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/*
* (C) Copyright Taligent, Inc. 1996-1998 - All Rights Reserved
* (C) Copyright IBM Corp. 1996-1998 - All Rights Reserved
*
* The original version of this source code and documentation is copyrighted
* and owned by Taligent, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of IBM. These
* materials are provided under terms of a License Agreement between Taligent
* and Sun. This technology is protected by multiple US and International
* patents. This notice and attribution to Taligent may not be removed.
* Taligent is a registered trademark of Taligent, Inc.
*
*/
package java.text;
import java.lang.ref.SoftReference;
import java.text.spi.CollatorProvider;
import java.util.Locale;
import java.util.ResourceBundle;
import java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentHashMap;
import java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentMap;
import sun.util.locale.provider.LocaleProviderAdapter;
import sun.util.locale.provider.LocaleServiceProviderPool;
/**
* The <code>Collator</code> class performs locale-sensitive
* <code>String</code> comparison. You use this class to build
* searching and sorting routines for natural language text.
*
* <p>
* <code>Collator</code> is an abstract base class. Subclasses
* implement specific collation strategies. One subclass,
* <code>RuleBasedCollator</code>, is currently provided with
* the Java Platform and is applicable to a wide set of languages. Other
* subclasses may be created to handle more specialized needs.
*
* <p>
* Like other locale-sensitive classes, you can use the static
* factory method, <code>getInstance</code>, to obtain the appropriate
* <code>Collator</code> object for a given locale. You will only need
* to look at the subclasses of <code>Collator</code> if you need
* to understand the details of a particular collation strategy or
* if you need to modify that strategy.
*
* <p>
* The following example shows how to compare two strings using
* the <code>Collator</code> for the default locale.
* <blockquote>
* <pre>{@code
* // Compare two strings in the default locale
* Collator myCollator = Collator.getInstance();
* if( myCollator.compare("abc", "ABC") < 0 )
* System.out.println("abc is less than ABC");
* else
* System.out.println("abc is greater than or equal to ABC");
* }</pre>
* </blockquote>
*
* <p>
* You can set a <code>Collator</code>'s <em>strength</em> property
* to determine the level of difference considered significant in
* comparisons. Four strengths are provided: <code>PRIMARY</code>,
* <code>SECONDARY</code>, <code>TERTIARY</code>, and <code>IDENTICAL</code>.
* The exact assignment of strengths to language features is
* locale dependant. For example, in Czech, "e" and "f" are considered
* primary differences, while "e" and "ě" are secondary differences,
* "e" and "E" are tertiary differences and "e" and "e" are identical.
* The following shows how both case and accents could be ignored for
* US English.
* <blockquote>
* <pre>
* //Get the Collator for US English and set its strength to PRIMARY
* Collator usCollator = Collator.getInstance(Locale.US);
* usCollator.setStrength(Collator.PRIMARY);
* if( usCollator.compare("abc", "ABC") == 0 ) {
* System.out.println("Strings are equivalent");
* }
* </pre>
* </blockquote>
* <p>
* For comparing <code>String</code>s exactly once, the <code>compare</code>
* method provides the best performance. When sorting a list of
* <code>String</code>s however, it is generally necessary to compare each
* <code>String</code> multiple times. In this case, <code>CollationKey</code>s
* provide better performance. The <code>CollationKey</code> class converts
* a <code>String</code> to a series of bits that can be compared bitwise
* against other <code>CollationKey</code>s. A <code>CollationKey</code> is
* created by a <code>Collator</code> object for a given <code>String</code>.
* <br>
* <strong>Note:</strong> <code>CollationKey</code>s from different
* <code>Collator</code>s can not be compared. See the class description
* for {@link CollationKey}
* for an example using <code>CollationKey</code>s.
*
* @see RuleBasedCollator
* @see CollationKey
* @see CollationElementIterator
* @see Locale
* @author Helena Shih, Laura Werner, Richard Gillam
*/
public abstract class Collator
implements java.util.Comparator<Object>, Cloneable
{
/**
* Collator strength value. When set, only PRIMARY differences are
* considered significant during comparison. The assignment of strengths
* to language features is locale dependant. A common example is for
* different base letters ("a" vs "b") to be considered a PRIMARY difference.
* @see java.text.Collator#setStrength
* @see java.text.Collator#getStrength
*/
public final static int PRIMARY = 0;
/**
* Collator strength value. When set, only SECONDARY and above differences are
* considered significant during comparison. The assignment of strengths
* to language features is locale dependant. A common example is for
* different accented forms of the same base letter ("a" vs "\u00E4") to be
* considered a SECONDARY difference.
* @see java.text.Collator#setStrength
* @see java.text.Collator#getStrength
*/
public final static int SECONDARY = 1;
/**
* Collator strength value. When set, only TERTIARY and above differences are
* considered significant during comparison. The assignment of strengths
* to language features is locale dependant. A common example is for
* case differences ("a" vs "A") to be considered a TERTIARY difference.
* @see java.text.Collator#setStrength
* @see java.text.Collator#getStrength
*/
public final static int TERTIARY = 2;
/**
* Collator strength value. When set, all differences are
* considered significant during comparison. The assignment of strengths
* to language features is locale dependant. A common example is for control
* characters ("\u0001" vs "\u0002") to be considered equal at the
* PRIMARY, SECONDARY, and TERTIARY levels but different at the IDENTICAL
* level. Additionally, differences between pre-composed accents such as
* "\u00C0" (A-grave) and combining accents such as "A\u0300"
* (A, combining-grave) will be considered significant at the IDENTICAL
* level if decomposition is set to NO_DECOMPOSITION.
*/
public final static int IDENTICAL = 3;
/**
* Decomposition mode value. With NO_DECOMPOSITION
* set, accented characters will not be decomposed for collation. This
* is the default setting and provides the fastest collation but
* will only produce correct results for languages that do not use accents.
* @see java.text.Collator#getDecomposition
* @see java.text.Collator#setDecomposition
*/
public final static int NO_DECOMPOSITION = 0;
/**
* Decomposition mode value. With CANONICAL_DECOMPOSITION
* set, characters that are canonical variants according to Unicode
* standard will be decomposed for collation. This should be used to get
* correct collation of accented characters.
* <p>
* CANONICAL_DECOMPOSITION corresponds to Normalization Form D as
* described in
* <a href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr15/tr15-23.html">Unicode
* Technical Report #15</a>.
* @see java.text.Collator#getDecomposition
* @see java.text.Collator#setDecomposition
*/
public final static int CANONICAL_DECOMPOSITION = 1;
/**
* Decomposition mode value. With FULL_DECOMPOSITION
* set, both Unicode canonical variants and Unicode compatibility variants
* will be decomposed for collation. This causes not only accented
* characters to be collated, but also characters that have special formats
* to be collated with their norminal form. For example, the half-width and
* full-width ASCII and Katakana characters are then collated together.
* FULL_DECOMPOSITION is the most complete and therefore the slowest
* decomposition mode.
* <p>
* FULL_DECOMPOSITION corresponds to Normalization Form KD as
* described in
* <a href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr15/tr15-23.html">Unicode
* Technical Report #15</a>.
* @see java.text.Collator#getDecomposition
* @see java.text.Collator#setDecomposition
*/
public final static int FULL_DECOMPOSITION = 2;
/**
* Gets the Collator for the current default locale.
* The default locale is determined by java.util.Locale.getDefault.
* @return the Collator for the default locale.(for example, en_US)
* @see java.util.Locale#getDefault
*/
public static synchronized Collator getInstance() {
return getInstance(Locale.getDefault());
}
/**
* Gets the Collator for the desired locale.
* @param desiredLocale the desired locale.
* @return the Collator for the desired locale.
* @see java.util.Locale
* @see java.util.ResourceBundle
*/
public static Collator getInstance(Locale desiredLocale) {
SoftReference<Collator> ref = cache.get(desiredLocale);
Collator result = (ref != null) ? ref.get() : null;
if (result == null) {
LocaleProviderAdapter adapter;
adapter = LocaleProviderAdapter.getAdapter(CollatorProvider.class,
desiredLocale);
CollatorProvider provider = adapter.getCollatorProvider();
result = provider.getInstance(desiredLocale);
if (result == null) {
result = LocaleProviderAdapter.forJRE()
.getCollatorProvider().getInstance(desiredLocale);
}
while (true) {
if (ref != null) {
// Remove the empty SoftReference if any
cache.remove(desiredLocale, ref);
}
ref = cache.putIfAbsent(desiredLocale, new SoftReference<>(result));
if (ref == null) {
break;
}
Collator cachedColl = ref.get();
if (cachedColl != null) {
result = cachedColl;
break;
}
}
}
return (Collator) result.clone(); // make the world safe
}
/**
* Compares the source string to the target string according to the
* collation rules for this Collator. Returns an integer less than,
* equal to or greater than zero depending on whether the source String is
* less than, equal to or greater than the target string. See the Collator
* class description for an example of use.
* <p>
* For a one time comparison, this method has the best performance. If a
* given String will be involved in multiple comparisons, CollationKey.compareTo
* has the best performance. See the Collator class description for an example
* using CollationKeys.
* @param source the source string.
* @param target the target string.
* @return Returns an integer value. Value is less than zero if source is less than
* target, value is zero if source and target are equal, value is greater than zero
* if source is greater than target.
* @see java.text.CollationKey
* @see java.text.Collator#getCollationKey
*/
public abstract int compare(String source, String target);
/**
* Compares its two arguments for order. Returns a negative integer,
* zero, or a positive integer as the first argument is less than, equal
* to, or greater than the second.
* <p>
* This implementation merely returns
* <code> compare((String)o1, (String)o2) </code>.
*
* @return a negative integer, zero, or a positive integer as the
* first argument is less than, equal to, or greater than the
* second.
* @exception ClassCastException the arguments cannot be cast to Strings.
* @see java.util.Comparator
* @since 1.2
*/
@Override
public int compare(Object o1, Object o2) {
return compare((String)o1, (String)o2);
}
/**
* Transforms the String into a series of bits that can be compared bitwise
* to other CollationKeys. CollationKeys provide better performance than
* Collator.compare when Strings are involved in multiple comparisons.
* See the Collator class description for an example using CollationKeys.
* @param source the string to be transformed into a collation key.
* @return the CollationKey for the given String based on this Collator's collation
* rules. If the source String is null, a null CollationKey is returned.
* @see java.text.CollationKey
* @see java.text.Collator#compare
*/
public abstract CollationKey getCollationKey(String source);
/**
* Convenience method for comparing the equality of two strings based on
* this Collator's collation rules.
* @param source the source string to be compared with.
* @param target the target string to be compared with.
* @return true if the strings are equal according to the collation
* rules. false, otherwise.
* @see java.text.Collator#compare
*/
public boolean equals(String source, String target)
{
return (compare(source, target) == Collator.EQUAL);
}
/**
* Returns this Collator's strength property. The strength property determines
* the minimum level of difference considered significant during comparison.
* See the Collator class description for an example of use.
* @return this Collator's current strength property.
* @see java.text.Collator#setStrength
* @see java.text.Collator#PRIMARY
* @see java.text.Collator#SECONDARY
* @see java.text.Collator#TERTIARY
* @see java.text.Collator#IDENTICAL
*/
public synchronized int getStrength()
{
return strength;
}
/**
* Sets this Collator's strength property. The strength property determines
* the minimum level of difference considered significant during comparison.
* See the Collator class description for an example of use.
* @param newStrength the new strength value.
* @see java.text.Collator#getStrength
* @see java.text.Collator#PRIMARY
* @see java.text.Collator#SECONDARY
* @see java.text.Collator#TERTIARY
* @see java.text.Collator#IDENTICAL
* @exception IllegalArgumentException If the new strength value is not one of
* PRIMARY, SECONDARY, TERTIARY or IDENTICAL.
*/
public synchronized void setStrength(int newStrength) {
if ((newStrength != PRIMARY) &&
(newStrength != SECONDARY) &&
(newStrength != TERTIARY) &&
(newStrength != IDENTICAL)) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("Incorrect comparison level.");
}
strength = newStrength;
}
/**
* Get the decomposition mode of this Collator. Decomposition mode
* determines how Unicode composed characters are handled. Adjusting
* decomposition mode allows the user to select between faster and more
* complete collation behavior.
* <p>The three values for decomposition mode are:
* <UL>
* <LI>NO_DECOMPOSITION,
* <LI>CANONICAL_DECOMPOSITION
* <LI>FULL_DECOMPOSITION.
* </UL>
* See the documentation for these three constants for a description
* of their meaning.
* @return the decomposition mode
* @see java.text.Collator#setDecomposition
* @see java.text.Collator#NO_DECOMPOSITION
* @see java.text.Collator#CANONICAL_DECOMPOSITION
* @see java.text.Collator#FULL_DECOMPOSITION
*/
public synchronized int getDecomposition()
{
return decmp;
}
/**
* Set the decomposition mode of this Collator. See getDecomposition
* for a description of decomposition mode.
* @param decompositionMode the new decomposition mode.
* @see java.text.Collator#getDecomposition
* @see java.text.Collator#NO_DECOMPOSITION
* @see java.text.Collator#CANONICAL_DECOMPOSITION
* @see java.text.Collator#FULL_DECOMPOSITION
* @exception IllegalArgumentException If the given value is not a valid decomposition
* mode.
*/
public synchronized void setDecomposition(int decompositionMode) {
if ((decompositionMode != NO_DECOMPOSITION) &&
(decompositionMode != CANONICAL_DECOMPOSITION) &&
(decompositionMode != FULL_DECOMPOSITION)) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("Wrong decomposition mode.");
}
decmp = decompositionMode;
}
/**
* Returns an array of all locales for which the
* <code>getInstance</code> methods of this class can return
* localized instances.
* The returned array represents the union of locales supported
* by the Java runtime and by installed
* {@link java.text.spi.CollatorProvider CollatorProvider} implementations.
* It must contain at least a Locale instance equal to
* {@link java.util.Locale#US Locale.US}.
*
* @return An array of locales for which localized
* <code>Collator</code> instances are available.
*/
public static synchronized Locale[] getAvailableLocales() {
LocaleServiceProviderPool pool =
LocaleServiceProviderPool.getPool(CollatorProvider.class);
return pool.getAvailableLocales();
}
/**
* Overrides Cloneable
*/
@Override
public Object clone()
{
try {
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