-
```
Currently if you want your users to fill your lists, you just create an
interface:
public interface ListFiller {
public void fillList(List builder);
}
Then you use it like this:
Lis…
-
```
Currently if you want your users to fill your lists, you just create an
interface:
public interface ListFiller {
public void fillList(List builder);
}
Then you use it like this:
Lis…
-
```
Currently if you want your users to fill your lists, you just create an
interface:
public interface ListFiller {
public void fillList(List builder);
}
Then you use it like this:
Lis…
-
```
Currently if you want your users to fill your lists, you just create an
interface:
public interface ListFiller {
public void fillList(List builder);
}
Then you use it like this:
Lis…
-
```
Currently if you want your users to fill your lists, you just create an
interface:
public interface ListFiller {
public void fillList(List builder);
}
Then you use it like this:
Lis…
-
```
Currently if you want your users to fill your lists, you just create an
interface:
public interface ListFiller {
public void fillList(List builder);
}
Then you use it like this:
Lis…
-
```
Currently if you want your users to fill your lists, you just create an
interface:
public interface ListFiller {
public void fillList(List builder);
}
Then you use it like this:
Lis…
-
```
Currently if you want your users to fill your lists, you just create an
interface:
public interface ListFiller {
public void fillList(List builder);
}
Then you use it like this:
Lis…
-
```
Currently if you want your users to fill your lists, you just create an
interface:
public interface ListFiller {
public void fillList(List builder);
}
Then you use it like this:
Lis…
-
```
Currently if you want your users to fill your lists, you just create an
interface:
public interface ListFiller {
public void fillList(List builder);
}
Then you use it like this:
Lis…