public static final class Locale.LanguageRange extends Object
There are two types of language ranges: basic and extended. In RFC 4647, the syntax of language ranges is expressed in ABNF as follows:
basic-language-range = (1*8ALPHA *("-" 1*8alphanum)) / "*"
extended-language-range = (1*8ALPHA / "*")
*("-" (1*8alphanum / "*"))
alphanum = ALPHA / DIGIT
For example,
"en" (English),
"ja-JP" (Japanese, Japan),
"*" (special language range which matches any language tag) are basic language ranges, whereas
"*-CH" (any languages, Switzerland),
"es-*" (Spanish, any regions), and
"zh-Hant-*" (Traditional Chinese, any regions) are extended language ranges.
Locale.filter(java.util.List<java.util.Locale.LanguageRange>, java.util.Collection<java.util.Locale>, java.util.Locale.FilteringMode) ,
Locale.filterTags(java.util.List<java.util.Locale.LanguageRange>, java.util.Collection<java.lang.String>, java.util.Locale.FilteringMode) ,
Locale.lookup(java.util.List<java.util.Locale.LanguageRange>, java.util.Collection<java.util.Locale>) ,
Locale.lookupTag(java.util.List<java.util.Locale.LanguageRange>, java.util.Collection<java.lang.String>)
| Modifier and Type | Field and Description |
|---|---|
static double |
MAX_WEIGHT
A constant holding the maximum value of weight, 1.0, which indicates that the language range is a good fit for the user.
|
static double |
MIN_WEIGHT
A constant holding the minimum value of weight, 0.0, which indicates that the language range is not a good fit for the user.
|
| Constructor and Description |
|---|
LanguageRange(String
Constructs a
LanguageRange using the given
range.
|
LanguageRange(String
Constructs a
LanguageRange using the given
range and
weight.
|
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
boolean |
equals(Object
Compares this object to the specified object.
|
String |
getRange()
Returns the language range of this
LanguageRange.
|
double |
getWeight()
Returns the weight of this
LanguageRange.
|
int |
hashCode()
Returns a hash code value for the object.
|
static List |
mapEquivalents(List
Generates a new customized Language Priority List using the given
priorityList and
map.
|
static List |
parse(String
Parses the given
ranges to generate a Language Priority List.
|
static List |
parse(String
Parses the given
ranges to generate a Language Priority List, and then customizes the list using the given
map.
|
public static final double MAX_WEIGHT
public static final double MIN_WEIGHT
public LanguageRange(Stringrange)
LanguageRange using the given
range. Note that no validation is done against the IANA Language Subtag Registry at time of construction.
This is equivalent to LanguageRange(range, MAX_WEIGHT).
range - a language range
NullPointerException - if the given
range is
null
public LanguageRange(Stringrange, double weight)
LanguageRange using the given
range and
weight. Note that no validation is done against the IANA Language Subtag Registry at time of construction.
range - a language range
weight - a weight value between
MIN_WEIGHT and
MAX_WEIGHT
NullPointerException - if the given
range is
null
IllegalArgumentException - if the given
weight is less than
MIN_WEIGHT or greater than
MAX_WEIGHT
public StringgetRange()
LanguageRange.
public double getWeight()
LanguageRange.
public static List<Locale .LanguageRange > parse(String ranges)
ranges to generate a Language Priority List.
This method performs a syntactic check for each language range in the given ranges but doesn't do validation using the IANA Language Subtag Registry.
The ranges to be given can take one of the following forms:
"Accept-Language: ja,en;q=0.4" (weighted list with Accept-Language prefix) "ja,en;q=0.4" (weighted list) "ja,en" (prioritized list)In a weighted list, each language range is given a weight value. The weight value is identical to the "quality value" in RFC 2616, and it expresses how much the user prefers the language. A weight value is specified after a corresponding language range followed by
";q=", and the default weight value is
MAX_WEIGHT when it is omitted.
Unlike a weighted list, language ranges in a prioritized list are sorted in the descending order based on its priority. The first language range has the highest priority and meets the user's preference most.
In either case, language ranges are sorted in descending order in the Language Priority List based on priority or weight. If a language range appears in the given ranges more than once, only the first one is included on the Language Priority List.
The returned list consists of language ranges from the given ranges and their equivalents found in the IANA Language Subtag Registry. For example, if the given ranges is "Accept-Language: iw,en-us;q=0.7,en;q=0.3", the elements in the list to be returned are:
Range Weight
"iw" (older tag for Hebrew) 1.0
"he" (new preferred code for Hebrew) 1.0
"en-us" (English, United States) 0.7
"en" (English) 0.3
Two language ranges,
"iw" and
"he", have the same highest priority in the list. By adding
"he" to the user's Language Priority List, locale-matching method can find Hebrew as a matching locale (or language tag) even if the application or system offers only
"he" as a supported locale (or language tag).
ranges - a list of comma-separated language ranges or a list of language ranges in the form of the "Accept-Language" header defined in
RFC 2616
ranges and their equivalent language ranges if available. The list is modifiable.
NullPointerException - if
ranges is null
IllegalArgumentException - if a language range or a weight found in the given
ranges is ill-formed
public static List<Locale .LanguageRange > parse(String ranges, Map <String ,List <String >> map)
ranges to generate a Language Priority List, and then customizes the list using the given
map. This method is equivalent to
mapEquivalents(parse(ranges), map).
ranges - a list of comma-separated language ranges or a list of language ranges in the form of the "Accept-Language" header defined in
RFC 2616
map - a map containing information to customize language ranges
NullPointerException - if
ranges is null
IllegalArgumentException - if a language range or a weight found in the given
ranges is ill-formed
parse(String),
mapEquivalents(java.util.List<java.util.Locale.LanguageRange>, java.util.Map<java.lang.String, java.util.List<java.lang.String>>)
public static List<Locale .LanguageRange > mapEquivalents(List <Locale .LanguageRange > priorityList, Map <String ,List <String >> map)
priorityList and
map. If the given
map is empty, this method returns a copy of the given
priorityList.
In the map, a key represents a language range whereas a value is a list of equivalents of it. '*' cannot be used in the map. Each equivalent language range has the same weight value as its original language range.
An example of map:
Key Value
"zh" (Chinese) "zh",
"zh-Hans"(Simplified Chinese)
"zh-HK" (Chinese, Hong Kong) "zh-HK"
"zh-TW" (Chinese, Taiwan) "zh-TW"
The customization is performed after modification using the IANA Language Subtag Registry.
For example, if a user's Language Priority List consists of five language ranges ("zh", "zh-CN", "en", "zh-TW", and "zh-HK"), the newly generated Language Priority List which is customized using the above map example will consists of "zh", "zh-Hans", "zh-CN", "zh-Hans-CN", "en", "zh-TW", and "zh-HK".
"zh-HK" and "zh-TW" aren't converted to "zh-Hans-HK" nor "zh-Hans-TW" even if they are included in the Language Priority List. In this example, mapping is used to clearly distinguish Simplified Chinese and Traditional Chinese.
If the "zh"-to-"zh" mapping isn't included in the map, a simple replacement will be performed and the customized list won't include "zh" and "zh-CN".
priorityList - user's Language Priority List
map - a map containing information to customize language ranges
NullPointerException - if
priorityList is
null
parse(String, Map)
public int hashCode()
hashCode in class
Object
Object.equals(java.lang.Object) ,
System.identityHashCode(java.lang.Object)
public boolean equals(Objectobj)
null and is a
LanguageRange object that contains the same
range and
weight values as this object.
equals in class
Object
obj - the object to compare with
true if this object's
range and
weight are the same as the
obj's;
false otherwise.
Object.hashCode() ,
HashMap