These classes are capable of formatting dates, numbers, and messages, parsing; searching and sorting strings; and iterating over characters, words, sentences, and line breaks. This package contains three main groups of classes and interfaces:
FormattingParsing
Dates and numbers are represented internally in a locale-independent way. For example, dates are kept as milliseconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 UCT. When these objects are printed or displayed, they must be converted to localized strings. The locale-specific parts of a date string, such as the time zone string, are separately imported from a locale-specific resource bundle.
The
format()
method converts the
Date
object from -604656780000 milliseconds to the form "Tuesday, November 3, 1997 9:47am CST" for the U. S. English locale. The figure shows how the
format()
method of subclasses of
Format
enable instances of
Number
,
Date
,
String
, and other objects to be formatted to locale-specific strings.
Conversely, the
parseObject()
method (and
parse()
method in subclasses) perform the reverse operation of parsing localized strings and converting them to
Number
,
Date
,
and
String
objects. The figure shows how the
parse()
method is complementary to
format()
. Any
String
formatted by
format()
is guaranteed to be parseable by
parseObject()
.
Java provides six subclasses of {@link Format} for formatting dates, numbers, and messages: {@link DateFormat}, {@link SimpleDateFormat}, {@link NumberFormat}, {@link DecimalFormat}, {@link ChoiceFormat}, and {@link MessageFormat}.
String Collation
collate"CollatorRuleBasedCollator
{@link Collator} is an abstract base class. Subclasses implement specific collation strategies. One subclass, {@link RuleBasedCollator}, is currently provided and is applicable to a wide set of languages. Other subclasses may be created to handle more specialized needs. {@link CollationElementIterator} provides an iterator for stepping through each character of a locale-specific string according to the rules of a specific
Collator
object. {@link CollationKey} enables fast sorting of strings by representing a string as a sort key under the rules of a specific
Collator
object.
charCharacter
user character
Locale-Sensitive Classes
Locale-Sensitive Classes | Locale-Independent Classes |
---|---|
NumberFormat
DecimalFormat DecimalFormatSymbols MessageFormat DateFormat SimpleDateFormat DateFormatSymbols Collator RuleBasedCollator CollationElementIterator CollationKey BreakIterator |
Format
ChoiceFormat FieldPosition ParsePosition ParseException StringCharacterIterator CharacterIterator |
Related Documentation