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author | Allen Byrne <50328838+byrnHDF@users.noreply.github.com> | 2021-11-17 05:13:59 (GMT) |
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committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | 2021-11-17 05:13:59 (GMT) |
commit | b823ddc52636596a886c9cc8424142b7c28a1b29 (patch) | |
tree | 377861e61b68d5c1d6536d1dc7f87ee24a4ca758 /java/src/hdf/hdf5lib/H5.java | |
parent | 28e92647f08aed7b875576ecf552a2204f259e8d (diff) | |
download | hdf5-b823ddc52636596a886c9cc8424142b7c28a1b29.zip hdf5-b823ddc52636596a886c9cc8424142b7c28a1b29.tar.gz hdf5-b823ddc52636596a886c9cc8424142b7c28a1b29.tar.bz2 |
Add javadoc to packages - HDFFV-11285 (#1197)
Diffstat (limited to 'java/src/hdf/hdf5lib/H5.java')
-rw-r--r-- | java/src/hdf/hdf5lib/H5.java | 16 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/java/src/hdf/hdf5lib/H5.java b/java/src/hdf/hdf5lib/H5.java index cfff680..3a485da 100644 --- a/java/src/hdf/hdf5lib/H5.java +++ b/java/src/hdf/hdf5lib/H5.java @@ -64,8 +64,8 @@ import hdf.hdf5lib.structs.H5O_token_t; * This code is the called by Java programs to access the entry points of the HDF5 library. Each routine wraps a single * HDF5 entry point, generally with the arguments and return codes analogous to the C interface. * <p> - * For details of the HDF5 library, see the HDF5 Documentation at: <a - * href="http://hdfgroup.org/HDF5/">http://hdfgroup.org/HDF5/</a> + * For details of the HDF5 library, see the HDF5 Documentation at: + * <a href="http://hdfgroup.org/HDF5/">http://hdfgroup.org/HDF5/</a> * <hr> * <p> * <b>Mapping of arguments for Java</b> @@ -162,8 +162,8 @@ import hdf.hdf5lib.structs.H5O_token_t; * <p> * For Java, this ``ANY'' is a problem, as the type of data must always be declared. Furthermore, multidimensional * arrays are definitely <i>not</i> layed out contiguously in memory. It would be infeasible to declare a separate - * routine for every combination of number type and dimensionality. For that reason, the <a - * href="./hdf.hdf5lib.HDFArray.html"><b>HDFArray</b></a> class is used to discover the type, shape, and size of the + * routine for every combination of number type and dimensionality. For that reason, the + * <a href="./hdf.hdf5lib.HDFArray.html"><b>HDFArray</b></a> class is used to discover the type, shape, and size of the * data array at run time, and to convert to and from a contiguous array of bytes in synchronized static native C order. * <p> * The upshot is that any Java array of numbers (either primitive or sub-classes of type <b>Number</b>) can be passed as @@ -187,8 +187,8 @@ import hdf.hdf5lib.structs.H5O_token_t; * <b><i>H5F_ACC_RDWR</i></b> and <b><i>H5P_DEFAULT</i></b>. * <p> * The HDF-5 API defines a set of values that describe number types and sizes, such as "H5T_NATIVE_INT" and "hsize_t". - * These values are determined at run time by the HDF-5 C library. To support these parameters, the Java class <a - * href="./hdf.hdf5lib.HDF5CDataTypes.html"> <b>HDF5CDataTypes</b></a> looks up the values when initiated. The values + * These values are determined at run time by the HDF-5 C library. To support these parameters, the Java class + * <a href="./hdf.hdf5lib.HDF5CDataTypes.html"> <b>HDF5CDataTypes</b></a> looks up the values when initiated. The values * can be accessed as public variables of the Java class, such as: * * <pre> @@ -204,8 +204,8 @@ import hdf.hdf5lib.structs.H5O_token_t; * JHI5. Errors are converted into Java exceptions. This is totally different from the C interface, but is very natural * for Java programming. * <p> - * The exceptions of the JHI5 are organized as sub-classes of the class <a - * href="./hdf.hdf5lib.exceptions.HDF5Exception.html"> <b>HDF5Exception</b></a>. There are two subclasses of + * The exceptions of the JHI5 are organized as sub-classes of the class + * <a href="./hdf.hdf5lib.exceptions.HDF5Exception.html"> <b>HDF5Exception</b></a>. There are two subclasses of * <b>HDF5Exception</b>, <a href="./hdf.hdf5lib.exceptions.HDF5LibraryException.html"> <b>HDF5LibraryException</b></a> * and <a href="./hdf.hdf5lib.exceptions.HDF5JavaException.html"> <b>HDF5JavaException</b></a>. The sub-classes of the * former represent errors from the HDF-5 C library, while sub-classes of the latter represent errors in the JHI5 |