ParseApplication/ExternalLibs/Parse-SDK-Android/Parse/src/main/java/com/parse/DeleteCallback.java

45 lines
1.5 KiB
Java

/*
* Copyright (c) 2015-present, Parse, LLC.
* All rights reserved.
*
* This source code is licensed under the BSD-style license found in the
* LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree. An additional grant
* of patent rights can be found in the PATENTS file in the same directory.
*/
package com.parse;
/**
* A {@code DeleteCallback} is used to run code after saving a {@link ParseObject} in a background
* thread.
* <p/>
* The easiest way to use a {@code DeleteCallback} is through an anonymous inner class. Override the
* {@code done} function to specify what the callback should do after the delete is complete.
* The {@code done} function will be run in the UI thread, while the delete happens in a
* background thread. This ensures that the UI does not freeze while the delete happens.
* <p/>
* For example, this sample code deletes the object {@code myObject} and calls a different
* function depending on whether the save succeeded or not.
* <p/>
* <pre>
* myObject.deleteInBackground(new DeleteCallback() {
* public void done(ParseException e) {
* if (e == null) {
* myObjectWasDeletedSuccessfully();
* } else {
* myObjectDeleteDidNotSucceed();
* }
* }
* });
* </pre>
*/
public interface DeleteCallback extends ParseCallback1<ParseException> {
/**
* Override this function with the code you want to run after the delete is complete.
*
* @param e
* The exception raised by the delete, or {@code null} if it succeeded.
*/
@Override
void done(ParseException e);
}