java.lang.Object | ||
↳ | javax.print.attribute.DateTimeSyntax | |
↳ | javax.print.attribute.standard.JobHoldUntil |
Class JobHoldUntil is a printing attribute class, a date-time attribute, that specifies the exact date and time at which the job must become a candidate for printing.
If the value of this attribute specifies a date-time that is in the future,
the printer should add the JobStateReason
value of
JOB_HOLD_UNTIL_SPECIFIED to the job's JobStateReasons
attribute, must move the job to the PENDING_HELD state, and must not schedule
the job for printing until the specified date-time arrives.
When the specified date-time arrives, the printer must remove the JobStateReason
value of JOB_HOLD_UNTIL_SPECIFIED from the
job's JobStateReasons
attribute, if present. If there
are no other job state reasons that keep the job in the PENDING_HELD state,
the printer must consider the job as a candidate for processing by moving the
job to the PENDING state.
If the specified date-time has already passed, the job must be a candidate for processing immediately. Thus, one way to make the job immediately become a candidate for processing is to specify a JobHoldUntil attribute constructed like this (denoting a date-time of January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 GMT):
JobHoldUntil immediately = new JobHoldUntil (new Date (0L));
If the client does not supply this attribute in a Print Request and the printer supports this attribute, the printer must use its (implementation-dependent) default JobHoldUntil value at job submission time (unlike most job template attributes that are used if necessary at job processing time).
To construct a JobHoldUntil attribute from separate values of the year,
month, day, hour, minute, and so on, use a Calendar
object to construct a Date
object, then use
the Date
object to construct the JobHoldUntil
attribute. To convert a JobHoldUntil attribute to separate values of the
year, month, day, hour, minute, and so on, create a Calendar
object and set it to the Date
from the
JobHoldUntil attribute.
IPP Compatibility: Although IPP supports a "job-hold-until" attribute
specified as a keyword, IPP does not at this time support a "job-hold-until"
attribute specified as a date and time. However, the date and time can be
converted to one of the standard IPP keywords with some loss of precision;
for example, a JobHoldUntil value with today's date and 9:00pm local time
might be converted to the standard IPP keyword "night". The category name
returned by getName()
gives the IPP attribute name.
Public Constructors | |||||||||||
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Construct a new job hold until date-time attribute with the given
Date value. |
Public Methods | |||||||||||
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Returns whether this job hold until attribute is equivalent to the
passed in object.
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Get the printing attribute class which is to be used as the "category"
for this printing attribute value.
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Get the name of the category of which this attribute value is an
instance.
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Inherited Methods | |||||||||||
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Construct a new job hold until date-time attribute with the given
Date
value.
dateTime | Date value. |
---|
NullPointerException | (unchecked exception) Thrown if dateTime is null.
|
---|
Returns whether this job hold until attribute is equivalent to the passed in object. To be equivalent, all of the following conditions must be true:
object | Object to compare to. |
---|
object
is equivalent to this job hold
until attribute, false otherwise.
Get the printing attribute class which is to be used as the "category" for this printing attribute value.
For class JobHoldUntil, the category is class JobHoldUntil itself.
java.lang.Class
.
Get the name of the category of which this attribute value is an instance.
For class JobHoldUntil, the category name is "job-hold-until"
.