/*
 * Copyright (c) 2007, 2017 Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
 *
 * This program and the accompanying materials are made available under the
 * terms of the Eclipse Public License v. 2.0, which is available at
 * http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-2.0.
 *
 * This Source Code may also be made available under the following Secondary
 * Licenses when the conditions for such availability set forth in the
 * Eclipse Public License v. 2.0 are satisfied: GNU General Public License,
 * version 2 with the GNU Classpath Exception, which is available at
 * https://www.gnu.org/software/classpath/license.html.
 *
 * SPDX-License-Identifier: EPL-2.0 OR GPL-2.0 WITH Classpath-exception-2.0
 */

package org.glassfish.grizzly.http.util;

import java.text.MessageFormat;
import java.util.*;

An internationalization / localization helper class which reduces the bother of handling ResourceBundles and takes care of the common cases of message formatting which otherwise require the creation of Object arrays and such.

The StringManager operates on a package basis. One StringManager per package can be created and accessed via the getManager method call.

The StringManager will look for a ResourceBundle named by the package name given plus the suffix of "LocalStrings". In practice, this means that the localized information will be contained in a LocalStrings.properties file located in the package directory of the classpath.

Please see the documentation for java.util.ResourceBundle for more information.

Author:James Duncan Davidson [duncan@eng.sun.com], James Todd [gonzo@eng.sun.com], Mel Martinez [mmartinez@g1440.com]
See Also:
Version:$Revision: 1.2 $ $Date: 2005/12/08 01:29:37 $
/** * An internationalization / localization helper class which reduces * the bother of handling ResourceBundles and takes care of the * common cases of message formatting which otherwise require the * creation of Object arrays and such. * <p/> * <p>The StringManager operates on a package basis. One StringManager * per package can be created and accessed via the getManager method * call. * <p/> * <p>The StringManager will look for a ResourceBundle named by * the package name given plus the suffix of "LocalStrings". In * practice, this means that the localized information will be contained * in a LocalStrings.properties file located in the package * directory of the classpath. * <p/> * <p>Please see the documentation for java.util.ResourceBundle for * more information. * * @author James Duncan Davidson [duncan@eng.sun.com] * @author James Todd [gonzo@eng.sun.com] * @author Mel Martinez [mmartinez@g1440.com] * @version $Revision: 1.2 $ $Date: 2005/12/08 01:29:37 $ * @see java.util.ResourceBundle */
public class StringManager {
The ResourceBundle for this StringManager.
/** * The ResourceBundle for this StringManager. */
private ResourceBundle bundle;
Creates a new StringManager for a given package. This is a private method and all access to it is arbitrated by the static getManager method call so that only one StringManager per package will be created.
Params:
  • packageName – Name of package to create StringManager for.
/** * Creates a new StringManager for a given package. This is a * private method and all access to it is arbitrated by the * static getManager method call so that only one StringManager * per package will be created. * * @param packageName Name of package to create StringManager for. */
private StringManager(String packageName, ClassLoader loader) { this(packageName, Locale.getDefault(), loader); } private StringManager(String packageName, Locale loc, ClassLoader loader) { String bundleName = packageName + ".LocalStrings"; try { bundle = ResourceBundle.getBundle(bundleName, loc, loader); } catch (MissingResourceException ex) { bundle = ResourceBundle.getBundle(bundleName, Locale.US, loader); } } private StringManager(ResourceBundle bundle) { this.bundle = bundle; }
Get a string from the underlying resource bundle or return null if the String is not found.
Params:
  • key – to desired resource String
Throws:
Returns:resource String matching key from underlying bundle or null if not found.
/** * Get a string from the underlying resource bundle or return * null if the String is not found. * * @param key to desired resource String * @return resource String matching <i>key</i> from underlying * bundle or null if not found. * @throws IllegalArgumentException if <i>key</i> is null. */
public String getString(String key) { if (key == null) { String msg = "key may not have a null value"; throw new IllegalArgumentException(msg); } String str; try { str = bundle.getString(key); } catch (MissingResourceException mre) { //bad: shouldn't mask an exception the following way: // str = "[cannot find message associated with key '" + key + "' due to " + mre + "]"; // because it hides the fact that the String was missing // from the calling code. //good: could just throw the exception (or wrap it in another) // but that would probably cause much havoc on existing // code. //better: consistent with container pattern to // simply return null. Calling code can then do // a null check. str = null; } return str; }
Get a string from the underlying resource bundle and format it with the given set of arguments.
Params:
  • key –
  • args –
/** * Get a string from the underlying resource bundle and format * it with the given set of arguments. * * @param key * @param args */
public String getString(String key, Object[] args) { String iString; String value = getString(key); // this check for the runtime exception is some pre 1.1.6 // VM's don't do an automatic toString() on the passed in // objects and barf out try { // ensure the arguments are not null so pre 1.2 VM's don't barf if (args == null) { args = new Object[1]; } Object[] nonNullArgs = args; for (int i = 0; i < args.length; i++) { if (args[i] == null) { if (nonNullArgs == args) { nonNullArgs = args.clone(); } nonNullArgs[i] = "null"; } } if (value == null) value = key; iString = MessageFormat.format(value, nonNullArgs); } catch (IllegalArgumentException iae) { StringBuilder buf = new StringBuilder(); buf.append(value); for (int i = 0; i < args.length; i++) { buf.append(" arg[").append(i).append("]=").append(args[i]); } iString = buf.toString(); } return iString; }
Get a string from the underlying resource bundle and format it with the given object argument. This argument can of course be a String object.
Params:
  • key –
  • arg –
/** * Get a string from the underlying resource bundle and format it * with the given object argument. This argument can of course be * a String object. * * @param key * @param arg */
public String getString(String key, Object arg) { Object[] args = new Object[]{arg}; return getString(key, args); }
Get a string from the underlying resource bundle and format it with the given object arguments. These arguments can of course be String objects.
Params:
  • key –
  • arg1 –
  • arg2 –
/** * Get a string from the underlying resource bundle and format it * with the given object arguments. These arguments can of course * be String objects. * * @param key * @param arg1 * @param arg2 */
public String getString(String key, Object arg1, Object arg2) { Object[] args = new Object[]{arg1, arg2}; return getString(key, args); }
Get a string from the underlying resource bundle and format it with the given object arguments. These arguments can of course be String objects.
Params:
  • key –
  • arg1 –
  • arg2 –
  • arg3 –
/** * Get a string from the underlying resource bundle and format it * with the given object arguments. These arguments can of course * be String objects. * * @param key * @param arg1 * @param arg2 * @param arg3 */
public String getString(String key, Object arg1, Object arg2, Object arg3) { Object[] args = new Object[]{arg1, arg2, arg3}; return getString(key, args); }
Get a string from the underlying resource bundle and format it with the given object arguments. These arguments can of course be String objects.
Params:
  • key –
  • arg1 –
  • arg2 –
  • arg3 –
  • arg4 –
/** * Get a string from the underlying resource bundle and format it * with the given object arguments. These arguments can of course * be String objects. * * @param key * @param arg1 * @param arg2 * @param arg3 * @param arg4 */
public String getString(String key, Object arg1, Object arg2, Object arg3, Object arg4) { Object[] args = new Object[]{arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4}; return getString(key, args); } // -------------------------------------------------------------- // STATIC SUPPORT METHODS // -------------------------------------------------------------- private static final Map<String,StringManager> managers = new HashMap<String,StringManager>();
Get the StringManager for a particular package. If a manager for a package already exists, it will be reused, else a new StringManager will be created and returned.
Params:
  • packageName –
/** * Get the StringManager for a particular package. If a manager for * a package already exists, it will be reused, else a new * StringManager will be created and returned. * * @param packageName */
public synchronized static StringManager getManager(String packageName, ClassLoader loader) { StringManager mgr = managers.get(packageName); if (mgr == null) { mgr = new StringManager(packageName, loader); managers.put(packageName, mgr); } return mgr; }
Get the StringManager for a particular package. If a manager for a package already exists, it will be reused, else a new StringManager will be created and returned.
Params:
  • bundle –
/** * Get the StringManager for a particular package. If a manager for * a package already exists, it will be reused, else a new * StringManager will be created and returned. * * @param bundle */
public synchronized static StringManager getManager(ResourceBundle bundle) { return new StringManager(bundle); }
Get the StringManager for a particular package and Locale. If a manager for a package already exists, it will be reused, else a new StringManager will be created for that Locale and returned.
Params:
  • packageName –
/** * Get the StringManager for a particular package and Locale. If a manager for * a package already exists, it will be reused, else a new * StringManager will be created for that Locale and returned. * * @param packageName */
public synchronized static StringManager getManager(String packageName, Locale loc, ClassLoader loader) { StringManager mgr = managers.get(packageName + '_' + loc.toString()); if (mgr == null) { mgr = new StringManager(packageName, loc, loader); managers.put(packageName + '_' + loc.toString(), mgr); } return mgr; } }