public final class DateTimeAtCreation extends DateTimeSyntax implements PrintJobAttribute
 To construct a DateTimeAtCreation attribute from separate values of the year,
 month, day, hour, minute, and so on, use a Calendar object to construct a Date object, then use
 the Date object to construct the DateTimeAtCreation
 attribute. To convert a DateTimeAtCreation attribute to separate values of
 the year, month, day, hour, minute, and so on, create a Calendar object and set it to the Date from the DateTimeAtCreation attribute.
 
 IPP Compatibility: The information needed to construct an IPP
 "date-time-at-creation" attribute can be obtained as described above. The
 category name returned by getName() gives the IPP attribute
 name.
 
| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
DateTimeAtCreation(Date dateTime)
Construct a new date-time at creation attribute with the given  
Date value. | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
boolean | 
equals(Object object)
Returns whether this date-time at creation attribute is equivalent to
 the passed in object. 
 | 
Class<? extends Attribute> | 
getCategory()
Get the printing attribute class which is to be used as the "category"
 for this printing attribute value. 
 | 
String | 
getName()
Get the name of the category of which this attribute value is an
 instance. 
 | 
getValue, hashCode, toStringpublic DateTimeAtCreation(Date dateTime)
Date value.dateTime - Date value.NullPointerException - (unchecked exception) Thrown if dateTime is null.public boolean equals(Object object)
equals in class DateTimeSyntaxobject - Object to compare to.object is equivalent to this date-time
          at creation attribute, false otherwise.Object.hashCode(), 
HashMappublic final Class<? extends Attribute> getCategory()
For class DateTimeAtCreation, the category is class DateTimeAtCreation itself.
getCategory in interface Attributejava.lang.Class. Submit a bug or feature 
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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