Added in API level 24

MessageFormat


open class MessageFormat : UFormat
kotlin.Any
   ↳ java.text.Format
   ↳ android.icu.text.UFormat
   ↳ android.icu.text.MessageFormat

[icu enhancement] ICU's replacement for java.text.MessageFormat. Methods, fields, and other functionality specific to ICU are labeled '[icu]'.

MessageFormat prepares strings for display to users, with optional arguments (variables/placeholders). The arguments can occur in any order, which is necessary for translation into languages with different grammars.

A MessageFormat is constructed from a pattern string with arguments in {curly braces} which will be replaced by formatted values.

MessageFormat differs from the other Format classes in that you create a MessageFormat object with one of its constructors (not with a getInstance style factory method). Factory methods aren't necessary because MessageFormat itself doesn't implement locale-specific behavior. Any locale-specific behavior is defined by the pattern that you provide and the subformats used for inserted arguments.

Arguments can be named (using identifiers) or numbered (using small ASCII-digit integers). Some of the API methods work only with argument numbers and throw an exception if the pattern has named arguments (see usesNamedArguments()).

An argument might not specify any format type. In this case, a Number value is formatted with a default (for the locale) NumberFormat, a Date value is formatted with a default (for the locale) DateFormat, and for any other value its toString() value is used.

An argument might specify a "simple" type for which the specified Format object is created, cached and used.

An argument might have a "complex" type with nested MessageFormat sub-patterns. During formatting, one of these sub-messages is selected according to the argument value and recursively formatted.

After construction, a custom Format object can be set for a top-level argument, overriding the default formatting and parsing behavior for that argument. However, custom formatting can be achieved more simply by writing a typeless argument in the pattern string and supplying it with a preformatted string value.

When formatting, MessageFormat takes a collection of argument values and writes an output string. The argument values may be passed as an array (when the pattern contains only numbered arguments) or as a Map (which works for both named and numbered arguments).

Each argument is matched with one of the input values by array index or map key and formatted according to its pattern specification (or using a custom Format object if one was set). A numbered pattern argument is matched with a map key that contains that number as an ASCII-decimal-digit string (without leading zero).

Patterns and Their Interpretation

MessageFormat uses patterns of the following form:
message = messageText (argument messageText)*
  argument = noneArg | simpleArg | complexArg
  complexArg = choiceArg | pluralArg | selectArg | selectordinalArg
 
  noneArg = '{' argNameOrNumber '}'
  simpleArg = '{' argNameOrNumber ',' argType [',' argStyle] '}'
  choiceArg = '{' argNameOrNumber ',' "choice" ',' choiceStyle '}'
  pluralArg = '{' argNameOrNumber ',' "plural" ',' pluralStyle '}'
  selectArg = '{' argNameOrNumber ',' "select" ',' selectStyle '}'
  selectordinalArg = '{' argNameOrNumber ',' "selectordinal" ',' pluralStyle '}'
 
  choiceStyle: see <code><a docref="java.text.ChoiceFormat">ChoiceFormat</a></code>pluralStyle: see <code><a docref="android.icu.text.PluralFormat">PluralFormat</a></code>selectStyle: see <code><a docref="android.icu.text.SelectFormat">SelectFormat</a></code>argNameOrNumber = argName | argNumber
  argName = [^[[:Pattern_Syntax:][:Pattern_White_Space:]]]+
  argNumber = '0' | ('1'..'9' ('0'..'9')*)
 
  argType = "number" | "date" | "time" | "spellout" | "ordinal" | "duration"
  argStyle = "short" | "medium" | "long" | "full" | "integer" | "currency" | "percent" | argStyleText
  
  • messageText can contain quoted literal strings including syntax characters. A quoted literal string begins with an ASCII apostrophe and a syntax character (usually a {curly brace}) and continues until the next single apostrophe. A double ASCII apostrophe inside or outside of a quoted string represents one literal apostrophe.
  • Quotable syntax characters are the {curly braces} in all messageText parts, plus the '#' sign in a messageText immediately inside a pluralStyle, and the '|' symbol in a messageText immediately inside a choiceStyle.
  • See also MessagePattern.ApostropheMode
  • In argStyleText, every single ASCII apostrophe begins and ends quoted literal text, and unquoted {curly braces} must occur in matched pairs.

Recommendation: Use the real apostrophe (single quote) character \\u2019 for human-readable text, and use the ASCII apostrophe (\\u0027 ' ) only in program syntax, like quoting in MessageFormat. See the annotations for U+0027 Apostrophe in The Unicode Standard.

The choice argument type is deprecated. Use plural arguments for proper plural selection, and select arguments for simple selection among a fixed set of choices.

The argType and argStyle values are used to create a Format instance for the format element. The following table shows how the values map to Format instances. Combinations not shown in the table are illegal. Any argStyleText must be a valid pattern string for the Format subclass used.

argType argStyle resulting Format object
(none) null
number (none) NumberFormat.getInstance(getLocale())
integer NumberFormat.getIntegerInstance(getLocale())
currency NumberFormat.getCurrencyInstance(getLocale())
percent NumberFormat.getPercentInstance(getLocale())
argStyleText new DecimalFormat(argStyleText, new DecimalFormatSymbols(getLocale()))
date (none) DateFormat.getDateInstance(DateFormat.DEFAULT, getLocale())
short DateFormat.getDateInstance(DateFormat.SHORT, getLocale())
medium DateFormat.getDateInstance(DateFormat.DEFAULT, getLocale())
long DateFormat.getDateInstance(DateFormat.LONG, getLocale())
full DateFormat.getDateInstance(DateFormat.FULL, getLocale())
argStyleText new SimpleDateFormat(argStyleText, getLocale())
time (none) DateFormat.getTimeInstance(DateFormat.DEFAULT, getLocale())
short DateFormat.getTimeInstance(DateFormat.SHORT, getLocale())
medium DateFormat.getTimeInstance(DateFormat.DEFAULT, getLocale())
long DateFormat.getTimeInstance(DateFormat.LONG, getLocale())
full DateFormat.getTimeInstance(DateFormat.FULL, getLocale())
argStyleText new SimpleDateFormat(argStyleText, getLocale())
spellout argStyleText (optional) new RuleBasedNumberFormat(getLocale(), RuleBasedNumberFormat.SPELLOUT)
    .setDefaultRuleset(argStyleText);
ordinal argStyleText (optional) new RuleBasedNumberFormat(getLocale(), RuleBasedNumberFormat.ORDINAL)
    .setDefaultRuleset(argStyleText);
duration argStyleText (optional) new RuleBasedNumberFormat(getLocale(), RuleBasedNumberFormat.DURATION)
    .setDefaultRuleset(argStyleText);

Differences from java.text.MessageFormat

The ICU MessageFormat supports both named and numbered arguments, while the JDK MessageFormat only supports numbered arguments. Named arguments make patterns more readable.

ICU implements a more user-friendly apostrophe quoting syntax. In message text, an apostrophe only begins quoting literal text if it immediately precedes a syntax character (mostly {curly braces}).
In the JDK MessageFormat, an apostrophe always begins quoting, which requires common text like "don't" and "aujourd'hui" to be written with doubled apostrophes like "don''t" and "aujourd''hui". For more details see MessagePattern.ApostropheMode.

ICU does not create a ChoiceFormat object for a choiceArg, pluralArg or selectArg but rather handles such arguments itself. The JDK MessageFormat does create and use a ChoiceFormat object (new ChoiceFormat(argStyleText)). The JDK does not support plural and select arguments at all.

Usage Information

Here are some examples of usage:

Object[] arguments = {
      7,
      new Date(System.currentTimeMillis()),
      "a disturbance in the Force"
  };
 
  String result = MessageFormat.format(
      "At {1,time} on {1,date}, there was {2} on planet {0,number,integer}.",
      arguments);
 
  <em>output</em>: At 12:30 PM on Jul 3, 2053, there was a disturbance
            in the Force on planet 7.
 
  
Typically, the message format will come from resources, and the arguments will be dynamically set at runtime.

Example 2:

Object[] testArgs = { 3, "MyDisk" };
 
  MessageFormat form = new MessageFormat(
      "The disk \"{1}\" contains {0} file(s).");
 
  System.out.println(form.format(testArgs));
 
  // output, with different testArgs
  <em>output</em>: The disk "MyDisk" contains 0 file(s).
  <em>output</em>: The disk "MyDisk" contains 1 file(s).
  <em>output</em>: The disk "MyDisk" contains 1,273 file(s).
  

For messages that include plural forms, you can use a plural argument:

MessageFormat msgFmt = new MessageFormat(
      "{num_files, plural, " +
      "=0{There are no files on disk \"{disk_name}\".}" +
      "=1{There is one file on disk \"{disk_name}\".}" +
      "other{There are # files on disk \"{disk_name}\".}}",
      ULocale.ENGLISH);
  Map args = new HashMap();
  args.put("num_files", 0);
  args.put("disk_name", "MyDisk");
  System.out.println(msgFmt.format(args));
  args.put("num_files", 3);
  System.out.println(msgFmt.format(args));
 
  <em>output</em>:
  There are no files on disk "MyDisk".
  There are 3 files on "MyDisk".
  
See PluralFormat and PluralRules for details.

Synchronization

MessageFormats are 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 MessageFormat.formatToCharacterIterator.

Public constructors
MessageFormat(pattern: String!)

Constructs a MessageFormat for the default FORMAT locale and the specified pattern.

MessageFormat(pattern: String!, locale: Locale!)

Constructs a MessageFormat for the specified locale and pattern.

MessageFormat(pattern: String!, locale: ULocale!)

Constructs a MessageFormat for the specified locale and pattern.

Public methods
open Unit

Sets the pattern used by this message format.

open Unit

[icu] Sets the ApostropheMode and the pattern used by this message format.

open static String!

[icu] Converts an 'apostrophe-friendly' pattern into a standard pattern.

open Any

Creates and returns a copy of this object.

open Boolean
equals(other: Any?)

Indicates whether some other object is "equal to" this one.

StringBuffer!
format(arguments: Array<Any!>!, result: StringBuffer!, pos: FieldPosition!)

Formats an array of objects and appends the MessageFormat's pattern, with arguments replaced by the formatted objects, to the provided StringBuffer.

StringBuffer!
format(arguments: MutableMap<String!, Any!>!, result: StringBuffer!, pos: FieldPosition!)

Formats a map of objects and appends the MessageFormat's pattern, with arguments replaced by the formatted objects, to the provided StringBuffer.

StringBuffer!
format(arguments: Any!, result: StringBuffer!, pos: FieldPosition!)

Formats a map or array of objects and appends the MessageFormat's pattern, with format elements replaced by the formatted objects, to the provided StringBuffer.

open static String!
format(pattern: String!, vararg arguments: Any!)

Creates a MessageFormat with the given pattern and uses it to format the given arguments.

open static String!
format(pattern: String!, arguments: MutableMap<String!, Any!>!)

Creates a MessageFormat with the given pattern and uses it to format the given arguments.

open AttributedCharacterIterator!

Formats an array of objects and inserts them into the MessageFormat's pattern, producing an AttributedCharacterIterator.

open MessagePattern.ApostropheMode!

[icu]

open MutableSet<String!>!

[icu] Returns the top-level argument names.

open Format!

[icu] Returns the first top-level format associated with the given argument name.

open Array<Format!>!

Returns the Format objects used for the format elements in the previously set pattern string.

open Array<Format!>!

Returns the Format objects used for the values passed into format methods or returned from parse methods.

open Locale!

Returns the locale that's used when creating or comparing subformats.

open ULocale!

[icu] Returns the locale that's used when creating argument Format objects.

open Int

Returns a hash code value for the object.

open Array<Any!>!
parse(source: String!, pos: ParsePosition!)

Parses the string.

open Array<Any!>!
parse(source: String!)

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

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

Parses text from a string to produce an object array or Map.

open MutableMap<String!, Any!>!
parseToMap(source: String!, pos: ParsePosition!)

[icu] Parses the string, returning the results in a Map.

open MutableMap<String!, Any!>!
parseToMap(source: String!)

[icu] Parses text from the beginning of the given string to produce a map from argument to values.

open Unit
setFormat(formatElementIndex: Int, newFormat: Format!)

Sets the Format object to use for the format element with the given format element index within the previously set pattern string.

open Unit
setFormatByArgumentIndex(argumentIndex: Int, newFormat: Format!)

Sets the Format object to use for the format elements within the previously set pattern string that use the given argument index.

open Unit
setFormatByArgumentName(argumentName: String!, newFormat: Format!)

[icu] Sets the Format object to use for the format elements within the previously set pattern string that use the given argument name.

open Unit
setFormats(newFormats: Array<Format!>!)

Sets the Format objects to use for the format elements in the previously set pattern string.

open Unit

Sets the Format objects to use for the values passed into format methods or returned from parse methods.

open Unit

[icu] Sets the Format objects to use for the values passed into format methods or returned from parse methods.

open Unit
setLocale(locale: Locale!)

Sets the locale to be used for creating argument Format objects.

open Unit
setLocale(locale: ULocale!)

Sets the locale to be used for creating argument Format objects.

open String!

Returns the applied pattern string.

open Boolean

[icu] Returns true if this MessageFormat uses named arguments, and false otherwise.

Public constructors

MessageFormat

Added in API level 24
MessageFormat(pattern: String!)

Constructs a MessageFormat for the default FORMAT locale and the specified pattern. Sets the locale and calls applyPattern(pattern).

Parameters
pattern String!: the pattern for this message format
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if the pattern is invalid

MessageFormat

Added in API level 24
MessageFormat(
    pattern: String!,
    locale: Locale!)

Constructs a MessageFormat for the specified locale and pattern. Sets the locale and calls applyPattern(pattern).

Parameters
pattern String!: the pattern for this message format
locale Locale!: the locale for this message format
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if the pattern is invalid

MessageFormat

Added in API level 24
MessageFormat(
    pattern: String!,
    locale: ULocale!)

Constructs a MessageFormat for the specified locale and pattern. Sets the locale and calls applyPattern(pattern).

Parameters
pattern String!: the pattern for this message format
locale ULocale!: the locale for this message format
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if the pattern is invalid

Public methods

applyPattern

Added in API level 24
open fun applyPattern(pttrn: String!): Unit

Sets the pattern used by this message format. Parses the pattern and caches Format objects for simple argument types. Patterns and their interpretation are specified in the class description.

Parameters
pttrn String!: the pattern for this message format
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if the pattern is invalid

applyPattern

Added in API level 24
open fun applyPattern(
    pattern: String!,
    aposMode: MessagePattern.ApostropheMode!
): Unit

[icu] Sets the ApostropheMode and the pattern used by this message format. Parses the pattern and caches Format objects for simple argument types. Patterns and their interpretation are specified in the class description.

This method is best used only once on a given object to avoid confusion about the mode, and after constructing the object with an empty pattern string to minimize overhead.

Parameters
pattern String!: the pattern for this message format
aposMode MessagePattern.ApostropheMode!: the new ApostropheMode
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if the pattern is invalid

autoQuoteApostrophe

Added in API level 24
open static fun autoQuoteApostrophe(pattern: String!): String!

[icu] Converts an 'apostrophe-friendly' pattern into a standard pattern. This is obsolete for ICU 4.8 and higher MessageFormat pattern strings. It can still be useful together with java.text.MessageFormat.

See the class description for more about apostrophes and quoting, and differences between ICU and java.text.MessageFormat.

java.text.MessageFormat and ICU 4.6 and earlier MessageFormat treat all ASCII apostrophes as quotes, which is problematic in some languages, e.g. French, where apostrophe is commonly used. This utility assumes that only an unpaired apostrophe immediately before a brace is a true quote. Other unpaired apostrophes are paired, and the resulting standard pattern string is returned.

Note: It is not guaranteed that the returned pattern is indeed a valid pattern. The only effect is to convert between patterns having different quoting semantics.

Note: This method only works on top-level messageText, not messageText nested inside a complexArg.

Parameters
pattern String!: the 'apostrophe-friendly' pattern to convert
Return
String! the standard equivalent of the original pattern

clone

Added in API level 24
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.

equals

Added in API level 24
open fun equals(other: Any?): Boolean

Indicates whether some other object is "equal to" this one.

The equals method implements an equivalence relation on non-null object references:

  • It is reflexive: for any non-null reference value x, x.equals(x) should return true.
  • It is symmetric: for any non-null reference values x and y, x.equals(y) should return true if and only if y.equals(x) returns true.
  • It is transitive: for any non-null reference values x, y, and z, if x.equals(y) returns true and y.equals(z) returns true, then x.equals(z) should return true.
  • It is consistent: for any non-null reference values x and y, multiple invocations of x.equals(y) consistently return true or consistently return false, provided no information used in equals comparisons on the objects is modified.
  • For any non-null reference value x, x.equals(null) should return false.

An equivalence relation partitions the elements it operates on into equivalence classes; all the members of an equivalence class are equal to each other. Members of an equivalence class are substitutable for each other, at least for some purposes.

Parameters
obj the reference object with which to compare.
Return
Boolean true if this object is the same as the obj argument; false otherwise.

format

Added in API level 24
fun format(
    arguments: Array<Any!>!,
    result: StringBuffer!,
    pos: FieldPosition!
): StringBuffer!

Formats an array of objects and appends the MessageFormat's pattern, with arguments replaced by the formatted objects, to the provided StringBuffer.

The text substituted for the individual format elements is derived from the current subformat of the format element and the arguments element at the format element's argument index as indicated by the first matching line of the following table. An argument is unavailable if arguments is null or has fewer than argumentIndex+1 elements. When an argument is unavailable no substitution is performed.

argType or Format value object Formatted Text
any unavailable "{" + argNameOrNumber + "}"
any null "null"
custom Format != null any customFormat.format(argument)
noneArg, or custom Format == null instanceof Number NumberFormat.getInstance(getLocale()).format(argument)
noneArg, or custom Format == null instanceof Date DateFormat.getDateTimeInstance(DateFormat.SHORT, DateFormat.SHORT, getLocale()).format(argument)
noneArg, or custom Format == null instanceof String argument
noneArg, or custom Format == null any argument.toString()
complexArg any result of recursive formatting of a selected sub-message

If pos is non-null, and refers to Field.ARGUMENT, the location of the first formatted string will be returned. This method is only supported when the format does not use named arguments, otherwise an IllegalArgumentException is thrown.

Parameters
arguments Array<Any!>!: an array of objects to be formatted and substituted.
result StringBuffer!: where text is appended.
pos FieldPosition!: On input: an alignment field, if desired. On output: the offsets of the alignment field.
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if this format uses named arguments

format

Added in API level 24
fun format(
    arguments: MutableMap<String!, Any!>!,
    result: StringBuffer!,
    pos: FieldPosition!
): StringBuffer!

Formats a map of objects and appends the MessageFormat's pattern, with arguments replaced by the formatted objects, to the provided StringBuffer.

The text substituted for the individual format elements is derived from the current subformat of the format element and the arguments value corresponding to the format element's argument name.

A numbered pattern argument is matched with a map key that contains that number as an ASCII-decimal-digit string (without leading zero).

An argument is unavailable if arguments is null or does not have a value corresponding to an argument name in the pattern. When an argument is unavailable no substitution is performed.

Parameters
arguments MutableMap<String!, Any!>!: a map of objects to be formatted and substituted.
result StringBuffer!: where text is appended.
pos FieldPosition!: On input: an alignment field, if desired. On output: the offsets of the alignment field.
Return
StringBuffer! the passed-in StringBuffer
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if a value in the arguments array is not of the type expected by the corresponding argument or custom Format object.

format

Added in API level 24
fun format(
    arguments: Any!,
    result: StringBuffer!,
    pos: FieldPosition!
): StringBuffer!

Formats a map or array of objects and appends the MessageFormat's pattern, with format elements replaced by the formatted objects, to the provided StringBuffer. This is equivalent to either of format((Object[]) arguments, result, pos) format((Map) arguments, result, pos) A map must be provided if this format uses named arguments, otherwise an IllegalArgumentException will be thrown.

Parameters
obj The object to format
toAppendTo where the text is to be appended
pos FieldPosition!: On input: an alignment field, if desired On output: the offsets of the alignment field
arguments Any!: a map or array of objects to be formatted
result StringBuffer!: where text is appended
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 arguments is an array of Object and this format uses named arguments

format

Added in API level 24
open static fun format(
    pattern: String!,
    vararg arguments: Any!
): String!

Creates a MessageFormat with the given pattern and uses it to format the given arguments. This is equivalent to (new MessageFormat(pattern)). format(arguments, new StringBuffer(), null).toString()

Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if this format uses named arguments

format

Added in API level 24
open static fun format(
    pattern: String!,
    arguments: MutableMap<String!, Any!>!
): String!

Creates a MessageFormat with the given pattern and uses it to format the given arguments. The pattern must identifyarguments by name instead of by number.

Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if a value in the arguments array is not of the type expected by the corresponding argument or custom Format object.

formatToCharacterIterator

Added in API level 24
open fun formatToCharacterIterator(arguments: Any!): AttributedCharacterIterator!

Formats an array of objects and inserts them into the MessageFormat's pattern, producing an AttributedCharacterIterator. You can use the returned AttributedCharacterIterator to build the resulting String, as well as to determine information about the resulting String.

The text of the returned AttributedCharacterIterator is the same that would be returned by

format(arguments, new StringBuffer(), null).toString()

In addition, the AttributedCharacterIterator contains at least attributes indicating where text was generated from an argument in the arguments array. The keys of these attributes are of type MessageFormat.Field, their values are Integer objects indicating the index in the arguments array of the argument from which the text was generated.

The attributes/value from the underlying Format instances that MessageFormat uses will also be placed in the resulting AttributedCharacterIterator. This allows you to not only find where an argument is placed in the resulting String, but also which fields it contains in turn.

Parameters
obj The object to format
arguments Any!: an array of objects to be formatted and substituted.
Return
AttributedCharacterIterator! AttributedCharacterIterator describing the formatted value.
Exceptions
java.lang.NullPointerException if obj is null.
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if a value in the arguments array is not of the type expected by the corresponding argument or custom Format object.
java.lang.NullPointerException if arguments is null.

getApostropheMode

Added in API level 24
open fun getApostropheMode(): MessagePattern.ApostropheMode!

[icu]

Return
MessagePattern.ApostropheMode! this instance's ApostropheMode.

getArgumentNames

Added in API level 24
open fun getArgumentNames(): MutableSet<String!>!

[icu] Returns the top-level argument names. For more details, see setFormatByArgumentName(java.lang.String,java.text.Format).

Return
MutableSet<String!>! a Set of argument names

getFormatByArgumentName

Added in API level 24
open fun getFormatByArgumentName(argumentName: String!): Format!

[icu] Returns the first top-level format associated with the given argument name. For more details, see setFormatByArgumentName(java.lang.String,java.text.Format).

Parameters
argumentName String!: The name of the desired argument.
Return
Format! the Format associated with the name, or null if there isn't one.

getFormats

Added in API level 24
open fun getFormats(): Array<Format!>!

Returns the Format objects used for the format elements in the previously set pattern string. The order of formats in the returned array corresponds to the order of format elements in the pattern string.

Since the order of format elements in a pattern string often changes during localization, it's generally better to use the getFormatsByArgumentIndex() method, which assumes an order of formats corresponding to the order of elements in the arguments array passed to the format methods or the result array returned by the parse methods. This method is only supported when exclusively numbers are used for argument names. Otherwise an IllegalArgumentException is thrown.

Return
Array<Format!>! the formats used for the format elements in the pattern
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if this format uses named arguments

getFormatsByArgumentIndex

Added in API level 24
open fun getFormatsByArgumentIndex(): Array<Format!>!

Returns the Format objects used for the values passed into format methods or returned from parse methods. The indices of elements in the returned array correspond to the argument indices used in the previously set pattern string. The order of formats in the returned array thus corresponds to the order of elements in the arguments array passed to the format methods or the result array returned by the parse methods.

If an argument index is used for more than one format element in the pattern string, then the format used for the last such format element is returned in the array. If an argument index is not used for any format element in the pattern string, then null is returned in the array. This method is only supported when exclusively numbers are used for argument names. Otherwise an IllegalArgumentException is thrown.

Return
Array<Format!>! the formats used for the arguments within the pattern
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if this format uses named arguments

getLocale

Added in API level 24
open fun getLocale(): Locale!

Returns the locale that's used when creating or comparing subformats.

Return
Locale! the locale used when creating or comparing subformats

getULocale

Added in API level 24
open fun getULocale(): ULocale!

[icu] Returns the locale that's used when creating argument Format objects.

Return
ULocale! the locale used when creating or comparing subformats

hashCode

Added in API level 24
open fun hashCode(): Int

Returns a hash code value for the object. This method is supported for the benefit of hash tables such as those provided by java.util.HashMap.

The general contract of hashCode is:

  • Whenever it is invoked on the same object more than once during an execution of a Java application, the hashCode method must consistently return the same integer, provided no information used in equals comparisons on the object is modified. This integer need not remain consistent from one execution of an application to another execution of the same application.
  • If two objects are equal according to the equals method, then calling the hashCode method on each of the two objects must produce the same integer result.
  • It is not required that if two objects are unequal according to the equals method, then calling the hashCode method on each of the two objects must produce distinct integer results. However, the programmer should be aware that producing distinct integer results for unequal objects may improve the performance of hash tables.
Return
Int a hash code value for this object.

parse

Added in API level 24
open fun parse(
    source: String!,
    pos: ParsePosition!
): Array<Any!>!

Parses the string.

Caveats: The parse may fail in a number of circumstances. For example:

  • If one of the arguments does not occur in the pattern.
  • If the format of an argument loses information, such as with a choice format where a large number formats to "many".
  • Does not yet handle recursion (where the substituted strings contain {n} references.)
  • Will not always find a match (or the correct match) if some part of the parse is ambiguous. For example, if the pattern "{1},{2}" is used with the string arguments {"a,b", "c"}, it will format as "a,b,c". When the result is parsed, it will return {"a", "b,c"}.
  • If a single argument is parsed more than once in the string, then the later parse wins.
When the parse fails, use ParsePosition.getErrorIndex() to find out where in the string did the parsing failed. The returned error index is the starting offset of the sub-patterns that the string is comparing with. For example, if the parsing string "AAA {0} BBB" is comparing against the pattern "AAD {0} BBB", the error index is 0. When an error occurs, the call to this method will return null. If the source is null, return an empty array.
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if this format uses named arguments

parse

Added in API level 24
open fun parse(source: String!): Array<Any!>!

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

See the parse(java.lang.String,java.text.ParsePosition) method for more information on message parsing.

Parameters
source String!: A String whose beginning should be parsed.
Return
Array<Any!>! An Object array parsed from the string.
Exceptions
java.text.ParseException if the beginning of the specified string cannot be parsed.
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if this format uses named arguments

parseObject

Added in API level 24
open fun parseObject(
    source: String!,
    pos: ParsePosition!
): Any!

Parses text from a string to produce an object array or Map.

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 array 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.

See the parse(java.lang.String,java.text.ParsePosition) method for more information on message parsing.

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, either an array of Object, or a Map, depending on whether named arguments are used. This can be queried using usesNamedArguments. In case of error, returns null.
Exceptions
java.lang.NullPointerException if pos is null.

parseToMap

Added in API level 24
open fun parseToMap(
    source: String!,
    pos: ParsePosition!
): MutableMap<String!, Any!>!

[icu] Parses the string, returning the results in a Map. This is similar to the version that returns an array of Object. This supports both named and numbered arguments-- if numbered, the keys in the map are the corresponding ASCII-decimal-digit strings (e.g. "0", "1", "2"...).

Parameters
source String!: the text to parse
pos ParsePosition!: the position at which to start parsing. on return, contains the result of the parse.
Return
MutableMap<String!, Any!>! a Map containing key/value pairs for each parsed argument.

parseToMap

Added in API level 24
open fun parseToMap(source: String!): MutableMap<String!, Any!>!

[icu] Parses text from the beginning of the given string to produce a map from argument to values. The method may not use the entire text of the given string.

See the parse(java.lang.String,java.text.ParsePosition) method for more information on message parsing.

Parameters
source String!: A String whose beginning should be parsed.
Return
MutableMap<String!, Any!>! A Map parsed from the string.
Exceptions
java.text.ParseException if the beginning of the specified string cannot be parsed.

setFormat

Added in API level 24
open fun setFormat(
    formatElementIndex: Int,
    newFormat: Format!
): Unit

Sets the Format object to use for the format element with the given format element index within the previously set pattern string. The format element index is the zero-based number of the format element counting from the start of the pattern string.

Since the order of format elements in a pattern string often changes during localization, it is generally better to use the setFormatByArgumentIndex method, which accesses format elements based on the argument index they specify.

Parameters
formatElementIndex Int: the index of a format element within the pattern
newFormat Format!: the format to use for the specified format element
Exceptions
java.lang.ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException if formatElementIndex is equal to or larger than the number of format elements in the pattern string

setFormatByArgumentIndex

Added in API level 24
open fun setFormatByArgumentIndex(
    argumentIndex: Int,
    newFormat: Format!
): Unit

Sets the Format object to use for the format elements within the previously set pattern string that use the given argument index. The argument index is part of the format element definition and represents an index into the arguments array passed to the format methods or the result array returned by the parse methods.

If the argument index is used for more than one format element in the pattern string, then the new format is used for all such format elements. If the argument index is not used for any format element in the pattern string, then the new format is ignored. This method is only supported when exclusively numbers are used for argument names. Otherwise an IllegalArgumentException is thrown.

Parameters
argumentIndex Int: the argument index for which to use the new format
newFormat Format!: the new format to use
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if this format uses named arguments

setFormatByArgumentName

Added in API level 24
open fun setFormatByArgumentName(
    argumentName: String!,
    newFormat: Format!
): Unit

[icu] Sets the Format object to use for the format elements within the previously set pattern string that use the given argument name.

If the argument name is used for more than one format element in the pattern string, then the new format is used for all such format elements. If the argument name is not used for any format element in the pattern string, then the new format is ignored.

This API may be used on formats that do not use named arguments. In this case argumentName should be a String that names an argument index, e.g. "0", "1", "2"... etc. If it does not name a valid index, the format will be ignored. No error is thrown.

Parameters
argumentName String!: the name of the argument to change
newFormat Format!: the new format to use

setFormats

Added in API level 24
open fun setFormats(newFormats: Array<Format!>!): Unit

Sets the Format objects to use for the format elements in the previously set pattern string. The order of formats in newFormats corresponds to the order of format elements in the pattern string.

If more formats are provided than needed by the pattern string, the remaining ones are ignored. If fewer formats are provided than needed, then only the first newFormats.length formats are replaced.

Since the order of format elements in a pattern string often changes during localization, it is generally better to use the setFormatsByArgumentIndex method, which assumes an order of formats corresponding to the order of elements in the arguments array passed to the format methods or the result array returned by the parse methods.

Parameters
newFormats Array<Format!>!: the new formats to use
Exceptions
java.lang.NullPointerException if newFormats is null

setFormatsByArgumentIndex

Added in API level 24
open fun setFormatsByArgumentIndex(newFormats: Array<Format!>!): Unit

Sets the Format objects to use for the values passed into format methods or returned from parse methods. The indices of elements in newFormats correspond to the argument indices used in the previously set pattern string. The order of formats in newFormats thus corresponds to the order of elements in the arguments array passed to the format methods or the result array returned by the parse methods.

If an argument index is used for more than one format element in the pattern string, then the corresponding new format is used for all such format elements. If an argument index is not used for any format element in the pattern string, then the corresponding new format is ignored. If fewer formats are provided than needed, then only the formats for argument indices less than newFormats.length are replaced. This method is only supported if the format does not use named arguments, otherwise an IllegalArgumentException is thrown.

Parameters
newFormats Array<Format!>!: the new formats to use
Exceptions
java.lang.NullPointerException if newFormats is null
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if this formatter uses named arguments

setFormatsByArgumentName

Added in API level 24
open fun setFormatsByArgumentName(newFormats: MutableMap<String!, Format!>!): Unit

[icu] Sets the Format objects to use for the values passed into format methods or returned from parse methods. The keys in newFormats are the argument names in the previously set pattern string, and the values are the formats.

Only argument names from the pattern string are considered. Extra keys in newFormats that do not correspond to an argument name are ignored. Similarly, if there is no format in newFormats for an argument name, the formatter for that argument remains unchanged.

This may be called on formats that do not use named arguments. In this case the map will be queried for key Strings that represent argument indices, e.g. "0", "1", "2" etc.

Parameters
newFormats MutableMap<String!, Format!>!: a map from String to Format providing new formats for named arguments.

setLocale

Added in API level 24
open fun setLocale(locale: Locale!): Unit

Sets the locale to be used for creating argument Format objects. This affects subsequent calls to the #applyPattern method as well as to the format and formatToCharacterIterator methods.

Parameters
locale Locale!: the locale to be used when creating or comparing subformats

setLocale

Added in API level 24
open fun setLocale(locale: ULocale!): Unit

Sets the locale to be used for creating argument Format objects. This affects subsequent calls to the #applyPattern method as well as to the format and formatToCharacterIterator methods.

Parameters
locale ULocale!: the locale to be used when creating or comparing subformats

toPattern

Added in API level 24
open fun toPattern(): String!

Returns the applied pattern string.

Return
String! the pattern string
Exceptions
java.lang.IllegalStateException after custom Format objects have been set via setFormat() or similar APIs

usesNamedArguments

Added in API level 24
open fun usesNamedArguments(): Boolean

[icu] Returns true if this MessageFormat uses named arguments, and false otherwise. See class description.

Return
Boolean true if named arguments are used.