Actually collection types are not harmonized to their interface
counterpart; this was implemented in the first proposal but wasn't
applied in the final review.

See gh-2206
pull/2400/head
Stephane Nicoll 10 years ago
parent 425f989a26
commit 20c8e54c5f

@ -121,12 +121,9 @@ The JSON object contained in the `properties` array can contain the following at
| The class name of the data type of the property. For example, `java.lang.String`. This | The class name of the data type of the property. For example, `java.lang.String`. This
attribute can be used to guide the user as to the types of values that they can enter. attribute can be used to guide the user as to the types of values that they can enter.
For consistency, the type of a primitive is specified using its wrapper counterpart, For consistency, the type of a primitive is specified using its wrapper counterpart,
i.e. `boolean` becomes `java.lang.Boolean`. Collection types are harmonized to their i.e. `boolean` becomes `java.lang.Boolean`. Note that this class may be a complex type
interface counterpart and define the actual generic types, i.e. that gets converted from a String as values are bound. May be omitted if the type is
`java.util.HashMap<java.lang.String,java.lang.Integer>` becomes not known.
`java.util.Map<java.lang.String,java.lang.Integer>`. Note that this class may be a
complex type that gets converted from a String as values are bound. May be omitted if
the type is not known.
|`description` |`description`
| String | String

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