org.w3c.dom.ls.LSInput Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright (c) 2004 World Wide Web Consortium,
*
* (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, European Research Consortium for
* Informatics and Mathematics, Keio University). All Rights Reserved. This
* work is distributed under the W3C(r) Software License [1] in the hope that
* it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied
* warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
*
* [1] http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/2002/copyright-software-20021231
*/
package org.w3c.dom.ls;
/**
* This interface represents an input source for data.
* This interface allows an application to encapsulate information about
* an input source in a single object, which may include a public
* identifier, a system identifier, a byte stream (possibly with a specified
* encoding), a base URI, and/or a character stream.
*
The exact definitions of a byte stream and a character stream are
* binding dependent.
*
The application is expected to provide objects that implement this
* interface whenever such objects are needed. The application can either
* provide its own objects that implement this interface, or it can use the
* generic factory method DOMImplementationLS.createLSInput()
* to create objects that implement this interface.
*
The LSParser
will use the LSInput
object to
* determine how to read data. The LSParser
will look at the
* different inputs specified in the LSInput
in the following
* order to know which one to read from, the first one that is not null and
* not an empty string will be used:
*
* -
LSInput.characterStream
*
* -
*
LSInput.byteStream
*
* -
LSInput.stringData
*
* -
*
LSInput.systemId
*
* -
LSInput.publicId
*
*
* If all inputs are null, the LSParser
will report a
* DOMError
with its DOMError.type
set to
* "no-input-specified"
and its DOMError.severity
* set to DOMError.SEVERITY_FATAL_ERROR
.
*
LSInput
objects belong to the application. The DOM
* implementation will never modify them (though it may make copies and
* modify the copies, if necessary).
*
See also the Document Object Model (DOM) Level 3 Load
and Save Specification.
*/
public interface LSInput {
/**
* An attribute of a language and binding dependent type that represents
* a stream of 16-bit units. The application must encode the stream
* using UTF-16 (defined in [Unicode] and in [ISO/IEC 10646]). It is not a requirement to have an XML declaration when
* using character streams. If an XML declaration is present, the value
* of the encoding attribute will be ignored.
*/
public java.io.Reader getCharacterStream();
/**
* An attribute of a language and binding dependent type that represents
* a stream of 16-bit units. The application must encode the stream
* using UTF-16 (defined in [Unicode] and in [ISO/IEC 10646]). It is not a requirement to have an XML declaration when
* using character streams. If an XML declaration is present, the value
* of the encoding attribute will be ignored.
*/
public void setCharacterStream(java.io.Reader characterStream);
/**
* An attribute of a language and binding dependent type that represents
* a stream of bytes.
*
If the application knows the character encoding of the byte
* stream, it should set the encoding attribute. Setting the encoding in
* this way will override any encoding specified in an XML declaration
* in the data.
*/
public java.io.InputStream getByteStream();
/**
* An attribute of a language and binding dependent type that represents
* a stream of bytes.
*
If the application knows the character encoding of the byte
* stream, it should set the encoding attribute. Setting the encoding in
* this way will override any encoding specified in an XML declaration
* in the data.
*/
public void setByteStream(java.io.InputStream byteStream);
/**
* String data to parse. If provided, this will always be treated as a
* sequence of 16-bit units (UTF-16 encoded characters). It is not a
* requirement to have an XML declaration when using
* stringData
. If an XML declaration is present, the value
* of the encoding attribute will be ignored.
*/
public String getStringData();
/**
* String data to parse. If provided, this will always be treated as a
* sequence of 16-bit units (UTF-16 encoded characters). It is not a
* requirement to have an XML declaration when using
* stringData
. If an XML declaration is present, the value
* of the encoding attribute will be ignored.
*/
public void setStringData(String stringData);
/**
* The system identifier, a URI reference [IETF RFC 2396], for this
* input source. The system identifier is optional if there is a byte
* stream, a character stream, or string data. It is still useful to
* provide one, since the application will use it to resolve any
* relative URIs and can include it in error messages and warnings. (The
* LSParser will only attempt to fetch the resource identified by the
* URI reference if there is no other input available in the input
* source.)
*
If the application knows the character encoding of the object
* pointed to by the system identifier, it can set the encoding using
* the encoding
attribute.
*
If the specified system ID is a relative URI reference (see
* section 5 in [IETF RFC 2396]), the DOM
* implementation will attempt to resolve the relative URI with the
* baseURI
as the base, if that fails, the behavior is
* implementation dependent.
*/
public String getSystemId();
/**
* The system identifier, a URI reference [IETF RFC 2396], for this
* input source. The system identifier is optional if there is a byte
* stream, a character stream, or string data. It is still useful to
* provide one, since the application will use it to resolve any
* relative URIs and can include it in error messages and warnings. (The
* LSParser will only attempt to fetch the resource identified by the
* URI reference if there is no other input available in the input
* source.)
*
If the application knows the character encoding of the object
* pointed to by the system identifier, it can set the encoding using
* the encoding
attribute.
*
If the specified system ID is a relative URI reference (see
* section 5 in [IETF RFC 2396]), the DOM
* implementation will attempt to resolve the relative URI with the
* baseURI
as the base, if that fails, the behavior is
* implementation dependent.
*/
public void setSystemId(String systemId);
/**
* The public identifier for this input source. This may be mapped to an
* input source using an implementation dependent mechanism (such as
* catalogues or other mappings). The public identifier, if specified,
* may also be reported as part of the location information when errors
* are reported.
*/
public String getPublicId();
/**
* The public identifier for this input source. This may be mapped to an
* input source using an implementation dependent mechanism (such as
* catalogues or other mappings). The public identifier, if specified,
* may also be reported as part of the location information when errors
* are reported.
*/
public void setPublicId(String publicId);
/**
* The base URI to be used (see section 5.1.4 in [IETF RFC 2396]) for
* resolving a relative systemId
to an absolute URI.
*
If, when used, the base URI is itself a relative URI, an empty
* string, or null, the behavior is implementation dependent.
*/
public String getBaseURI();
/**
* The base URI to be used (see section 5.1.4 in [IETF RFC 2396]) for
* resolving a relative systemId
to an absolute URI.
*
If, when used, the base URI is itself a relative URI, an empty
* string, or null, the behavior is implementation dependent.
*/
public void setBaseURI(String baseURI);
/**
* The character encoding, if known. The encoding must be a string
* acceptable for an XML encoding declaration ([XML 1.0] section
* 4.3.3 "Character Encoding in Entities").
*
This attribute has no effect when the application provides a
* character stream or string data. For other sources of input, an
* encoding specified by means of this attribute will override any
* encoding specified in the XML declaration or the Text declaration, or
* an encoding obtained from a higher level protocol, such as HTTP [IETF RFC 2616].
*/
public String getEncoding();
/**
* The character encoding, if known. The encoding must be a string
* acceptable for an XML encoding declaration ([XML 1.0] section
* 4.3.3 "Character Encoding in Entities").
*
This attribute has no effect when the application provides a
* character stream or string data. For other sources of input, an
* encoding specified by means of this attribute will override any
* encoding specified in the XML declaration or the Text declaration, or
* an encoding obtained from a higher level protocol, such as HTTP [IETF RFC 2616].
*/
public void setEncoding(String encoding);
/**
* If set to true, assume that the input is certified (see section 2.13
* in [XML 1.1]) when
* parsing [XML 1.1].
*/
public boolean getCertifiedText();
/**
* If set to true, assume that the input is certified (see section 2.13
* in [XML 1.1]) when
* parsing [XML 1.1].
*/
public void setCertifiedText(boolean certifiedText);
}