diff --git a/gson/gson/src/main/java/com/google/gson/Gson.java b/gson/gson/src/main/java/com/google/gson/Gson.java index 3b208336d6e0a033b42b4f8198121689aa39ef77..6c0a999c807a61ec9da0c799628a0f000896340b 100644 --- a/gson/gson/src/main/java/com/google/gson/Gson.java +++ b/gson/gson/src/main/java/com/google/gson/Gson.java @@ -408,7 +408,7 @@ public final class Gson { public GsonBuilder newBuilder() { return new GsonBuilder(this); } - + /** * Returns the field naming strategy used by this Gson instance. * diff --git a/gson/gson/src/main/java/com/google/gson/TypeAdapter.java b/gson/gson/src/main/java/com/google/gson/TypeAdapter.java index 90d330e382a9512dcdfebb6c3500fe03e0eda900..776fc46617f1814e94d46e34dad732b2526ddd38 100644 --- a/gson/gson/src/main/java/com/google/gson/TypeAdapter.java +++ b/gson/gson/src/main/java/com/google/gson/TypeAdapter.java @@ -98,26 +98,7 @@ import java.io.Writer; * * @since 2.1 */ -// non-Javadoc: -// -// <h2>JSON Conversion</h2> -// <p>A type adapter registered with Gson is automatically invoked while serializing -// or deserializing JSON. However, you can also use type adapters directly to serialize -// and deserialize JSON. Here is an example for deserialization: <pre>{@code -// String json = "{'origin':'0,0','points':['1,2','3,4']}"; -// TypeAdapter<Graph> graphAdapter = gson.getAdapter(Graph.class); -// Graph graph = graphAdapter.fromJson(json); -// }</pre> -// And an example for serialization: <pre>{@code -// Graph graph = new Graph(...); -// TypeAdapter<Graph> graphAdapter = gson.getAdapter(Graph.class); -// String json = graphAdapter.toJson(graph); -// }</pre> -// -// <p>Type adapters are <strong>type-specific</strong>. For example, a {@code -// TypeAdapter<Date>} can convert {@code Date} instances to JSON and JSON to -// instances of {@code Date}, but cannot convert any other types. -// + public abstract class TypeAdapter<T> { public TypeAdapter() {}