java.text.CollationElementIterator Maven / Gradle / Ivy
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* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
* contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
* this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
* The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
* (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
* the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package java.text;
import libcore.icu.CollationElementIteratorICU;
/**
* Created by a {@code RuleBasedCollator} to iterate through a string. The
* result of each iteration is a 32-bit collation element that defines the
* ordering priority of the next character or sequence of characters in the
* source string.
*
* For illustration, consider the following in Spanish:
*
* "ca": the first collation element is collation_element('c') and second
* collation element is collation_element('a').
*
* Since "ch" in Spanish sorts as one entity, the example below returns one
* collation element for the two characters 'c' and 'h':
*
* "cha": the first collation element is collation_element('ch') and the second
* one is collation_element('a').
*
* In German, since the character '\u0086' is a composed character of 'a'
* and 'e', the iterator returns two collation elements for the single character
* '\u0086':
*
* "\u0086b": the first collation element is collation_element('a'), the
* second one is collation_element('e'), and the third collation element is
* collation_element('b').
*/
public final class CollationElementIterator {
/**
* This constant is returned by the iterator in the methods
* {@code next()} and {@code previous()} when the end or the
* beginning of the source string has been reached, and there are no more
* valid collation elements to return.
*/
public static final int NULLORDER = -1;
private CollationElementIteratorICU icuIterator;
CollationElementIterator(CollationElementIteratorICU iterator) {
this.icuIterator = iterator;
}
/**
* Obtains the maximum length of any expansion sequence that ends with the
* specified collation element. Returns {@code 1} if there is no expansion
* with this collation element as the last element.
*
* @param order
* a collation element that has been previously obtained from a
* call to either the {@link #next()} or {@link #previous()}
* method.
* @return the maximum length of any expansion sequence ending with the
* specified collation element.
*/
public int getMaxExpansion(int order) {
return this.icuIterator.getMaxExpansion(order);
}
/**
* Obtains the character offset in the source string corresponding to the
* next collation element. This value could be any of:
*
* - The index of the first character in the source string that matches
* the value of the next collation element. This means that if
* {@code setOffset(offset)} sets the index in the middle of a contraction,
* {@code getOffset()} returns the index of the first character in the
* contraction, which may not be equal to the original offset that was set.
* Hence calling {@code getOffset()} immediately after
* {@code setOffset(offset)} does not guarantee that the original offset set
* will be returned.
* - If normalization is on, the index of the immediate subsequent
* character, or composite character with the first character, having a
* combining class of 0.
* - The length of the source string, if iteration has reached the end.
*
*
*
* @return The position of the collation element in the source string that
* will be returned by the next invocation of the {@link #next()}
* method.
*/
public int getOffset() {
return this.icuIterator.getOffset();
}
/**
* Obtains the next collation element in the source string.
*
* @return the next collation element or {@code NULLORDER} if the end
* of the iteration has been reached.
*/
public int next() {
return this.icuIterator.next();
}
/**
* Obtains the previous collation element in the source string.
*
* @return the previous collation element, or {@code NULLORDER} when
* the start of the iteration has been reached.
*/
public int previous() {
return this.icuIterator.previous();
}
/**
* Obtains the primary order of the specified collation element, i.e. the
* first 16 bits. This value is unsigned.
*
* @param order
* the element of the collation.
* @return the element's 16 bit primary order.
*/
public static final int primaryOrder(int order) {
return CollationElementIteratorICU.primaryOrder(order);
}
/**
* Repositions the cursor to point at the first element of the current
* string. The next call to {@link #next()} or {@link #previous()} will
* return the first and last collation element in the string, respectively.
*
* If the {@code RuleBasedCollator} used by this iterator has had its
* attributes changed, calling {@code reset()} reinitializes the iterator to
* use the new attributes.
*/
public void reset() {
this.icuIterator.reset();
}
/**
* Obtains the secondary order of the specified collation element, i.e. the
* 16th to 23th bits, inclusive. This value is unsigned.
*
* @param order
* the element of the collator.
* @return the 8 bit secondary order of the element.
*/
public static final short secondaryOrder(int order) {
return (short) CollationElementIteratorICU.secondaryOrder(order);
}
/**
* Points the iterator at the collation element associated with the
* character in the source string which is found at the supplied offset.
* After this call completes, an invocation of the {@link #next()} method
* will return this collation element.
*
* If {@code newOffset} corresponds to a character which is part of a
* sequence that maps to a single collation element then the iterator is
* adjusted to the start of that sequence. As a result of this, any
* subsequent call made to {@code getOffset()} may not return the same value
* set by this method.
*
* If the decomposition mode is on, and offset is in the middle of a
* decomposable range of source text, the iterator may not return a correct
* result for the next forwards or backwards iteration. The user must ensure
* that the offset is not in the middle of a decomposable range.
*
* @param newOffset
* the character offset into the original source string to set.
* Note that this is not an offset into the corresponding
* sequence of collation elements.
*/
public void setOffset(int newOffset) {
this.icuIterator.setOffset(newOffset);
}
/**
* Sets a new source string iterator for iteration, and resets the offset to
* the beginning of the text.
*
* @param source
* the new source string iterator for iteration.
*/
public void setText(CharacterIterator source) {
this.icuIterator.setText(source);
}
/**
* Sets a new source string for iteration, and resets the offset to the
* beginning of the text.
*
* @param source
* the new source string for iteration.
*/
public void setText(String source) {
this.icuIterator.setText(source);
}
/**
* Obtains the tertiary order of the specified collation element, i.e. the
* last 8 bits. This value is unsigned.
*
* @param order
* the element of the collation.
* @return the 8 bit tertiary order of the element.
*/
public static final short tertiaryOrder(int order) {
return (short) CollationElementIteratorICU.tertiaryOrder(order);
}
}