public class ZendriveEvent.SpeedingInfo
extends java.lang.Object
| Modifier and Type | Field and Description |
|---|---|
double |
avgSpeed
The average speed in meters per second that the driver drove at during this speeding event.
|
double |
maxSpeed
The max speed in meters per second that the driver drove at during this speeding event.
|
double |
speedLimit
Speed limit where the speeding event is reported in meters per second.
|
| Constructor and Description |
|---|
SpeedingInfo()
Default constructor.
|
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
boolean |
equals(java.lang.Object o)
Compares this instance with the specified object and indicates if they
are equal.
|
int |
hashCode()
Returns an integer hash code for this object.
|
public double speedLimit
public double maxSpeed
public double avgSpeed
public boolean equals(java.lang.Object o)
java.lang.Objecto must represent the same object
as this instance using a class-specific comparison. The general contract
is that this comparison should be reflexive, symmetric, and transitive.
Also, no object reference other than null is equal to null.
The default implementation returns true only if this ==
o. See Writing a correct
equals method
if you intend implementing your own equals method.
The general contract for the equals and Object.hashCode() methods is that if equals returns true for
any two objects, then hashCode() must return the same value for
these objects. This means that subclasses of Object usually
override either both methods or neither of them.
equals in class java.lang.Objecto - the object to compare this instance with.true if the specified object is equal to this Object; false otherwise.Object.hashCode()public int hashCode()
java.lang.ObjectObject.equals(java.lang.Object) returns true must return
the same hash code value. This means that subclasses of Object
usually override both methods or neither method.
Note that hash values must not change over time unless information used in equals comparisons also changes.
See Writing a correct
hashCode method
if you intend implementing your own hashCode method.
hashCode in class java.lang.ObjectObject.equals(java.lang.Object)