Added in API level 1

Format

abstract class Format : Serializable, Cloneable
kotlin.Any
   ↳ 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).

Generally, a format's parseObject method must be able to parse any string formatted by its format method. However, there may be exceptional cases where this is not possible. For example, a format method might create two adjacent integer numbers with no separator in between, and in this case the parseObject could not tell which digits belong to which number.

Subclassing

The Java Platform provides three specialized subclasses of Format-- DateFormat, MessageFormat, and NumberFormat--for formatting dates, messages, and numbers, respectively.

Concrete subclasses must implement three methods:

  1. format(Object obj, StringBuffer toAppendTo, FieldPosition pos)
  2. formatToCharacterIterator(Object obj)
  3. parseObject(String source, ParsePosition pos)
These general methods allow polymorphic parsing and formatting of objects and are used, for example, by MessageFormat. Subclasses often also provide additional format methods for specific input types as well as parse methods for specific result types. Any parse method that does not take a ParsePosition argument should throw ParseException when no text in the required format is at the beginning of the input text.

Most subclasses will also implement the following factory methods:

  1. getInstance for getting a useful format object appropriate for the current locale
  2. getInstance(Locale) for getting a useful format object appropriate for the specified locale
In addition, some subclasses may also implement other 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.

Synchronization

Formats are generally not synchronized. It is recommended to create separate format instances for each thread. If multiple threads access a format concurrently, it must be synchronized externally.

Summary

Nested classes
open

Defines constants that are used as attribute keys in the AttributedCharacterIterator returned from Format.formatToCharacterIterator and as field identifiers in FieldPosition.

Protected constructors

Sole constructor.

Public methods
open Any

Creates and returns a copy of this object.

String!
format(obj: Any!)

Formats an object to produce a string.

abstract StringBuffer!
format(obj: Any!, toAppendTo: StringBuffer!, pos: FieldPosition!)

Formats an object and appends the resulting text to a given string buffer.

open AttributedCharacterIterator!

Formats an Object producing an AttributedCharacterIterator.

abstract Any!
parseObject(source: String!, pos: ParsePosition!)

Parses text from a string to produce an object.

open Any!
parseObject(source: String!)

Parses text from the beginning of the given string to produce an object.

Protected constructors

Format

Added in API level 1
protected Format()

Sole constructor. (For invocation by subclass constructors, typically implicit.)

Public methods

clone

Added in API level 1
open fun clone(): Any

Creates and returns a copy of this object.

Return
Any a clone of this instance.
Exceptions
java.lang.CloneNotSupportedException if the object's class does not support the Cloneable interface. Subclasses that override the clone method can also throw this exception to indicate that an instance cannot be cloned.

format

Added in API level 1
fun format(obj: Any!): String!

Formats an object to produce a string. This is equivalent to format(obj, new StringBuffer(), new FieldPosition(0)).toString();

Parameters
obj Any!: The object to format
Return
String! Formatted string.
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if the Format cannot format the given object

format

Added in API level 1
abstract fun format(
    obj: Any!,
    toAppendTo: StringBuffer!,
    pos: FieldPosition!
): StringBuffer!

Formats an object and appends the resulting text to a given string buffer. If the pos argument identifies a field used by the format, then its indices are set to the beginning and end of the first such field encountered.

Parameters
obj Any!: The object to format
toAppendTo StringBuffer!: where the text is to be appended
pos FieldPosition!: A FieldPosition identifying a field in the formatted text
Return
StringBuffer! the string buffer passed in as toAppendTo, with formatted text appended
Exceptions
java.lang.NullPointerException if toAppendTo or pos is null
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if the Format cannot format the given object

formatToCharacterIterator

Added in API level 1
open fun formatToCharacterIterator(obj: Any!): AttributedCharacterIterator!

Formats an Object producing an AttributedCharacterIterator. You can use the returned AttributedCharacterIterator to build the resulting String, as well as to determine information about the resulting String.

Each attribute key of the AttributedCharacterIterator will be of type Field. It is up to each Format implementation to define what the legal values are for each attribute in the AttributedCharacterIterator, but typically the attribute key is also used as the attribute value.

The default implementation creates an AttributedCharacterIterator with no attributes. Subclasses that support fields should override this and create an AttributedCharacterIterator with meaningful attributes.

Parameters
obj Any!: The object to format
Return
AttributedCharacterIterator! AttributedCharacterIterator describing the formatted value.
Exceptions
java.lang.NullPointerException if obj is null.
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException when the Format cannot format the given object.

parseObject

Added in API level 1
abstract fun parseObject(
    source: String!,
    pos: ParsePosition!
): Any!

Parses text from a string to produce an object.

The method attempts to parse text starting at the index given by pos. If parsing succeeds, then the index of pos is updated to the index after the last character used (parsing does not necessarily use all characters up to the end of the string), and the parsed object is returned. The updated pos can be used to indicate the starting point for the next call to this method. If an error occurs, then the index of pos is not changed, the error index of pos is set to the index of the character where the error occurred, and null is returned.

Parameters
source String!: A String, part of which should be parsed.
pos ParsePosition!: A ParsePosition object with index and error index information as described above.
Return
Any! An Object parsed from the string. In case of error, returns null.
Exceptions
java.lang.NullPointerException if source or pos is null.

parseObject

Added in API level 1
open fun parseObject(source: String!): Any!

Parses text from the beginning of the given string to produce an object. The method may not use the entire text of the given string.

Parameters
source String!: A String whose beginning should be parsed.
Return
Any! An Object parsed from the string.
Exceptions
java.text.ParseException if the beginning of the specified string cannot be parsed.
java.lang.NullPointerException if source is null.