These are the preferred way to get instances of Boolean, Byte,
Short, Character, Integer, Long, Float, and Double object.
It's always made sense for Boolean objects, and with 1.5 these factory
methods were blessed as the proper way to get instances unless one
absolutely needed a distinct object.
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- OccupantInfo is created by the BodyObject
- the BodyObject is passed to the OI constructor and it uses information
therefrom to configure itself
- the PlaceManager are no longer responsible for indicating the type of
OccupantInfo to use or how to populate it.
This makes much more sense as the same type of OccupantInfo is generally used
across the entire system and it's annoying to have to have every PlaceMaanger
derived class know the type of OccupantInfo to create and know how to
initialize it. The one drawback is that only information from the BodyObject
can be used to populate the OccupantInfo, unpublished server-side only
information cannot be used (unless its stuffed into a transient field in the
BodyObject).
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as their authentication name (which we leave in BodyObject.username). This
turns out to be simpler than the system we adopted for Yohoho wherein we
replace the player's user object after they select a character, but converting
to this sort of system is way more work than would be worth it.
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CommunicationAuthorizer and rolled that into the BodyObject-based
permissions system. A victory for consolidation and elegance.
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more discipline when handling names in our code base. Any user entered
name should find its way into a Name object as soon as it comes out of a
text field or whatnot, and stay that way until it makes its way into a
text field or into a database record (for which String objects are vastly
simpler because of JORA magic).
Dear God, let me never again make a change this large for the rest of my
mortal life.
Unfortunately, this means we have to keep an eye out for funny business
pretty much everywhere. However, since we will absolutely want to test
market stalls and so forth on Azure, we'll have an opportunity to iron out
any funny business that might fall under the radar during our internal
testing.
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that indicates the time at which their status became what it is.
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method invocation services and converted everything to the new style.
Could this be my biggest checkin ever?
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*always* set immediately because after some deliberation, we decided that
doing that led to less unexpectedly annoying behavior than having to wait
for the event to propagate to see the new value.
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checked in their generated counterparts (which we want available for
javadoc-type stuff and so that we don't have to see CVS claim no knowledge
of them for the rest of time).
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