Interface TriPredicate<T,​U,​V>

All Superinterfaces:
Serializable
Functional Interface:
This is a functional interface and can therefore be used as the assignment target for a lambda expression or method reference.

@FunctionalInterface
public interface TriPredicate<T,​U,​V>
extends Serializable
Represents a predicate which accepts three arguments. This is the three-arity specialization of Predicate.
Since:
3.0
  • Method Summary

    Modifier and Type Method Description
    default TriPredicate<T,​U,​V> and​(TriPredicate<? super T,​? super U,​? super V> other)
    Returns a composite predicate which evaluates the equivalent of this.test(t, u, v) && other.test(t, u, v).
    default TriPredicate<T,​U,​V> negate()
    Returns a composite predicate which evaluates the equivalent of !this.test(t, u, v).
    default TriPredicate<T,​U,​V> or​(TriPredicate<? super T,​? super U,​? super V> other)
    Returns a composite predicate which evaluates the equivalent of this.test(t, u, v) || other.test(t, u, v).
    default boolean test​(T t, U u, V v)
    Evaluates this predicate with the given arguments.
    boolean testEx​(T t, U u, V v)
    Exception-declaring version of test(T, U, V).
  • Method Details

    • testEx

      boolean testEx​(T t, U u, V v) throws Exception
      Exception-declaring version of test(T, U, V).
      Throws:
      Exception
    • test

      default boolean test​(T t, U u, V v)
      Evaluates this predicate with the given arguments.
      Parameters:
      t - the first argument
      u - the second argument
      v - the third argument
      Returns:
      true if predicate evaluated to true, false otherwise
    • and

      default TriPredicate<T,​U,​V> and​(@Nonnull TriPredicate<? super T,​? super U,​? super V> other)
      Returns a composite predicate which evaluates the equivalent of this.test(t, u, v) && other.test(t, u, v).
    • negate

      default TriPredicate<T,​U,​V> negate()
      Returns a composite predicate which evaluates the equivalent of !this.test(t, u, v).
    • or

      default TriPredicate<T,​U,​V> or​(@Nonnull TriPredicate<? super T,​? super U,​? super V> other)
      Returns a composite predicate which evaluates the equivalent of this.test(t, u, v) || other.test(t, u, v).