors.OneofDescriptor oneof)

TODO(jieluo): Clear it when all subclasses have implemented this method.

Parameter
NameDescription
oneofDescriptors.OneofDescriptor
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder
Overrides

clone()

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder clone()

Clones the Builder.

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder
Overrides

getContent()

public String getContent()

The file contents.

optional string content = 15;

Returns
TypeDescription
String

The content.

getContentBytes()

public ByteString getContentBytes()

The file contents.

optional string content = 15;

Returns
TypeDescription
ByteString

The bytes for content.

getDefaultInstanceForType()

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File getDefaultInstanceForType()

Get an instance of the type with no fields set. Because no fields are set, all getters for singular fields will return default values and repeated fields will appear empty. This may or may not be a singleton. This differs from the getDefaultInstance() method of generated message classes in that this method is an abstract method of the MessageLite interface whereas getDefaultInstance() is a static method of a specific class. They return the same thing.

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File

getDescriptorForType()

public Descriptors.Descriptor getDescriptorForType()

Get the message's type's descriptor. This differs from the getDescriptor() method of generated message classes in that this method is an abstract method of the Message interface whereas getDescriptor() is a static method of a specific class. They return the same thing.

Returns
TypeDescription
Descriptors.Descriptor
Overrides

getGeneratedCodeInfo()

public DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo getGeneratedCodeInfo()

Information describing the file content being inserted. If an insertion point is used, this information will be appropriately offset and inserted into the code generation metadata for the generated files.

optional .google.protobuf.GeneratedCodeInfo generated_code_info = 16;

Returns
TypeDescription
DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo

The generatedCodeInfo.

getGeneratedCodeInfoBuilder()

public DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo.Builder getGeneratedCodeInfoBuilder()

Information describing the file content being inserted. If an insertion point is used, this information will be appropriately offset and inserted into the code generation metadata for the generated files.

optional .google.protobuf.GeneratedCodeInfo generated_code_info = 16;

Returns
TypeDescription
DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo.Builder

getGeneratedCodeInfoOrBuilder()

public DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfoOrBuilder getGeneratedCodeInfoOrBuilder()

Information describing the file content being inserted. If an insertion point is used, this information will be appropriately offset and inserted into the code generation metadata for the generated files.

optional .google.protobuf.GeneratedCodeInfo generated_code_info = 16;

Returns
TypeDescription
DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfoOrBuilder

getInsertionPoint()

public String getInsertionPoint()

If non-empty, indicates that the named file should already exist, and the content here is to be inserted into that file at a defined insertion point. This feature allows a code generator to extend the output produced by another code generator. The original generator may provide insertion points by placing special annotations in the file that look like: @@protoc_insertion_point(NAME) The annotation can have arbitrary text before and after it on the line, which allows it to be placed in a comment. NAME should be replaced with an identifier naming the point -- this is what other generators will use as the insertion_point. Code inserted at this point will be placed immediately above the line containing the insertion point (thus multiple insertions to the same point will come out in the order they were added). The double-@ is intended to make it unlikely that the generated code could contain things that look like insertion points by accident. For example, the C++ code generator places the following line in the .pb.h files that it generates: // @@protoc_insertion_point(namespace_scope) This line appears within the scope of the file's package namespace, but outside of any particular class. Another plugin can then specify the insertion_point "namespace_scope" to generate additional classes or other declarations that should be placed in this scope. Note that if the line containing the insertion point begins with whitespace, the same whitespace will be added to every line of the inserted text. This is useful for languages like Python, where indentation matters. In these languages, the insertion point comment should be indented the same amount as any inserted code will need to be in order to work correctly in that context. The code generator that generates the initial file and the one which inserts into it must both run as part of a single invocation of protoc. Code generators are executed in the order in which they appear on the command line. If |insertion_point| is present, |name| must also be present.

optional string insertion_point = 2;

Returns
TypeDescription
String

The insertionPoint.

getInsertionPointBytes()

public ByteString getInsertionPointBytes()

If non-empty, indicates that the named file should already exist, and the content here is to be inserted into that file at a defined insertion point. This feature allows a code generator to extend the output produced by another code generator. The original generator may provide insertion points by placing special annotations in the file that look like: @@protoc_insertion_point(NAME) The annotation can have arbitrary text before and after it on the line, which allows it to be placed in a comment. NAME should be replaced with an identifier naming the point -- this is what other generators will use as the insertion_point. Code inserted at this point will be placed immediately above the line containing the insertion point (thus multiple insertions to the same point will come out in the order they were added). The double-@ is intended to make it unlikely that the generated code could contain things that look like insertion points by accident. For example, the C++ code generator places the following line in the .pb.h files that it generates: // @@protoc_insertion_point(namespace_scope) This line appears within the scope of the file's package namespace, but outside of any particular class. Another plugin can then specify the insertion_point "namespace_scope" to generate additional classes or other declarations that should be placed in this scope. Note that if the line containing the insertion point begins with whitespace, the same whitespace will be added to every line of the inserted text. This is useful for languages like Python, where indentation matters. In these languages, the insertion point comment should be indented the same amount as any inserted code will need to be in order to work correctly in that context. The code generator that generates the initial file and the one which inserts into it must both run as part of a single invocation of protoc. Code generators are executed in the order in which they appear on the command line. If |insertion_point| is present, |name| must also be present.

optional string insertion_point = 2;

Returns
TypeDescription
ByteString

The bytes for insertionPoint.

getName()

public String getName()

The file name, relative to the output directory. The name must not contain "." or ".." components and must be relative, not be absolute (so, the file cannot lie outside the output directory). "/" must be used as the path separator, not "\". If the name is omitted, the content will be appended to the previous file. This allows the generator to break large files into small chunks, and allows the generated text to be streamed back to protoc so that large files need not reside completely in memory at one time. Note that as of this writing protoc does not optimize for this -- it will read the entire CodeGeneratorResponse before writing files to disk.

optional string name = 1;

Returns
TypeDescription
String

The name.

getNameBytes()

public ByteString getNameBytes()

The file name, relative to the output directory. The name must not contain "." or ".." components and must be relative, not be absolute (so, the file cannot lie outside the output directory). "/" must be used as the path separator, not "\". If the name is omitted, the content will be appended to the previous file. This allows the generator to break large files into small chunks, and allows the generated text to be streamed back to protoc so that large files need not reside completely in memory at one time. Note that as of this writing protoc does not optimize for this -- it will read the entire CodeGeneratorResponse before writing files to disk.

optional string name = 1;

Returns
TypeDescription
ByteString

The bytes for name.

hasContent()

public boolean hasContent()

The file contents.

optional string content = 15;

Returns
TypeDescription
boolean

Whether the content field is set.

hasGeneratedCodeInfo()

public boolean hasGeneratedCodeInfo()

Information describing the file content being inserted. If an insertion point is used, this information will be appropriately offset and inserted into the code generation metadata for the generated files.

optional .google.protobuf.GeneratedCodeInfo generated_code_info = 16;

Returns
TypeDescription
boolean

Whether the generatedCodeInfo field is set.

hasInsertionPoint()

public boolean hasInsertionPoint()

If non-empty, indicates that the named file should already exist, and the content here is to be inserted into that file at a defined insertion point. This feature allows a code generator to extend the output produced by another code generator. The original generator may provide insertion points by placing special annotations in the file that look like: @@protoc_insertion_point(NAME) The annotation can have arbitrary text before and after it on the line, which allows it to be placed in a comment. NAME should be replaced with an identifier naming the point -- this is what other generators will use as the insertion_point. Code inserted at this point will be placed immediately above the line containing the insertion point (thus multiple insertions to the same point will come out in the order they were added). The double-@ is intended to make it unlikely that the generated code could contain things that look like insertion points by accident. For example, the C++ code generator places the following line in the .pb.h files that it generates: // @@protoc_insertion_point(namespace_scope) This line appears within the scope of the file's package namespace, but outside of any particular class. Another plugin can then specify the insertion_point "namespace_scope" to generate additional classes or other declarations that should be placed in this scope. Note that if the line containing the insertion point begins with whitespace, the same whitespace will be added to every line of the inserted text. This is useful for languages like Python, where indentation matters. In these languages, the insertion point comment should be indented the same amount as any inserted code will need to be in order to work correctly in that context. The code generator that generates the initial file and the one which inserts into it must both run as part of a single invocation of protoc. Code generators are executed in the order in which they appear on the command line. If |insertion_point| is present, |name| must also be present.

optional string insertion_point = 2;

Returns
TypeDescription
boolean

Whether the insertionPoint field is set.

hasName()

public boolean hasName()

The file name, relative to the output directory. The name must not contain "." or ".." components and must be relative, not be absolute (so, the file cannot lie outside the output directory). "/" must be used as the path separator, not "\". If the name is omitted, the content will be appended to the previous file. This allows the generator to break large files into small chunks, and allows the generated text to be streamed back to protoc so that large files need not reside completely in memory at one time. Note that as of this writing protoc does not optimize for this -- it will read the entire CodeGeneratorResponse before writing files to disk.

optional string name = 1;

Returns
TypeDescription
boolean

Whether the name field is set.

internalGetFieldAccessorTable()

protected GeneratedMessageV3.FieldAccessorTable internalGetFieldAccessorTable()

Get the FieldAccessorTable for this type. We can't have the message class pass this in to the constructor because of bootstrapping trouble with DescriptorProtos.

Returns
TypeDescription
GeneratedMessageV3.FieldAccessorTable
Overrides

isInitialized()

public final boolean isInitialized()

Returns true if all required fields in the message and all embedded messages are set, false otherwise.

See also: MessageOrBuilder#getInitializationErrorString()

Returns
TypeDescription
boolean
Overrides

mergeFrom(CodedInputStream input, ExtensionRegistryLite extensionRegistry)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder mergeFrom(CodedInputStream input, ExtensionRegistryLite extensionRegistry)

Like Builder#mergeFrom(CodedInputStream), but also parses extensions. The extensions that you want to be able to parse must be registered in extensionRegistry. Extensions not in the registry will be treated as unknown fields.

Parameters
NameDescription
inputCodedInputStream
extensionRegistryExtensionRegistryLite
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder
Overrides
Exceptions
TypeDescription
IOException

mergeFrom(Message other)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder mergeFrom(Message other)

Merge other into the message being built. other must have the exact same type as this (i.e. getDescriptorForType() == other.getDescriptorForType()).

Merging occurs as follows. For each field:

  • For singular primitive fields, if the field is set in other, then other's value overwrites the value in this message.
  • For singular message fields, if the field is set in other, it is merged into the corresponding sub-message of this message using the same merging rules.
  • For repeated fields, the elements in other are concatenated with the elements in this message.
  • For oneof groups, if the other message has one of the fields set, the group of this message is cleared and replaced by the field of the other message, so that the oneof constraint is preserved.

    This is equivalent to the Message::MergeFrom method in C++.

Parameter
NameDescription
otherMessage
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder
Overrides

mergeFrom(PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File other)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder mergeFrom(PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File other)
Parameter
NameDescription
otherPluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

mergeGeneratedCodeInfo(DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo value)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder mergeGeneratedCodeInfo(DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo value)

Information describing the file content being inserted. If an insertion point is used, this information will be appropriately offset and inserted into the code generation metadata for the generated files.

optional .google.protobuf.GeneratedCodeInfo generated_code_info = 16;

Parameter
NameDescription
valueDescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

mergeUnknownFields(UnknownFieldSet unknownFields)

public final PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder mergeUnknownFields(UnknownFieldSet unknownFields)

Merge some unknown fields into the UnknownFieldSet for this message.

Parameter
NameDescription
unknownFieldsUnknownFieldSet
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder
Overrides

setContent(String value)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder setContent(String value)

The file contents.

optional string content = 15;

Parameter
NameDescription
valueString

The content to set.

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

This builder for chaining.

setContentBytes(ByteString value)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder setContentBytes(ByteString value)

The file contents.

optional string content = 15;

Parameter
NameDescription
valueByteString

The bytes for content to set.

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

This builder for chaining.

setField(Descriptors.FieldDescriptor field, Object value)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder setField(Descriptors.FieldDescriptor field, Object value)
Parameters
NameDescription
fieldDescriptors.FieldDescriptor
valueObject
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder
Overrides

setGeneratedCodeInfo(DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo value)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder setGeneratedCodeInfo(DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo value)

Information describing the file content being inserted. If an insertion point is used, this information will be appropriately offset and inserted into the code generation metadata for the generated files.

optional .google.protobuf.GeneratedCodeInfo generated_code_info = 16;

Parameter
NameDescription
valueDescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

setGeneratedCodeInfo(DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo.Builder builderForValue)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder setGeneratedCodeInfo(DescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo.Builder builderForValue)

Information describing the file content being inserted. If an insertion point is used, this information will be appropriately offset and inserted into the code generation metadata for the generated files.

optional .google.protobuf.GeneratedCodeInfo generated_code_info = 16;

Parameter
NameDescription
builderForValueDescriptorProtos.GeneratedCodeInfo.Builder
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

setInsertionPoint(String value)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder setInsertionPoint(String value)

If non-empty, indicates that the named file should already exist, and the content here is to be inserted into that file at a defined insertion point. This feature allows a code generator to extend the output produced by another code generator. The original generator may provide insertion points by placing special annotations in the file that look like: @@protoc_insertion_point(NAME) The annotation can have arbitrary text before and after it on the line, which allows it to be placed in a comment. NAME should be replaced with an identifier naming the point -- this is what other generators will use as the insertion_point. Code inserted at this point will be placed immediately above the line containing the insertion point (thus multiple insertions to the same point will come out in the order they were added). The double-@ is intended to make it unlikely that the generated code could contain things that look like insertion points by accident. For example, the C++ code generator places the following line in the .pb.h files that it generates: // @@protoc_insertion_point(namespace_scope) This line appears within the scope of the file's package namespace, but outside of any particular class. Another plugin can then specify the insertion_point "namespace_scope" to generate additional classes or other declarations that should be placed in this scope. Note that if the line containing the insertion point begins with whitespace, the same whitespace will be added to every line of the inserted text. This is useful for languages like Python, where indentation matters. In these languages, the insertion point comment should be indented the same amount as any inserted code will need to be in order to work correctly in that context. The code generator that generates the initial file and the one which inserts into it must both run as part of a single invocation of protoc. Code generators are executed in the order in which they appear on the command line. If |insertion_point| is present, |name| must also be present.

optional string insertion_point = 2;

Parameter
NameDescription
valueString

The insertionPoint to set.

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

This builder for chaining.

setInsertionPointBytes(ByteString value)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder setInsertionPointBytes(ByteString value)

If non-empty, indicates that the named file should already exist, and the content here is to be inserted into that file at a defined insertion point. This feature allows a code generator to extend the output produced by another code generator. The original generator may provide insertion points by placing special annotations in the file that look like: @@protoc_insertion_point(NAME) The annotation can have arbitrary text before and after it on the line, which allows it to be placed in a comment. NAME should be replaced with an identifier naming the point -- this is what other generators will use as the insertion_point. Code inserted at this point will be placed immediately above the line containing the insertion point (thus multiple insertions to the same point will come out in the order they were added). The double-@ is intended to make it unlikely that the generated code could contain things that look like insertion points by accident. For example, the C++ code generator places the following line in the .pb.h files that it generates: // @@protoc_insertion_point(namespace_scope) This line appears within the scope of the file's package namespace, but outside of any particular class. Another plugin can then specify the insertion_point "namespace_scope" to generate additional classes or other declarations that should be placed in this scope. Note that if the line containing the insertion point begins with whitespace, the same whitespace will be added to every line of the inserted text. This is useful for languages like Python, where indentation matters. In these languages, the insertion point comment should be indented the same amount as any inserted code will need to be in order to work correctly in that context. The code generator that generates the initial file and the one which inserts into it must both run as part of a single invocation of protoc. Code generators are executed in the order in which they appear on the command line. If |insertion_point| is present, |name| must also be present.

optional string insertion_point = 2;

Parameter
NameDescription
valueByteString

The bytes for insertionPoint to set.

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

This builder for chaining.

setName(String value)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder setName(String value)

The file name, relative to the output directory. The name must not contain "." or ".." components and must be relative, not be absolute (so, the file cannot lie outside the output directory). "/" must be used as the path separator, not "\". If the name is omitted, the content will be appended to the previous file. This allows the generator to break large files into small chunks, and allows the generated text to be streamed back to protoc so that large files need not reside completely in memory at one time. Note that as of this writing protoc does not optimize for this -- it will read the entire CodeGeneratorResponse before writing files to disk.

optional string name = 1;

Parameter
NameDescription
valueString

The name to set.

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

This builder for chaining.

setNameBytes(ByteString value)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder setNameBytes(ByteString value)

The file name, relative to the output directory. The name must not contain "." or ".." components and must be relative, not be absolute (so, the file cannot lie outside the output directory). "/" must be used as the path separator, not "\". If the name is omitted, the content will be appended to the previous file. This allows the generator to break large files into small chunks, and allows the generated text to be streamed back to protoc so that large files need not reside completely in memory at one time. Note that as of this writing protoc does not optimize for this -- it will read the entire CodeGeneratorResponse before writing files to disk.

optional string name = 1;

Parameter
NameDescription
valueByteString

The bytes for name to set.

Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder

This builder for chaining.

setRepeatedField(Descriptors.FieldDescriptor field, int index, Object value)

public PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder setRepeatedField(Descriptors.FieldDescriptor field, int index, Object value)
Parameters
NameDescription
fieldDescriptors.FieldDescriptor
indexint
valueObject
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder
Overrides

setUnknownFields(UnknownFieldSet unknownFields)

public final PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder setUnknownFields(UnknownFieldSet unknownFields)
Parameter
NameDescription
unknownFieldsUnknownFieldSet
Returns
TypeDescription
PluginProtos.CodeGeneratorResponse.File.Builder
Overrides