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JSR-62 (Final) | ||||||||||
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java.lang.Object | +--java.text.Format
Format is an abstract base class for formatting locale-sensitive
 information such as dates, messages, and numbers.
 
 Format defines the programming interface for formatting
 locale-sensitive objects into Strings (the
 format method) and for parsing Strings back
 into objects (the parseObject method). Any String
 formatted by format is guaranteed to be parseable by
 parseObject.
 
 If formatting is unsuccessful because the Format object
 cannot format the type of object specified, format throws an
 IllegalArgumentException. Otherwise, if there is something
 illformed about the object, format returns the Unicode
 replacement character \\uFFFD.
 
 If there is no match when parsing,
 parseObject(String) throws a ParseException,
 and parseObject(String, ParsePosition) leaves the
 ParsePosition index member unchanged and
 returns null.
 
 Subclassing:
 The Java 2 platform provides three concrete subclasses of Format--
 DateFormat, MessageFormat, and
 NumberFormat--for formatting dates, messages, and numbers,
 respectively.
 
Concrete subclasses must implement these two methods:
format(Object obj, StringBuffer toAppendTo, FieldPosition pos)
 parseObject (String source, ParsePosition pos)
 Most subclasses will also implement the following two methods:
getInstance for getting a useful format object appropriate
 for the current locale
 getInstance(Locale) for getting a useful format
 object appropriate for the specified locale
 getXxxxInstance methods for more specialized control. For
 example, the NumberFormat class provides
 getPercentInstance and getCurrencyInstance
 methods for getting specialized number formatters.
 
 Subclasses of Format that allow programmers to create objects
 for locales (with getInstance(Locale) for example)
 must also implement the following class method:
 
public static Locale[] getAvailableLocales()
 And finally subclasses may define a set of constants to identify the various
 fields in the formatted output. These constants are used to create a FieldPosition
 object which identifies what information is contained in the field and its
 position in the formatted result. These constants should be named
 item_FIELD where item identifies
 the field. For examples of these constants, see ERA_FIELD and its
 friends in DateFormat.
ParsePosition, 
FieldPosition, 
NumberFormat, 
DateFormat, 
MessageFormat, 
Serialized Form| Constructor Summary | |
Format()
 | 
|
| Method Summary | |
 Object | 
clone()
Overrides Cloneable  | 
 String | 
format(Object obj)
Formats an object to produce a string.  | 
abstract  StringBuffer | 
format(Object obj,
       StringBuffer toAppendTo,
       FieldPosition pos)
Formats an object to produce a string.  | 
 Object | 
parseObject(String source)
Parses a string to produce an object.  | 
abstract  Object | 
parseObject(String source,
            ParsePosition status)
Parses a string to produce an object.  | 
| Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object | 
equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait | 
| Constructor Detail | 
public Format()
| Method Detail | 
public final String format(Object obj)
Subclasses will override the StringBuffer version of format.
obj - The object to format
IllegalArgumentException - when the Format cannot format the
 type of object.MessageFormat, 
format(Object, StringBuffer, FieldPosition)
public abstract StringBuffer format(Object obj,
                                    StringBuffer toAppendTo,
                                    FieldPosition pos)
StringBuffer format (Number obj, StringBuffer toAppendTo) Number parse (String str)These general routines allow polymorphic parsing and formatting for objects such as the MessageFormat.
obj - The object to formattoAppendTo - where the text is to be appendedpos - On input: an alignment field, if desired.
 On output: the offsets of the alignment field.
IllegalArgumentException - when the Format cannot format the
 given object.MessageFormat, 
FieldPosition
public abstract Object parseObject(String source,
                                   ParsePosition status)
       String format (Number obj);
       String format (long obj);
       String format (double obj);
       Number parse (String str);
 
status - Input-Output parameter.
 Before calling, set status.index to the offset you want to start parsing at in the source. After calling, status.index is the end of the text you parsed. If error occurs, index is unchanged.
When parsing, leading whitespace is discarded (with successful parse), while trailing whitespace is left as is.
Example: Parsing "_12_xy" (where _ represents a space) for a number, with index == 0 will result in the number 12, with status.index updated to 3 (just before the second space). Parsing a second time will result in a ParseException since "xy" is not a number, and leave index at 3.
Subclasses will typically supply specific parse methods that return different types of values. Since methods can't overload on return types, these will typically be named "parse", while this polymorphic method will always be called parseObject. Any parse method that does not take a status should throw ParseException when no text in the required format is at the start position.
ParsePosition
public Object parseObject(String source)
                   throws ParseException
ParseException - if the specified string is invalid.public Object clone()
clone in class ObjectCloneable
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