JFIF x x C C " } !1AQa "q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w !1AQ aq"2B #3Rbr{
File "RotatingBarcodeValues.php"
Full Path: /home/palsarh/web/palsarh.in/public_html/vendor/google/apiclient-services/src/Walletobjects/RotatingBarcodeValues.php
File size: 3.95 KB
MIME-type: text/x-php
Charset: utf-8
<?php
/*
* Copyright 2014 Google Inc.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
* use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
* the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
* License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
* the License.
*/
namespace Google\Service\Walletobjects;
class RotatingBarcodeValues extends \Google\Collection
{
protected $collection_key = 'values';
/**
* Required. The amount of time each barcode is valid for.
*
* @var string
*/
public $periodMillis;
/**
* Required. The date/time the first barcode is valid from. Barcodes will be
* rotated through using period_millis defined on the object's
* RotatingBarcodeValueInfo. This is an ISO 8601 extended format date/time,
* with an offset. Time may be specified up to nanosecond precision. Offsets
* may be specified with seconds precision (even though offset seconds is not
* part of ISO 8601). For example: `1985-04-12T23:20:50.52Z` would be 20
* minutes and 50.52 seconds after the 23rd hour of April 12th, 1985 in UTC.
* `1985-04-12T19:20:50.52-04:00` would be 20 minutes and 50.52 seconds after
* the 19th hour of April 12th, 1985, 4 hours before UTC (same instant in time
* as the above example). If the event were in New York, this would be the
* equivalent of Eastern Daylight Time (EDT). Remember that offset varies in
* regions that observe Daylight Saving Time (or Summer Time), depending on
* the time of the year.
*
* @var string
*/
public $startDateTime;
/**
* Required. The values to encode in the barcode. At least one value is
* required.
*
* @var string[]
*/
public $values;
/**
* Required. The amount of time each barcode is valid for.
*
* @param string $periodMillis
*/
public function setPeriodMillis($periodMillis)
{
$this->periodMillis = $periodMillis;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function getPeriodMillis()
{
return $this->periodMillis;
}
/**
* Required. The date/time the first barcode is valid from. Barcodes will be
* rotated through using period_millis defined on the object's
* RotatingBarcodeValueInfo. This is an ISO 8601 extended format date/time,
* with an offset. Time may be specified up to nanosecond precision. Offsets
* may be specified with seconds precision (even though offset seconds is not
* part of ISO 8601). For example: `1985-04-12T23:20:50.52Z` would be 20
* minutes and 50.52 seconds after the 23rd hour of April 12th, 1985 in UTC.
* `1985-04-12T19:20:50.52-04:00` would be 20 minutes and 50.52 seconds after
* the 19th hour of April 12th, 1985, 4 hours before UTC (same instant in time
* as the above example). If the event were in New York, this would be the
* equivalent of Eastern Daylight Time (EDT). Remember that offset varies in
* regions that observe Daylight Saving Time (or Summer Time), depending on
* the time of the year.
*
* @param string $startDateTime
*/
public function setStartDateTime($startDateTime)
{
$this->startDateTime = $startDateTime;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function getStartDateTime()
{
return $this->startDateTime;
}
/**
* Required. The values to encode in the barcode. At least one value is
* required.
*
* @param string[] $values
*/
public function setValues($values)
{
$this->values = $values;
}
/**
* @return string[]
*/
public function getValues()
{
return $this->values;
}
}
// Adding a class alias for backwards compatibility with the previous class name.
class_alias(RotatingBarcodeValues::class, 'Google_Service_Walletobjects_RotatingBarcodeValues');