A
ListResouceBundle
provides an easy way, to create your own
resource bundle. It is an abstract class that you can subclass. You should
then overwrite the getContents method, that provides a key/value list.
The key/value list is a two dimensional list of Object. The first
dimension ranges over the resources. The second dimension ranges from
zero (key) to one (value). The keys must be of type String, and they are
case-sensitive. For example:
public class MyResources
extends ListResourceBundle
{
public Object[][] getContents()
{
return contents;
}
static final Object[][] contents =
{
// LOCALIZED STRINGS
{"s1", "The disk \"{1}\" contains {0}."}, // MessageFormat pattern
{"s2", "1"}, // location of {0} in pattern
{"s3", "My Disk"}, // sample disk name
{"s4", "no files"}, // first ChoiceFormat choice
{"s5", "one file"}, // second ChoiceFormat choice
{"s6", "{0,number} files"} // third ChoiceFormat choice
{"s7", "3 Mar 96"}, // sample date
{"s8", new Dimension(1,5)} // real object, not just string
// END OF LOCALIZED MATERIAL
};
}
The constructor. It does nothing special.
Gets the key/value list. You must override this method, and should not
provide duplicate keys or null entries.
This method should return all keys for which a resource exists.
Gets a resource for a given key. This is called by getObject
.
ListResouceBundle
provides an easy way, to create your own resource bundle. It is an abstract class that you can subclass. You should then overwrite the getContents method, that provides a key/value list.The key/value list is a two dimensional list of Object. The first dimension ranges over the resources. The second dimension ranges from zero (key) to one (value). The keys must be of type String, and they are case-sensitive. For example: