1.1 --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
1.2 +++ b/emul/mini/src/main/java/java/lang/String.java Thu Jan 24 18:03:29 2013 +0100
1.3 @@ -0,0 +1,3010 @@
1.4 +/*
1.5 + * Copyright (c) 1994, 2010, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
1.6 + * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
1.7 + *
1.8 + * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
1.9 + * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
1.10 + * published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this
1.11 + * particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided
1.12 + * by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code.
1.13 + *
1.14 + * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
1.15 + * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
1.16 + * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
1.17 + * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
1.18 + * accompanied this code).
1.19 + *
1.20 + * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
1.21 + * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
1.22 + * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
1.23 + *
1.24 + * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA
1.25 + * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any
1.26 + * questions.
1.27 + */
1.28 +
1.29 +package java.lang;
1.30 +
1.31 +import java.util.Comparator;
1.32 +import org.apidesign.bck2brwsr.core.ExtraJavaScript;
1.33 +import org.apidesign.bck2brwsr.core.JavaScriptBody;
1.34 +import org.apidesign.bck2brwsr.core.JavaScriptOnly;
1.35 +import org.apidesign.bck2brwsr.core.JavaScriptPrototype;
1.36 +import org.apidesign.bck2brwsr.emul.lang.System;
1.37 +
1.38 +/**
1.39 + * The <code>String</code> class represents character strings. All
1.40 + * string literals in Java programs, such as <code>"abc"</code>, are
1.41 + * implemented as instances of this class.
1.42 + * <p>
1.43 + * Strings are constant; their values cannot be changed after they
1.44 + * are created. String buffers support mutable strings.
1.45 + * Because String objects are immutable they can be shared. For example:
1.46 + * <p><blockquote><pre>
1.47 + * String str = "abc";
1.48 + * </pre></blockquote><p>
1.49 + * is equivalent to:
1.50 + * <p><blockquote><pre>
1.51 + * char data[] = {'a', 'b', 'c'};
1.52 + * String str = new String(data);
1.53 + * </pre></blockquote><p>
1.54 + * Here are some more examples of how strings can be used:
1.55 + * <p><blockquote><pre>
1.56 + * System.out.println("abc");
1.57 + * String cde = "cde";
1.58 + * System.out.println("abc" + cde);
1.59 + * String c = "abc".substring(2,3);
1.60 + * String d = cde.substring(1, 2);
1.61 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.62 + * <p>
1.63 + * The class <code>String</code> includes methods for examining
1.64 + * individual characters of the sequence, for comparing strings, for
1.65 + * searching strings, for extracting substrings, and for creating a
1.66 + * copy of a string with all characters translated to uppercase or to
1.67 + * lowercase. Case mapping is based on the Unicode Standard version
1.68 + * specified by the {@link java.lang.Character Character} class.
1.69 + * <p>
1.70 + * The Java language provides special support for the string
1.71 + * concatenation operator ( + ), and for conversion of
1.72 + * other objects to strings. String concatenation is implemented
1.73 + * through the <code>StringBuilder</code>(or <code>StringBuffer</code>)
1.74 + * class and its <code>append</code> method.
1.75 + * String conversions are implemented through the method
1.76 + * <code>toString</code>, defined by <code>Object</code> and
1.77 + * inherited by all classes in Java. For additional information on
1.78 + * string concatenation and conversion, see Gosling, Joy, and Steele,
1.79 + * <i>The Java Language Specification</i>.
1.80 + *
1.81 + * <p> Unless otherwise noted, passing a <tt>null</tt> argument to a constructor
1.82 + * or method in this class will cause a {@link NullPointerException} to be
1.83 + * thrown.
1.84 + *
1.85 + * <p>A <code>String</code> represents a string in the UTF-16 format
1.86 + * in which <em>supplementary characters</em> are represented by <em>surrogate
1.87 + * pairs</em> (see the section <a href="Character.html#unicode">Unicode
1.88 + * Character Representations</a> in the <code>Character</code> class for
1.89 + * more information).
1.90 + * Index values refer to <code>char</code> code units, so a supplementary
1.91 + * character uses two positions in a <code>String</code>.
1.92 + * <p>The <code>String</code> class provides methods for dealing with
1.93 + * Unicode code points (i.e., characters), in addition to those for
1.94 + * dealing with Unicode code units (i.e., <code>char</code> values).
1.95 + *
1.96 + * @author Lee Boynton
1.97 + * @author Arthur van Hoff
1.98 + * @author Martin Buchholz
1.99 + * @author Ulf Zibis
1.100 + * @see java.lang.Object#toString()
1.101 + * @see java.lang.StringBuffer
1.102 + * @see java.lang.StringBuilder
1.103 + * @see java.nio.charset.Charset
1.104 + * @since JDK1.0
1.105 + */
1.106 +
1.107 +@ExtraJavaScript(
1.108 + resource="/org/apidesign/vm4brwsr/emul/lang/java_lang_String.js",
1.109 + processByteCode=true
1.110 +)
1.111 +@JavaScriptPrototype(container = "String.prototype", prototype = "new String")
1.112 +public final class String
1.113 + implements java.io.Serializable, Comparable<String>, CharSequence
1.114 +{
1.115 + /** real string to delegate to */
1.116 + private Object r;
1.117 +
1.118 + /** use serialVersionUID from JDK 1.0.2 for interoperability */
1.119 + private static final long serialVersionUID = -6849794470754667710L;
1.120 +
1.121 + @JavaScriptOnly(name="toString", value="function() { return this.fld_r; }")
1.122 + private static void jsToString() {
1.123 + }
1.124 +
1.125 + @JavaScriptOnly(name="valueOf", value="function() { return this.toString().valueOf(); }")
1.126 + private static void jsValudOf() {
1.127 + }
1.128 +
1.129 + /**
1.130 + * Class String is special cased within the Serialization Stream Protocol.
1.131 + *
1.132 + * A String instance is written initially into an ObjectOutputStream in the
1.133 + * following format:
1.134 + * <pre>
1.135 + * <code>TC_STRING</code> (utf String)
1.136 + * </pre>
1.137 + * The String is written by method <code>DataOutput.writeUTF</code>.
1.138 + * A new handle is generated to refer to all future references to the
1.139 + * string instance within the stream.
1.140 + */
1.141 +// private static final ObjectStreamField[] serialPersistentFields =
1.142 +// new ObjectStreamField[0];
1.143 +
1.144 + /**
1.145 + * Initializes a newly created {@code String} object so that it represents
1.146 + * an empty character sequence. Note that use of this constructor is
1.147 + * unnecessary since Strings are immutable.
1.148 + */
1.149 + public String() {
1.150 + this.r = "";
1.151 + }
1.152 +
1.153 + /**
1.154 + * Initializes a newly created {@code String} object so that it represents
1.155 + * the same sequence of characters as the argument; in other words, the
1.156 + * newly created string is a copy of the argument string. Unless an
1.157 + * explicit copy of {@code original} is needed, use of this constructor is
1.158 + * unnecessary since Strings are immutable.
1.159 + *
1.160 + * @param original
1.161 + * A {@code String}
1.162 + */
1.163 + public String(String original) {
1.164 + this.r = original.toString();
1.165 + }
1.166 +
1.167 + /**
1.168 + * Allocates a new {@code String} so that it represents the sequence of
1.169 + * characters currently contained in the character array argument. The
1.170 + * contents of the character array are copied; subsequent modification of
1.171 + * the character array does not affect the newly created string.
1.172 + *
1.173 + * @param value
1.174 + * The initial value of the string
1.175 + */
1.176 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "charArr" }, body=
1.177 + "for (var i = 0; i < charArr.length; i++) {\n"
1.178 + + " if (typeof charArr[i] === 'number') charArr[i] = String.fromCharCode(charArr[i]);\n"
1.179 + + "}\n"
1.180 + + "this.fld_r = charArr.join('');\n"
1.181 + )
1.182 + public String(char value[]) {
1.183 + }
1.184 +
1.185 + /**
1.186 + * Allocates a new {@code String} that contains characters from a subarray
1.187 + * of the character array argument. The {@code offset} argument is the
1.188 + * index of the first character of the subarray and the {@code count}
1.189 + * argument specifies the length of the subarray. The contents of the
1.190 + * subarray are copied; subsequent modification of the character array does
1.191 + * not affect the newly created string.
1.192 + *
1.193 + * @param value
1.194 + * Array that is the source of characters
1.195 + *
1.196 + * @param offset
1.197 + * The initial offset
1.198 + *
1.199 + * @param count
1.200 + * The length
1.201 + *
1.202 + * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException
1.203 + * If the {@code offset} and {@code count} arguments index
1.204 + * characters outside the bounds of the {@code value} array
1.205 + */
1.206 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "charArr", "off", "cnt" }, body =
1.207 + "var up = off + cnt;\n" +
1.208 + "for (var i = off; i < up; i++) {\n" +
1.209 + " if (typeof charArr[i] === 'number') charArr[i] = String.fromCharCode(charArr[i]);\n" +
1.210 + "}\n" +
1.211 + "this.fld_r = charArr.slice(off, up).join(\"\");\n"
1.212 + )
1.213 + public String(char value[], int offset, int count) {
1.214 + }
1.215 +
1.216 + /**
1.217 + * Allocates a new {@code String} that contains characters from a subarray
1.218 + * of the <a href="Character.html#unicode">Unicode code point</a> array
1.219 + * argument. The {@code offset} argument is the index of the first code
1.220 + * point of the subarray and the {@code count} argument specifies the
1.221 + * length of the subarray. The contents of the subarray are converted to
1.222 + * {@code char}s; subsequent modification of the {@code int} array does not
1.223 + * affect the newly created string.
1.224 + *
1.225 + * @param codePoints
1.226 + * Array that is the source of Unicode code points
1.227 + *
1.228 + * @param offset
1.229 + * The initial offset
1.230 + *
1.231 + * @param count
1.232 + * The length
1.233 + *
1.234 + * @throws IllegalArgumentException
1.235 + * If any invalid Unicode code point is found in {@code
1.236 + * codePoints}
1.237 + *
1.238 + * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException
1.239 + * If the {@code offset} and {@code count} arguments index
1.240 + * characters outside the bounds of the {@code codePoints} array
1.241 + *
1.242 + * @since 1.5
1.243 + */
1.244 + public String(int[] codePoints, int offset, int count) {
1.245 + if (offset < 0) {
1.246 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(offset);
1.247 + }
1.248 + if (count < 0) {
1.249 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(count);
1.250 + }
1.251 + // Note: offset or count might be near -1>>>1.
1.252 + if (offset > codePoints.length - count) {
1.253 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(offset + count);
1.254 + }
1.255 +
1.256 + final int end = offset + count;
1.257 +
1.258 + // Pass 1: Compute precise size of char[]
1.259 + int n = count;
1.260 + for (int i = offset; i < end; i++) {
1.261 + int c = codePoints[i];
1.262 + if (Character.isBmpCodePoint(c))
1.263 + continue;
1.264 + else if (Character.isValidCodePoint(c))
1.265 + n++;
1.266 + else throw new IllegalArgumentException(Integer.toString(c));
1.267 + }
1.268 +
1.269 + // Pass 2: Allocate and fill in char[]
1.270 + final char[] v = new char[n];
1.271 +
1.272 + for (int i = offset, j = 0; i < end; i++, j++) {
1.273 + int c = codePoints[i];
1.274 + if (Character.isBmpCodePoint(c))
1.275 + v[j] = (char) c;
1.276 + else
1.277 + Character.toSurrogates(c, v, j++);
1.278 + }
1.279 +
1.280 + this.r = new String(v, 0, n);
1.281 + }
1.282 +
1.283 + /**
1.284 + * Allocates a new {@code String} constructed from a subarray of an array
1.285 + * of 8-bit integer values.
1.286 + *
1.287 + * <p> The {@code offset} argument is the index of the first byte of the
1.288 + * subarray, and the {@code count} argument specifies the length of the
1.289 + * subarray.
1.290 + *
1.291 + * <p> Each {@code byte} in the subarray is converted to a {@code char} as
1.292 + * specified in the method above.
1.293 + *
1.294 + * @deprecated This method does not properly convert bytes into characters.
1.295 + * As of JDK 1.1, the preferred way to do this is via the
1.296 + * {@code String} constructors that take a {@link
1.297 + * java.nio.charset.Charset}, charset name, or that use the platform's
1.298 + * default charset.
1.299 + *
1.300 + * @param ascii
1.301 + * The bytes to be converted to characters
1.302 + *
1.303 + * @param hibyte
1.304 + * The top 8 bits of each 16-bit Unicode code unit
1.305 + *
1.306 + * @param offset
1.307 + * The initial offset
1.308 + * @param count
1.309 + * The length
1.310 + *
1.311 + * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException
1.312 + * If the {@code offset} or {@code count} argument is invalid
1.313 + *
1.314 + * @see #String(byte[], int)
1.315 + * @see #String(byte[], int, int, java.lang.String)
1.316 + * @see #String(byte[], int, int, java.nio.charset.Charset)
1.317 + * @see #String(byte[], int, int)
1.318 + * @see #String(byte[], java.lang.String)
1.319 + * @see #String(byte[], java.nio.charset.Charset)
1.320 + * @see #String(byte[])
1.321 + */
1.322 + @Deprecated
1.323 + public String(byte ascii[], int hibyte, int offset, int count) {
1.324 + checkBounds(ascii, offset, count);
1.325 + char value[] = new char[count];
1.326 +
1.327 + if (hibyte == 0) {
1.328 + for (int i = count ; i-- > 0 ;) {
1.329 + value[i] = (char) (ascii[i + offset] & 0xff);
1.330 + }
1.331 + } else {
1.332 + hibyte <<= 8;
1.333 + for (int i = count ; i-- > 0 ;) {
1.334 + value[i] = (char) (hibyte | (ascii[i + offset] & 0xff));
1.335 + }
1.336 + }
1.337 + this.r = new String(value, 0, count);
1.338 + }
1.339 +
1.340 + /**
1.341 + * Allocates a new {@code String} containing characters constructed from
1.342 + * an array of 8-bit integer values. Each character <i>c</i>in the
1.343 + * resulting string is constructed from the corresponding component
1.344 + * <i>b</i> in the byte array such that:
1.345 + *
1.346 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.347 + * <b><i>c</i></b> == (char)(((hibyte & 0xff) << 8)
1.348 + * | (<b><i>b</i></b> & 0xff))
1.349 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.350 + *
1.351 + * @deprecated This method does not properly convert bytes into
1.352 + * characters. As of JDK 1.1, the preferred way to do this is via the
1.353 + * {@code String} constructors that take a {@link
1.354 + * java.nio.charset.Charset}, charset name, or that use the platform's
1.355 + * default charset.
1.356 + *
1.357 + * @param ascii
1.358 + * The bytes to be converted to characters
1.359 + *
1.360 + * @param hibyte
1.361 + * The top 8 bits of each 16-bit Unicode code unit
1.362 + *
1.363 + * @see #String(byte[], int, int, java.lang.String)
1.364 + * @see #String(byte[], int, int, java.nio.charset.Charset)
1.365 + * @see #String(byte[], int, int)
1.366 + * @see #String(byte[], java.lang.String)
1.367 + * @see #String(byte[], java.nio.charset.Charset)
1.368 + * @see #String(byte[])
1.369 + */
1.370 + @Deprecated
1.371 + public String(byte ascii[], int hibyte) {
1.372 + this(ascii, hibyte, 0, ascii.length);
1.373 + }
1.374 +
1.375 + /* Common private utility method used to bounds check the byte array
1.376 + * and requested offset & length values used by the String(byte[],..)
1.377 + * constructors.
1.378 + */
1.379 + private static void checkBounds(byte[] bytes, int offset, int length) {
1.380 + if (length < 0)
1.381 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(length);
1.382 + if (offset < 0)
1.383 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(offset);
1.384 + if (offset > bytes.length - length)
1.385 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(offset + length);
1.386 + }
1.387 +
1.388 + /**
1.389 + * Constructs a new {@code String} by decoding the specified subarray of
1.390 + * bytes using the specified charset. The length of the new {@code String}
1.391 + * is a function of the charset, and hence may not be equal to the length
1.392 + * of the subarray.
1.393 + *
1.394 + * <p> The behavior of this constructor when the given bytes are not valid
1.395 + * in the given charset is unspecified. The {@link
1.396 + * java.nio.charset.CharsetDecoder} class should be used when more control
1.397 + * over the decoding process is required.
1.398 + *
1.399 + * @param bytes
1.400 + * The bytes to be decoded into characters
1.401 + *
1.402 + * @param offset
1.403 + * The index of the first byte to decode
1.404 + *
1.405 + * @param length
1.406 + * The number of bytes to decode
1.407 +
1.408 + * @param charsetName
1.409 + * The name of a supported {@linkplain java.nio.charset.Charset
1.410 + * charset}
1.411 + *
1.412 + * @throws UnsupportedEncodingException
1.413 + * If the named charset is not supported
1.414 + *
1.415 + * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException
1.416 + * If the {@code offset} and {@code length} arguments index
1.417 + * characters outside the bounds of the {@code bytes} array
1.418 + *
1.419 + * @since JDK1.1
1.420 + */
1.421 +// public String(byte bytes[], int offset, int length, String charsetName)
1.422 +// throws UnsupportedEncodingException
1.423 +// {
1.424 +// if (charsetName == null)
1.425 +// throw new NullPointerException("charsetName");
1.426 +// checkBounds(bytes, offset, length);
1.427 +// char[] v = StringCoding.decode(charsetName, bytes, offset, length);
1.428 +// this.offset = 0;
1.429 +// this.count = v.length;
1.430 +// this.value = v;
1.431 +// }
1.432 +
1.433 + /**
1.434 + * Constructs a new {@code String} by decoding the specified subarray of
1.435 + * bytes using the specified {@linkplain java.nio.charset.Charset charset}.
1.436 + * The length of the new {@code String} is a function of the charset, and
1.437 + * hence may not be equal to the length of the subarray.
1.438 + *
1.439 + * <p> This method always replaces malformed-input and unmappable-character
1.440 + * sequences with this charset's default replacement string. The {@link
1.441 + * java.nio.charset.CharsetDecoder} class should be used when more control
1.442 + * over the decoding process is required.
1.443 + *
1.444 + * @param bytes
1.445 + * The bytes to be decoded into characters
1.446 + *
1.447 + * @param offset
1.448 + * The index of the first byte to decode
1.449 + *
1.450 + * @param length
1.451 + * The number of bytes to decode
1.452 + *
1.453 + * @param charset
1.454 + * The {@linkplain java.nio.charset.Charset charset} to be used to
1.455 + * decode the {@code bytes}
1.456 + *
1.457 + * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException
1.458 + * If the {@code offset} and {@code length} arguments index
1.459 + * characters outside the bounds of the {@code bytes} array
1.460 + *
1.461 + * @since 1.6
1.462 + */
1.463 + /* don't want dependnecy on Charset
1.464 + public String(byte bytes[], int offset, int length, Charset charset) {
1.465 + if (charset == null)
1.466 + throw new NullPointerException("charset");
1.467 + checkBounds(bytes, offset, length);
1.468 + char[] v = StringCoding.decode(charset, bytes, offset, length);
1.469 + this.offset = 0;
1.470 + this.count = v.length;
1.471 + this.value = v;
1.472 + }
1.473 + */
1.474 +
1.475 + /**
1.476 + * Constructs a new {@code String} by decoding the specified array of bytes
1.477 + * using the specified {@linkplain java.nio.charset.Charset charset}. The
1.478 + * length of the new {@code String} is a function of the charset, and hence
1.479 + * may not be equal to the length of the byte array.
1.480 + *
1.481 + * <p> The behavior of this constructor when the given bytes are not valid
1.482 + * in the given charset is unspecified. The {@link
1.483 + * java.nio.charset.CharsetDecoder} class should be used when more control
1.484 + * over the decoding process is required.
1.485 + *
1.486 + * @param bytes
1.487 + * The bytes to be decoded into characters
1.488 + *
1.489 + * @param charsetName
1.490 + * The name of a supported {@linkplain java.nio.charset.Charset
1.491 + * charset}
1.492 + *
1.493 + * @throws UnsupportedEncodingException
1.494 + * If the named charset is not supported
1.495 + *
1.496 + * @since JDK1.1
1.497 + */
1.498 +// public String(byte bytes[], String charsetName)
1.499 +// throws UnsupportedEncodingException
1.500 +// {
1.501 +// this(bytes, 0, bytes.length, charsetName);
1.502 +// }
1.503 +
1.504 + /**
1.505 + * Constructs a new {@code String} by decoding the specified array of
1.506 + * bytes using the specified {@linkplain java.nio.charset.Charset charset}.
1.507 + * The length of the new {@code String} is a function of the charset, and
1.508 + * hence may not be equal to the length of the byte array.
1.509 + *
1.510 + * <p> This method always replaces malformed-input and unmappable-character
1.511 + * sequences with this charset's default replacement string. The {@link
1.512 + * java.nio.charset.CharsetDecoder} class should be used when more control
1.513 + * over the decoding process is required.
1.514 + *
1.515 + * @param bytes
1.516 + * The bytes to be decoded into characters
1.517 + *
1.518 + * @param charset
1.519 + * The {@linkplain java.nio.charset.Charset charset} to be used to
1.520 + * decode the {@code bytes}
1.521 + *
1.522 + * @since 1.6
1.523 + */
1.524 + /* don't want dep on Charset
1.525 + public String(byte bytes[], Charset charset) {
1.526 + this(bytes, 0, bytes.length, charset);
1.527 + }
1.528 + */
1.529 +
1.530 + /**
1.531 + * Constructs a new {@code String} by decoding the specified subarray of
1.532 + * bytes using the platform's default charset. The length of the new
1.533 + * {@code String} is a function of the charset, and hence may not be equal
1.534 + * to the length of the subarray.
1.535 + *
1.536 + * <p> The behavior of this constructor when the given bytes are not valid
1.537 + * in the default charset is unspecified. The {@link
1.538 + * java.nio.charset.CharsetDecoder} class should be used when more control
1.539 + * over the decoding process is required.
1.540 + *
1.541 + * @param bytes
1.542 + * The bytes to be decoded into characters
1.543 + *
1.544 + * @param offset
1.545 + * The index of the first byte to decode
1.546 + *
1.547 + * @param length
1.548 + * The number of bytes to decode
1.549 + *
1.550 + * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException
1.551 + * If the {@code offset} and the {@code length} arguments index
1.552 + * characters outside the bounds of the {@code bytes} array
1.553 + *
1.554 + * @since JDK1.1
1.555 + */
1.556 + public String(byte bytes[], int offset, int length) {
1.557 + checkBounds(bytes, offset, length);
1.558 + char[] v = new char[length];
1.559 + for (int i = 0; i < length; i++) {
1.560 + v[i] = (char)bytes[offset++];
1.561 + }
1.562 + this.r = new String(v, 0, v.length);
1.563 + }
1.564 +
1.565 + /**
1.566 + * Constructs a new {@code String} by decoding the specified array of bytes
1.567 + * using the platform's default charset. The length of the new {@code
1.568 + * String} is a function of the charset, and hence may not be equal to the
1.569 + * length of the byte array.
1.570 + *
1.571 + * <p> The behavior of this constructor when the given bytes are not valid
1.572 + * in the default charset is unspecified. The {@link
1.573 + * java.nio.charset.CharsetDecoder} class should be used when more control
1.574 + * over the decoding process is required.
1.575 + *
1.576 + * @param bytes
1.577 + * The bytes to be decoded into characters
1.578 + *
1.579 + * @since JDK1.1
1.580 + */
1.581 + public String(byte bytes[]) {
1.582 + this(bytes, 0, bytes.length);
1.583 + }
1.584 +
1.585 + /**
1.586 + * Allocates a new string that contains the sequence of characters
1.587 + * currently contained in the string buffer argument. The contents of the
1.588 + * string buffer are copied; subsequent modification of the string buffer
1.589 + * does not affect the newly created string.
1.590 + *
1.591 + * @param buffer
1.592 + * A {@code StringBuffer}
1.593 + */
1.594 + public String(StringBuffer buffer) {
1.595 + this.r = buffer.toString();
1.596 + }
1.597 +
1.598 + /**
1.599 + * Allocates a new string that contains the sequence of characters
1.600 + * currently contained in the string builder argument. The contents of the
1.601 + * string builder are copied; subsequent modification of the string builder
1.602 + * does not affect the newly created string.
1.603 + *
1.604 + * <p> This constructor is provided to ease migration to {@code
1.605 + * StringBuilder}. Obtaining a string from a string builder via the {@code
1.606 + * toString} method is likely to run faster and is generally preferred.
1.607 + *
1.608 + * @param builder
1.609 + * A {@code StringBuilder}
1.610 + *
1.611 + * @since 1.5
1.612 + */
1.613 + public String(StringBuilder builder) {
1.614 + this.r = builder.toString();
1.615 + }
1.616 +
1.617 + /**
1.618 + * Returns the length of this string.
1.619 + * The length is equal to the number of <a href="Character.html#unicode">Unicode
1.620 + * code units</a> in the string.
1.621 + *
1.622 + * @return the length of the sequence of characters represented by this
1.623 + * object.
1.624 + */
1.625 + @JavaScriptBody(args = {}, body = "return this.toString().length;")
1.626 + public int length() {
1.627 + throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
1.628 + }
1.629 +
1.630 + /**
1.631 + * Returns <tt>true</tt> if, and only if, {@link #length()} is <tt>0</tt>.
1.632 + *
1.633 + * @return <tt>true</tt> if {@link #length()} is <tt>0</tt>, otherwise
1.634 + * <tt>false</tt>
1.635 + *
1.636 + * @since 1.6
1.637 + */
1.638 + @JavaScriptBody(args = {}, body="return this.toString().length === 0;")
1.639 + public boolean isEmpty() {
1.640 + return length() == 0;
1.641 + }
1.642 +
1.643 + /**
1.644 + * Returns the <code>char</code> value at the
1.645 + * specified index. An index ranges from <code>0</code> to
1.646 + * <code>length() - 1</code>. The first <code>char</code> value of the sequence
1.647 + * is at index <code>0</code>, the next at index <code>1</code>,
1.648 + * and so on, as for array indexing.
1.649 + *
1.650 + * <p>If the <code>char</code> value specified by the index is a
1.651 + * <a href="Character.html#unicode">surrogate</a>, the surrogate
1.652 + * value is returned.
1.653 + *
1.654 + * @param index the index of the <code>char</code> value.
1.655 + * @return the <code>char</code> value at the specified index of this string.
1.656 + * The first <code>char</code> value is at index <code>0</code>.
1.657 + * @exception IndexOutOfBoundsException if the <code>index</code>
1.658 + * argument is negative or not less than the length of this
1.659 + * string.
1.660 + */
1.661 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "index" },
1.662 + body = "return this.toString().charCodeAt(index);"
1.663 + )
1.664 + public char charAt(int index) {
1.665 + throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
1.666 + }
1.667 +
1.668 + /**
1.669 + * Returns the character (Unicode code point) at the specified
1.670 + * index. The index refers to <code>char</code> values
1.671 + * (Unicode code units) and ranges from <code>0</code> to
1.672 + * {@link #length()}<code> - 1</code>.
1.673 + *
1.674 + * <p> If the <code>char</code> value specified at the given index
1.675 + * is in the high-surrogate range, the following index is less
1.676 + * than the length of this <code>String</code>, and the
1.677 + * <code>char</code> value at the following index is in the
1.678 + * low-surrogate range, then the supplementary code point
1.679 + * corresponding to this surrogate pair is returned. Otherwise,
1.680 + * the <code>char</code> value at the given index is returned.
1.681 + *
1.682 + * @param index the index to the <code>char</code> values
1.683 + * @return the code point value of the character at the
1.684 + * <code>index</code>
1.685 + * @exception IndexOutOfBoundsException if the <code>index</code>
1.686 + * argument is negative or not less than the length of this
1.687 + * string.
1.688 + * @since 1.5
1.689 + */
1.690 + public int codePointAt(int index) {
1.691 + if ((index < 0) || (index >= length())) {
1.692 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(index);
1.693 + }
1.694 + return Character.codePointAtImpl(toCharArray(), offset() + index, offset() + length());
1.695 + }
1.696 +
1.697 + /**
1.698 + * Returns the character (Unicode code point) before the specified
1.699 + * index. The index refers to <code>char</code> values
1.700 + * (Unicode code units) and ranges from <code>1</code> to {@link
1.701 + * CharSequence#length() length}.
1.702 + *
1.703 + * <p> If the <code>char</code> value at <code>(index - 1)</code>
1.704 + * is in the low-surrogate range, <code>(index - 2)</code> is not
1.705 + * negative, and the <code>char</code> value at <code>(index -
1.706 + * 2)</code> is in the high-surrogate range, then the
1.707 + * supplementary code point value of the surrogate pair is
1.708 + * returned. If the <code>char</code> value at <code>index -
1.709 + * 1</code> is an unpaired low-surrogate or a high-surrogate, the
1.710 + * surrogate value is returned.
1.711 + *
1.712 + * @param index the index following the code point that should be returned
1.713 + * @return the Unicode code point value before the given index.
1.714 + * @exception IndexOutOfBoundsException if the <code>index</code>
1.715 + * argument is less than 1 or greater than the length
1.716 + * of this string.
1.717 + * @since 1.5
1.718 + */
1.719 + public int codePointBefore(int index) {
1.720 + int i = index - 1;
1.721 + if ((i < 0) || (i >= length())) {
1.722 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(index);
1.723 + }
1.724 + return Character.codePointBeforeImpl(toCharArray(), offset() + index, offset());
1.725 + }
1.726 +
1.727 + /**
1.728 + * Returns the number of Unicode code points in the specified text
1.729 + * range of this <code>String</code>. The text range begins at the
1.730 + * specified <code>beginIndex</code> and extends to the
1.731 + * <code>char</code> at index <code>endIndex - 1</code>. Thus the
1.732 + * length (in <code>char</code>s) of the text range is
1.733 + * <code>endIndex-beginIndex</code>. Unpaired surrogates within
1.734 + * the text range count as one code point each.
1.735 + *
1.736 + * @param beginIndex the index to the first <code>char</code> of
1.737 + * the text range.
1.738 + * @param endIndex the index after the last <code>char</code> of
1.739 + * the text range.
1.740 + * @return the number of Unicode code points in the specified text
1.741 + * range
1.742 + * @exception IndexOutOfBoundsException if the
1.743 + * <code>beginIndex</code> is negative, or <code>endIndex</code>
1.744 + * is larger than the length of this <code>String</code>, or
1.745 + * <code>beginIndex</code> is larger than <code>endIndex</code>.
1.746 + * @since 1.5
1.747 + */
1.748 + public int codePointCount(int beginIndex, int endIndex) {
1.749 + if (beginIndex < 0 || endIndex > length() || beginIndex > endIndex) {
1.750 + throw new IndexOutOfBoundsException();
1.751 + }
1.752 + return Character.codePointCountImpl(toCharArray(), offset()+beginIndex, endIndex-beginIndex);
1.753 + }
1.754 +
1.755 + /**
1.756 + * Returns the index within this <code>String</code> that is
1.757 + * offset from the given <code>index</code> by
1.758 + * <code>codePointOffset</code> code points. Unpaired surrogates
1.759 + * within the text range given by <code>index</code> and
1.760 + * <code>codePointOffset</code> count as one code point each.
1.761 + *
1.762 + * @param index the index to be offset
1.763 + * @param codePointOffset the offset in code points
1.764 + * @return the index within this <code>String</code>
1.765 + * @exception IndexOutOfBoundsException if <code>index</code>
1.766 + * is negative or larger then the length of this
1.767 + * <code>String</code>, or if <code>codePointOffset</code> is positive
1.768 + * and the substring starting with <code>index</code> has fewer
1.769 + * than <code>codePointOffset</code> code points,
1.770 + * or if <code>codePointOffset</code> is negative and the substring
1.771 + * before <code>index</code> has fewer than the absolute value
1.772 + * of <code>codePointOffset</code> code points.
1.773 + * @since 1.5
1.774 + */
1.775 + public int offsetByCodePoints(int index, int codePointOffset) {
1.776 + if (index < 0 || index > length()) {
1.777 + throw new IndexOutOfBoundsException();
1.778 + }
1.779 + return Character.offsetByCodePointsImpl(toCharArray(), offset(), length(),
1.780 + offset()+index, codePointOffset) - offset();
1.781 + }
1.782 +
1.783 + /**
1.784 + * Copy characters from this string into dst starting at dstBegin.
1.785 + * This method doesn't perform any range checking.
1.786 + */
1.787 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "arr", "to" }, body =
1.788 + "var s = this.toString();\n" +
1.789 + "for (var i = 0; i < s.length; i++) {\n" +
1.790 + " arr[to++] = s[i];\n" +
1.791 + "}"
1.792 + )
1.793 + void getChars(char dst[], int dstBegin) {
1.794 + System.arraycopy(toCharArray(), offset(), dst, dstBegin, length());
1.795 + }
1.796 +
1.797 + /**
1.798 + * Copies characters from this string into the destination character
1.799 + * array.
1.800 + * <p>
1.801 + * The first character to be copied is at index <code>srcBegin</code>;
1.802 + * the last character to be copied is at index <code>srcEnd-1</code>
1.803 + * (thus the total number of characters to be copied is
1.804 + * <code>srcEnd-srcBegin</code>). The characters are copied into the
1.805 + * subarray of <code>dst</code> starting at index <code>dstBegin</code>
1.806 + * and ending at index:
1.807 + * <p><blockquote><pre>
1.808 + * dstbegin + (srcEnd-srcBegin) - 1
1.809 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.810 + *
1.811 + * @param srcBegin index of the first character in the string
1.812 + * to copy.
1.813 + * @param srcEnd index after the last character in the string
1.814 + * to copy.
1.815 + * @param dst the destination array.
1.816 + * @param dstBegin the start offset in the destination array.
1.817 + * @exception IndexOutOfBoundsException If any of the following
1.818 + * is true:
1.819 + * <ul><li><code>srcBegin</code> is negative.
1.820 + * <li><code>srcBegin</code> is greater than <code>srcEnd</code>
1.821 + * <li><code>srcEnd</code> is greater than the length of this
1.822 + * string
1.823 + * <li><code>dstBegin</code> is negative
1.824 + * <li><code>dstBegin+(srcEnd-srcBegin)</code> is larger than
1.825 + * <code>dst.length</code></ul>
1.826 + */
1.827 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "beg", "end", "arr", "dst" }, body=
1.828 + "var s = this.toString();\n" +
1.829 + "while (beg < end) {\n" +
1.830 + " arr[dst++] = s.charCodeAt(beg++);\n" +
1.831 + "}\n"
1.832 + )
1.833 + public void getChars(int srcBegin, int srcEnd, char dst[], int dstBegin) {
1.834 + if (srcBegin < 0) {
1.835 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(srcBegin);
1.836 + }
1.837 + if (srcEnd > length()) {
1.838 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(srcEnd);
1.839 + }
1.840 + if (srcBegin > srcEnd) {
1.841 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(srcEnd - srcBegin);
1.842 + }
1.843 + System.arraycopy(toCharArray(), offset() + srcBegin, dst, dstBegin,
1.844 + srcEnd - srcBegin);
1.845 + }
1.846 +
1.847 + /**
1.848 + * Copies characters from this string into the destination byte array. Each
1.849 + * byte receives the 8 low-order bits of the corresponding character. The
1.850 + * eight high-order bits of each character are not copied and do not
1.851 + * participate in the transfer in any way.
1.852 + *
1.853 + * <p> The first character to be copied is at index {@code srcBegin}; the
1.854 + * last character to be copied is at index {@code srcEnd-1}. The total
1.855 + * number of characters to be copied is {@code srcEnd-srcBegin}. The
1.856 + * characters, converted to bytes, are copied into the subarray of {@code
1.857 + * dst} starting at index {@code dstBegin} and ending at index:
1.858 + *
1.859 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.860 + * dstbegin + (srcEnd-srcBegin) - 1
1.861 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.862 + *
1.863 + * @deprecated This method does not properly convert characters into
1.864 + * bytes. As of JDK 1.1, the preferred way to do this is via the
1.865 + * {@link #getBytes()} method, which uses the platform's default charset.
1.866 + *
1.867 + * @param srcBegin
1.868 + * Index of the first character in the string to copy
1.869 + *
1.870 + * @param srcEnd
1.871 + * Index after the last character in the string to copy
1.872 + *
1.873 + * @param dst
1.874 + * The destination array
1.875 + *
1.876 + * @param dstBegin
1.877 + * The start offset in the destination array
1.878 + *
1.879 + * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException
1.880 + * If any of the following is true:
1.881 + * <ul>
1.882 + * <li> {@code srcBegin} is negative
1.883 + * <li> {@code srcBegin} is greater than {@code srcEnd}
1.884 + * <li> {@code srcEnd} is greater than the length of this String
1.885 + * <li> {@code dstBegin} is negative
1.886 + * <li> {@code dstBegin+(srcEnd-srcBegin)} is larger than {@code
1.887 + * dst.length}
1.888 + * </ul>
1.889 + */
1.890 + @Deprecated
1.891 + public void getBytes(int srcBegin, int srcEnd, byte dst[], int dstBegin) {
1.892 + if (srcBegin < 0) {
1.893 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(srcBegin);
1.894 + }
1.895 + if (srcEnd > length()) {
1.896 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(srcEnd);
1.897 + }
1.898 + if (srcBegin > srcEnd) {
1.899 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(srcEnd - srcBegin);
1.900 + }
1.901 + int j = dstBegin;
1.902 + int n = offset() + srcEnd;
1.903 + int i = offset() + srcBegin;
1.904 + char[] val = toCharArray(); /* avoid getfield opcode */
1.905 +
1.906 + while (i < n) {
1.907 + dst[j++] = (byte)val[i++];
1.908 + }
1.909 + }
1.910 +
1.911 + /**
1.912 + * Encodes this {@code String} into a sequence of bytes using the named
1.913 + * charset, storing the result into a new byte array.
1.914 + *
1.915 + * <p> The behavior of this method when this string cannot be encoded in
1.916 + * the given charset is unspecified. The {@link
1.917 + * java.nio.charset.CharsetEncoder} class should be used when more control
1.918 + * over the encoding process is required.
1.919 + *
1.920 + * @param charsetName
1.921 + * The name of a supported {@linkplain java.nio.charset.Charset
1.922 + * charset}
1.923 + *
1.924 + * @return The resultant byte array
1.925 + *
1.926 + * @throws UnsupportedEncodingException
1.927 + * If the named charset is not supported
1.928 + *
1.929 + * @since JDK1.1
1.930 + */
1.931 +// public byte[] getBytes(String charsetName)
1.932 +// throws UnsupportedEncodingException
1.933 +// {
1.934 +// if (charsetName == null) throw new NullPointerException();
1.935 +// return StringCoding.encode(charsetName, value, offset, count);
1.936 +// }
1.937 +
1.938 + /**
1.939 + * Encodes this {@code String} into a sequence of bytes using the given
1.940 + * {@linkplain java.nio.charset.Charset charset}, storing the result into a
1.941 + * new byte array.
1.942 + *
1.943 + * <p> This method always replaces malformed-input and unmappable-character
1.944 + * sequences with this charset's default replacement byte array. The
1.945 + * {@link java.nio.charset.CharsetEncoder} class should be used when more
1.946 + * control over the encoding process is required.
1.947 + *
1.948 + * @param charset
1.949 + * The {@linkplain java.nio.charset.Charset} to be used to encode
1.950 + * the {@code String}
1.951 + *
1.952 + * @return The resultant byte array
1.953 + *
1.954 + * @since 1.6
1.955 + */
1.956 + /* don't want dep on Charset
1.957 + public byte[] getBytes(Charset charset) {
1.958 + if (charset == null) throw new NullPointerException();
1.959 + return StringCoding.encode(charset, value, offset, count);
1.960 + }
1.961 + */
1.962 +
1.963 + /**
1.964 + * Encodes this {@code String} into a sequence of bytes using the
1.965 + * platform's default charset, storing the result into a new byte array.
1.966 + *
1.967 + * <p> The behavior of this method when this string cannot be encoded in
1.968 + * the default charset is unspecified. The {@link
1.969 + * java.nio.charset.CharsetEncoder} class should be used when more control
1.970 + * over the encoding process is required.
1.971 + *
1.972 + * @return The resultant byte array
1.973 + *
1.974 + * @since JDK1.1
1.975 + */
1.976 + public byte[] getBytes() {
1.977 + byte[] arr = new byte[length()];
1.978 + for (int i = 0; i < arr.length; i++) {
1.979 + final char v = charAt(i);
1.980 + arr[i] = (byte)v;
1.981 + }
1.982 + return arr;
1.983 + }
1.984 +
1.985 + /**
1.986 + * Compares this string to the specified object. The result is {@code
1.987 + * true} if and only if the argument is not {@code null} and is a {@code
1.988 + * String} object that represents the same sequence of characters as this
1.989 + * object.
1.990 + *
1.991 + * @param anObject
1.992 + * The object to compare this {@code String} against
1.993 + *
1.994 + * @return {@code true} if the given object represents a {@code String}
1.995 + * equivalent to this string, {@code false} otherwise
1.996 + *
1.997 + * @see #compareTo(String)
1.998 + * @see #equalsIgnoreCase(String)
1.999 + */
1.1000 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "obj" }, body =
1.1001 + "return obj != null && obj.$instOf_java_lang_String && "
1.1002 + + "this.toString() === obj.toString();"
1.1003 + )
1.1004 + public boolean equals(Object anObject) {
1.1005 + if (this == anObject) {
1.1006 + return true;
1.1007 + }
1.1008 + if (anObject instanceof String) {
1.1009 + String anotherString = (String)anObject;
1.1010 + int n = length();
1.1011 + if (n == anotherString.length()) {
1.1012 + char v1[] = toCharArray();
1.1013 + char v2[] = anotherString.toCharArray();
1.1014 + int i = offset();
1.1015 + int j = anotherString.offset();
1.1016 + while (n-- != 0) {
1.1017 + if (v1[i++] != v2[j++])
1.1018 + return false;
1.1019 + }
1.1020 + return true;
1.1021 + }
1.1022 + }
1.1023 + return false;
1.1024 + }
1.1025 +
1.1026 + /**
1.1027 + * Compares this string to the specified {@code StringBuffer}. The result
1.1028 + * is {@code true} if and only if this {@code String} represents the same
1.1029 + * sequence of characters as the specified {@code StringBuffer}.
1.1030 + *
1.1031 + * @param sb
1.1032 + * The {@code StringBuffer} to compare this {@code String} against
1.1033 + *
1.1034 + * @return {@code true} if this {@code String} represents the same
1.1035 + * sequence of characters as the specified {@code StringBuffer},
1.1036 + * {@code false} otherwise
1.1037 + *
1.1038 + * @since 1.4
1.1039 + */
1.1040 + public boolean contentEquals(StringBuffer sb) {
1.1041 + synchronized(sb) {
1.1042 + return contentEquals((CharSequence)sb);
1.1043 + }
1.1044 + }
1.1045 +
1.1046 + /**
1.1047 + * Compares this string to the specified {@code CharSequence}. The result
1.1048 + * is {@code true} if and only if this {@code String} represents the same
1.1049 + * sequence of char values as the specified sequence.
1.1050 + *
1.1051 + * @param cs
1.1052 + * The sequence to compare this {@code String} against
1.1053 + *
1.1054 + * @return {@code true} if this {@code String} represents the same
1.1055 + * sequence of char values as the specified sequence, {@code
1.1056 + * false} otherwise
1.1057 + *
1.1058 + * @since 1.5
1.1059 + */
1.1060 + public boolean contentEquals(CharSequence cs) {
1.1061 + if (length() != cs.length())
1.1062 + return false;
1.1063 + // Argument is a StringBuffer, StringBuilder
1.1064 + if (cs instanceof AbstractStringBuilder) {
1.1065 + char v1[] = toCharArray();
1.1066 + char v2[] = ((AbstractStringBuilder)cs).getValue();
1.1067 + int i = offset();
1.1068 + int j = 0;
1.1069 + int n = length();
1.1070 + while (n-- != 0) {
1.1071 + if (v1[i++] != v2[j++])
1.1072 + return false;
1.1073 + }
1.1074 + return true;
1.1075 + }
1.1076 + // Argument is a String
1.1077 + if (cs.equals(this))
1.1078 + return true;
1.1079 + // Argument is a generic CharSequence
1.1080 + char v1[] = toCharArray();
1.1081 + int i = offset();
1.1082 + int j = 0;
1.1083 + int n = length();
1.1084 + while (n-- != 0) {
1.1085 + if (v1[i++] != cs.charAt(j++))
1.1086 + return false;
1.1087 + }
1.1088 + return true;
1.1089 + }
1.1090 +
1.1091 + /**
1.1092 + * Compares this {@code String} to another {@code String}, ignoring case
1.1093 + * considerations. Two strings are considered equal ignoring case if they
1.1094 + * are of the same length and corresponding characters in the two strings
1.1095 + * are equal ignoring case.
1.1096 + *
1.1097 + * <p> Two characters {@code c1} and {@code c2} are considered the same
1.1098 + * ignoring case if at least one of the following is true:
1.1099 + * <ul>
1.1100 + * <li> The two characters are the same (as compared by the
1.1101 + * {@code ==} operator)
1.1102 + * <li> Applying the method {@link
1.1103 + * java.lang.Character#toUpperCase(char)} to each character
1.1104 + * produces the same result
1.1105 + * <li> Applying the method {@link
1.1106 + * java.lang.Character#toLowerCase(char)} to each character
1.1107 + * produces the same result
1.1108 + * </ul>
1.1109 + *
1.1110 + * @param anotherString
1.1111 + * The {@code String} to compare this {@code String} against
1.1112 + *
1.1113 + * @return {@code true} if the argument is not {@code null} and it
1.1114 + * represents an equivalent {@code String} ignoring case; {@code
1.1115 + * false} otherwise
1.1116 + *
1.1117 + * @see #equals(Object)
1.1118 + */
1.1119 + public boolean equalsIgnoreCase(String anotherString) {
1.1120 + return (this == anotherString) ? true :
1.1121 + (anotherString != null) && (anotherString.length() == length()) &&
1.1122 + regionMatches(true, 0, anotherString, 0, length());
1.1123 + }
1.1124 +
1.1125 + /**
1.1126 + * Compares two strings lexicographically.
1.1127 + * The comparison is based on the Unicode value of each character in
1.1128 + * the strings. The character sequence represented by this
1.1129 + * <code>String</code> object is compared lexicographically to the
1.1130 + * character sequence represented by the argument string. The result is
1.1131 + * a negative integer if this <code>String</code> object
1.1132 + * lexicographically precedes the argument string. The result is a
1.1133 + * positive integer if this <code>String</code> object lexicographically
1.1134 + * follows the argument string. The result is zero if the strings
1.1135 + * are equal; <code>compareTo</code> returns <code>0</code> exactly when
1.1136 + * the {@link #equals(Object)} method would return <code>true</code>.
1.1137 + * <p>
1.1138 + * This is the definition of lexicographic ordering. If two strings are
1.1139 + * different, then either they have different characters at some index
1.1140 + * that is a valid index for both strings, or their lengths are different,
1.1141 + * or both. If they have different characters at one or more index
1.1142 + * positions, let <i>k</i> be the smallest such index; then the string
1.1143 + * whose character at position <i>k</i> has the smaller value, as
1.1144 + * determined by using the < operator, lexicographically precedes the
1.1145 + * other string. In this case, <code>compareTo</code> returns the
1.1146 + * difference of the two character values at position <code>k</code> in
1.1147 + * the two string -- that is, the value:
1.1148 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1149 + * this.charAt(k)-anotherString.charAt(k)
1.1150 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1151 + * If there is no index position at which they differ, then the shorter
1.1152 + * string lexicographically precedes the longer string. In this case,
1.1153 + * <code>compareTo</code> returns the difference of the lengths of the
1.1154 + * strings -- that is, the value:
1.1155 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1156 + * this.length()-anotherString.length()
1.1157 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1158 + *
1.1159 + * @param anotherString the <code>String</code> to be compared.
1.1160 + * @return the value <code>0</code> if the argument string is equal to
1.1161 + * this string; a value less than <code>0</code> if this string
1.1162 + * is lexicographically less than the string argument; and a
1.1163 + * value greater than <code>0</code> if this string is
1.1164 + * lexicographically greater than the string argument.
1.1165 + */
1.1166 + public int compareTo(String anotherString) {
1.1167 + int len1 = length();
1.1168 + int len2 = anotherString.length();
1.1169 + int n = Math.min(len1, len2);
1.1170 + char v1[] = toCharArray();
1.1171 + char v2[] = anotherString.toCharArray();
1.1172 + int i = offset();
1.1173 + int j = anotherString.offset();
1.1174 +
1.1175 + if (i == j) {
1.1176 + int k = i;
1.1177 + int lim = n + i;
1.1178 + while (k < lim) {
1.1179 + char c1 = v1[k];
1.1180 + char c2 = v2[k];
1.1181 + if (c1 != c2) {
1.1182 + return c1 - c2;
1.1183 + }
1.1184 + k++;
1.1185 + }
1.1186 + } else {
1.1187 + while (n-- != 0) {
1.1188 + char c1 = v1[i++];
1.1189 + char c2 = v2[j++];
1.1190 + if (c1 != c2) {
1.1191 + return c1 - c2;
1.1192 + }
1.1193 + }
1.1194 + }
1.1195 + return len1 - len2;
1.1196 + }
1.1197 +
1.1198 + /**
1.1199 + * A Comparator that orders <code>String</code> objects as by
1.1200 + * <code>compareToIgnoreCase</code>. This comparator is serializable.
1.1201 + * <p>
1.1202 + * Note that this Comparator does <em>not</em> take locale into account,
1.1203 + * and will result in an unsatisfactory ordering for certain locales.
1.1204 + * The java.text package provides <em>Collators</em> to allow
1.1205 + * locale-sensitive ordering.
1.1206 + *
1.1207 + * @see java.text.Collator#compare(String, String)
1.1208 + * @since 1.2
1.1209 + */
1.1210 + public static final Comparator<String> CASE_INSENSITIVE_ORDER
1.1211 + = new CaseInsensitiveComparator();
1.1212 +
1.1213 + private static int offset() {
1.1214 + return 0;
1.1215 + }
1.1216 +
1.1217 + private static class CaseInsensitiveComparator
1.1218 + implements Comparator<String>, java.io.Serializable {
1.1219 + // use serialVersionUID from JDK 1.2.2 for interoperability
1.1220 + private static final long serialVersionUID = 8575799808933029326L;
1.1221 +
1.1222 + public int compare(String s1, String s2) {
1.1223 + int n1 = s1.length();
1.1224 + int n2 = s2.length();
1.1225 + int min = Math.min(n1, n2);
1.1226 + for (int i = 0; i < min; i++) {
1.1227 + char c1 = s1.charAt(i);
1.1228 + char c2 = s2.charAt(i);
1.1229 + if (c1 != c2) {
1.1230 + c1 = Character.toUpperCase(c1);
1.1231 + c2 = Character.toUpperCase(c2);
1.1232 + if (c1 != c2) {
1.1233 + c1 = Character.toLowerCase(c1);
1.1234 + c2 = Character.toLowerCase(c2);
1.1235 + if (c1 != c2) {
1.1236 + // No overflow because of numeric promotion
1.1237 + return c1 - c2;
1.1238 + }
1.1239 + }
1.1240 + }
1.1241 + }
1.1242 + return n1 - n2;
1.1243 + }
1.1244 + }
1.1245 +
1.1246 + /**
1.1247 + * Compares two strings lexicographically, ignoring case
1.1248 + * differences. This method returns an integer whose sign is that of
1.1249 + * calling <code>compareTo</code> with normalized versions of the strings
1.1250 + * where case differences have been eliminated by calling
1.1251 + * <code>Character.toLowerCase(Character.toUpperCase(character))</code> on
1.1252 + * each character.
1.1253 + * <p>
1.1254 + * Note that this method does <em>not</em> take locale into account,
1.1255 + * and will result in an unsatisfactory ordering for certain locales.
1.1256 + * The java.text package provides <em>collators</em> to allow
1.1257 + * locale-sensitive ordering.
1.1258 + *
1.1259 + * @param str the <code>String</code> to be compared.
1.1260 + * @return a negative integer, zero, or a positive integer as the
1.1261 + * specified String is greater than, equal to, or less
1.1262 + * than this String, ignoring case considerations.
1.1263 + * @see java.text.Collator#compare(String, String)
1.1264 + * @since 1.2
1.1265 + */
1.1266 + public int compareToIgnoreCase(String str) {
1.1267 + return CASE_INSENSITIVE_ORDER.compare(this, str);
1.1268 + }
1.1269 +
1.1270 + /**
1.1271 + * Tests if two string regions are equal.
1.1272 + * <p>
1.1273 + * A substring of this <tt>String</tt> object is compared to a substring
1.1274 + * of the argument other. The result is true if these substrings
1.1275 + * represent identical character sequences. The substring of this
1.1276 + * <tt>String</tt> object to be compared begins at index <tt>toffset</tt>
1.1277 + * and has length <tt>len</tt>. The substring of other to be compared
1.1278 + * begins at index <tt>ooffset</tt> and has length <tt>len</tt>. The
1.1279 + * result is <tt>false</tt> if and only if at least one of the following
1.1280 + * is true:
1.1281 + * <ul><li><tt>toffset</tt> is negative.
1.1282 + * <li><tt>ooffset</tt> is negative.
1.1283 + * <li><tt>toffset+len</tt> is greater than the length of this
1.1284 + * <tt>String</tt> object.
1.1285 + * <li><tt>ooffset+len</tt> is greater than the length of the other
1.1286 + * argument.
1.1287 + * <li>There is some nonnegative integer <i>k</i> less than <tt>len</tt>
1.1288 + * such that:
1.1289 + * <tt>this.charAt(toffset+<i>k</i>) != other.charAt(ooffset+<i>k</i>)</tt>
1.1290 + * </ul>
1.1291 + *
1.1292 + * @param toffset the starting offset of the subregion in this string.
1.1293 + * @param other the string argument.
1.1294 + * @param ooffset the starting offset of the subregion in the string
1.1295 + * argument.
1.1296 + * @param len the number of characters to compare.
1.1297 + * @return <code>true</code> if the specified subregion of this string
1.1298 + * exactly matches the specified subregion of the string argument;
1.1299 + * <code>false</code> otherwise.
1.1300 + */
1.1301 + public boolean regionMatches(int toffset, String other, int ooffset,
1.1302 + int len) {
1.1303 + char ta[] = toCharArray();
1.1304 + int to = offset() + toffset;
1.1305 + char pa[] = other.toCharArray();
1.1306 + int po = other.offset() + ooffset;
1.1307 + // Note: toffset, ooffset, or len might be near -1>>>1.
1.1308 + if ((ooffset < 0) || (toffset < 0) || (toffset > (long)length() - len)
1.1309 + || (ooffset > (long)other.length() - len)) {
1.1310 + return false;
1.1311 + }
1.1312 + while (len-- > 0) {
1.1313 + if (ta[to++] != pa[po++]) {
1.1314 + return false;
1.1315 + }
1.1316 + }
1.1317 + return true;
1.1318 + }
1.1319 +
1.1320 + /**
1.1321 + * Tests if two string regions are equal.
1.1322 + * <p>
1.1323 + * A substring of this <tt>String</tt> object is compared to a substring
1.1324 + * of the argument <tt>other</tt>. The result is <tt>true</tt> if these
1.1325 + * substrings represent character sequences that are the same, ignoring
1.1326 + * case if and only if <tt>ignoreCase</tt> is true. The substring of
1.1327 + * this <tt>String</tt> object to be compared begins at index
1.1328 + * <tt>toffset</tt> and has length <tt>len</tt>. The substring of
1.1329 + * <tt>other</tt> to be compared begins at index <tt>ooffset</tt> and
1.1330 + * has length <tt>len</tt>. The result is <tt>false</tt> if and only if
1.1331 + * at least one of the following is true:
1.1332 + * <ul><li><tt>toffset</tt> is negative.
1.1333 + * <li><tt>ooffset</tt> is negative.
1.1334 + * <li><tt>toffset+len</tt> is greater than the length of this
1.1335 + * <tt>String</tt> object.
1.1336 + * <li><tt>ooffset+len</tt> is greater than the length of the other
1.1337 + * argument.
1.1338 + * <li><tt>ignoreCase</tt> is <tt>false</tt> and there is some nonnegative
1.1339 + * integer <i>k</i> less than <tt>len</tt> such that:
1.1340 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1341 + * this.charAt(toffset+k) != other.charAt(ooffset+k)
1.1342 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1343 + * <li><tt>ignoreCase</tt> is <tt>true</tt> and there is some nonnegative
1.1344 + * integer <i>k</i> less than <tt>len</tt> such that:
1.1345 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1346 + * Character.toLowerCase(this.charAt(toffset+k)) !=
1.1347 + Character.toLowerCase(other.charAt(ooffset+k))
1.1348 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1349 + * and:
1.1350 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1351 + * Character.toUpperCase(this.charAt(toffset+k)) !=
1.1352 + * Character.toUpperCase(other.charAt(ooffset+k))
1.1353 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1354 + * </ul>
1.1355 + *
1.1356 + * @param ignoreCase if <code>true</code>, ignore case when comparing
1.1357 + * characters.
1.1358 + * @param toffset the starting offset of the subregion in this
1.1359 + * string.
1.1360 + * @param other the string argument.
1.1361 + * @param ooffset the starting offset of the subregion in the string
1.1362 + * argument.
1.1363 + * @param len the number of characters to compare.
1.1364 + * @return <code>true</code> if the specified subregion of this string
1.1365 + * matches the specified subregion of the string argument;
1.1366 + * <code>false</code> otherwise. Whether the matching is exact
1.1367 + * or case insensitive depends on the <code>ignoreCase</code>
1.1368 + * argument.
1.1369 + */
1.1370 + public boolean regionMatches(boolean ignoreCase, int toffset,
1.1371 + String other, int ooffset, int len) {
1.1372 + char ta[] = toCharArray();
1.1373 + int to = offset() + toffset;
1.1374 + char pa[] = other.toCharArray();
1.1375 + int po = other.offset() + ooffset;
1.1376 + // Note: toffset, ooffset, or len might be near -1>>>1.
1.1377 + if ((ooffset < 0) || (toffset < 0) || (toffset > (long)length() - len) ||
1.1378 + (ooffset > (long)other.length() - len)) {
1.1379 + return false;
1.1380 + }
1.1381 + while (len-- > 0) {
1.1382 + char c1 = ta[to++];
1.1383 + char c2 = pa[po++];
1.1384 + if (c1 == c2) {
1.1385 + continue;
1.1386 + }
1.1387 + if (ignoreCase) {
1.1388 + // If characters don't match but case may be ignored,
1.1389 + // try converting both characters to uppercase.
1.1390 + // If the results match, then the comparison scan should
1.1391 + // continue.
1.1392 + char u1 = Character.toUpperCase(c1);
1.1393 + char u2 = Character.toUpperCase(c2);
1.1394 + if (u1 == u2) {
1.1395 + continue;
1.1396 + }
1.1397 + // Unfortunately, conversion to uppercase does not work properly
1.1398 + // for the Georgian alphabet, which has strange rules about case
1.1399 + // conversion. So we need to make one last check before
1.1400 + // exiting.
1.1401 + if (Character.toLowerCase(u1) == Character.toLowerCase(u2)) {
1.1402 + continue;
1.1403 + }
1.1404 + }
1.1405 + return false;
1.1406 + }
1.1407 + return true;
1.1408 + }
1.1409 +
1.1410 + /**
1.1411 + * Tests if the substring of this string beginning at the
1.1412 + * specified index starts with the specified prefix.
1.1413 + *
1.1414 + * @param prefix the prefix.
1.1415 + * @param toffset where to begin looking in this string.
1.1416 + * @return <code>true</code> if the character sequence represented by the
1.1417 + * argument is a prefix of the substring of this object starting
1.1418 + * at index <code>toffset</code>; <code>false</code> otherwise.
1.1419 + * The result is <code>false</code> if <code>toffset</code> is
1.1420 + * negative or greater than the length of this
1.1421 + * <code>String</code> object; otherwise the result is the same
1.1422 + * as the result of the expression
1.1423 + * <pre>
1.1424 + * this.substring(toffset).startsWith(prefix)
1.1425 + * </pre>
1.1426 + */
1.1427 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "find", "from" }, body=
1.1428 + "find = find.toString();\n" +
1.1429 + "return this.toString().substring(from, from + find.length) === find;\n"
1.1430 + )
1.1431 + public boolean startsWith(String prefix, int toffset) {
1.1432 + char ta[] = toCharArray();
1.1433 + int to = offset() + toffset;
1.1434 + char pa[] = prefix.toCharArray();
1.1435 + int po = prefix.offset();
1.1436 + int pc = prefix.length();
1.1437 + // Note: toffset might be near -1>>>1.
1.1438 + if ((toffset < 0) || (toffset > length() - pc)) {
1.1439 + return false;
1.1440 + }
1.1441 + while (--pc >= 0) {
1.1442 + if (ta[to++] != pa[po++]) {
1.1443 + return false;
1.1444 + }
1.1445 + }
1.1446 + return true;
1.1447 + }
1.1448 +
1.1449 + /**
1.1450 + * Tests if this string starts with the specified prefix.
1.1451 + *
1.1452 + * @param prefix the prefix.
1.1453 + * @return <code>true</code> if the character sequence represented by the
1.1454 + * argument is a prefix of the character sequence represented by
1.1455 + * this string; <code>false</code> otherwise.
1.1456 + * Note also that <code>true</code> will be returned if the
1.1457 + * argument is an empty string or is equal to this
1.1458 + * <code>String</code> object as determined by the
1.1459 + * {@link #equals(Object)} method.
1.1460 + * @since 1. 0
1.1461 + */
1.1462 + public boolean startsWith(String prefix) {
1.1463 + return startsWith(prefix, 0);
1.1464 + }
1.1465 +
1.1466 + /**
1.1467 + * Tests if this string ends with the specified suffix.
1.1468 + *
1.1469 + * @param suffix the suffix.
1.1470 + * @return <code>true</code> if the character sequence represented by the
1.1471 + * argument is a suffix of the character sequence represented by
1.1472 + * this object; <code>false</code> otherwise. Note that the
1.1473 + * result will be <code>true</code> if the argument is the
1.1474 + * empty string or is equal to this <code>String</code> object
1.1475 + * as determined by the {@link #equals(Object)} method.
1.1476 + */
1.1477 + public boolean endsWith(String suffix) {
1.1478 + return startsWith(suffix, length() - suffix.length());
1.1479 + }
1.1480 +
1.1481 + /**
1.1482 + * Returns a hash code for this string. The hash code for a
1.1483 + * <code>String</code> object is computed as
1.1484 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1485 + * s[0]*31^(n-1) + s[1]*31^(n-2) + ... + s[n-1]
1.1486 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1487 + * using <code>int</code> arithmetic, where <code>s[i]</code> is the
1.1488 + * <i>i</i>th character of the string, <code>n</code> is the length of
1.1489 + * the string, and <code>^</code> indicates exponentiation.
1.1490 + * (The hash value of the empty string is zero.)
1.1491 + *
1.1492 + * @return a hash code value for this object.
1.1493 + */
1.1494 + public int hashCode() {
1.1495 + return super.hashCode();
1.1496 + }
1.1497 + int computeHashCode() {
1.1498 + int h = 0;
1.1499 + if (h == 0 && length() > 0) {
1.1500 + int off = offset();
1.1501 + int len = length();
1.1502 +
1.1503 + for (int i = 0; i < len; i++) {
1.1504 + h = 31*h + charAt(off++);
1.1505 + }
1.1506 + }
1.1507 + return h;
1.1508 + }
1.1509 +
1.1510 + /**
1.1511 + * Returns the index within this string of the first occurrence of
1.1512 + * the specified character. If a character with value
1.1513 + * <code>ch</code> occurs in the character sequence represented by
1.1514 + * this <code>String</code> object, then the index (in Unicode
1.1515 + * code units) of the first such occurrence is returned. For
1.1516 + * values of <code>ch</code> in the range from 0 to 0xFFFF
1.1517 + * (inclusive), this is the smallest value <i>k</i> such that:
1.1518 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1519 + * this.charAt(<i>k</i>) == ch
1.1520 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1521 + * is true. For other values of <code>ch</code>, it is the
1.1522 + * smallest value <i>k</i> such that:
1.1523 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1524 + * this.codePointAt(<i>k</i>) == ch
1.1525 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1526 + * is true. In either case, if no such character occurs in this
1.1527 + * string, then <code>-1</code> is returned.
1.1528 + *
1.1529 + * @param ch a character (Unicode code point).
1.1530 + * @return the index of the first occurrence of the character in the
1.1531 + * character sequence represented by this object, or
1.1532 + * <code>-1</code> if the character does not occur.
1.1533 + */
1.1534 + public int indexOf(int ch) {
1.1535 + return indexOf(ch, 0);
1.1536 + }
1.1537 +
1.1538 + /**
1.1539 + * Returns the index within this string of the first occurrence of the
1.1540 + * specified character, starting the search at the specified index.
1.1541 + * <p>
1.1542 + * If a character with value <code>ch</code> occurs in the
1.1543 + * character sequence represented by this <code>String</code>
1.1544 + * object at an index no smaller than <code>fromIndex</code>, then
1.1545 + * the index of the first such occurrence is returned. For values
1.1546 + * of <code>ch</code> in the range from 0 to 0xFFFF (inclusive),
1.1547 + * this is the smallest value <i>k</i> such that:
1.1548 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1549 + * (this.charAt(<i>k</i>) == ch) && (<i>k</i> >= fromIndex)
1.1550 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1551 + * is true. For other values of <code>ch</code>, it is the
1.1552 + * smallest value <i>k</i> such that:
1.1553 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1554 + * (this.codePointAt(<i>k</i>) == ch) && (<i>k</i> >= fromIndex)
1.1555 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1556 + * is true. In either case, if no such character occurs in this
1.1557 + * string at or after position <code>fromIndex</code>, then
1.1558 + * <code>-1</code> is returned.
1.1559 + *
1.1560 + * <p>
1.1561 + * There is no restriction on the value of <code>fromIndex</code>. If it
1.1562 + * is negative, it has the same effect as if it were zero: this entire
1.1563 + * string may be searched. If it is greater than the length of this
1.1564 + * string, it has the same effect as if it were equal to the length of
1.1565 + * this string: <code>-1</code> is returned.
1.1566 + *
1.1567 + * <p>All indices are specified in <code>char</code> values
1.1568 + * (Unicode code units).
1.1569 + *
1.1570 + * @param ch a character (Unicode code point).
1.1571 + * @param fromIndex the index to start the search from.
1.1572 + * @return the index of the first occurrence of the character in the
1.1573 + * character sequence represented by this object that is greater
1.1574 + * than or equal to <code>fromIndex</code>, or <code>-1</code>
1.1575 + * if the character does not occur.
1.1576 + */
1.1577 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "ch", "from" }, body =
1.1578 + "if (typeof ch === 'number') ch = String.fromCharCode(ch);\n" +
1.1579 + "return this.toString().indexOf(ch, from);\n"
1.1580 + )
1.1581 + public int indexOf(int ch, int fromIndex) {
1.1582 + if (fromIndex < 0) {
1.1583 + fromIndex = 0;
1.1584 + } else if (fromIndex >= length()) {
1.1585 + // Note: fromIndex might be near -1>>>1.
1.1586 + return -1;
1.1587 + }
1.1588 +
1.1589 + if (ch < Character.MIN_SUPPLEMENTARY_CODE_POINT) {
1.1590 + // handle most cases here (ch is a BMP code point or a
1.1591 + // negative value (invalid code point))
1.1592 + final char[] value = this.toCharArray();
1.1593 + final int offset = this.offset();
1.1594 + final int max = offset + length();
1.1595 + for (int i = offset + fromIndex; i < max ; i++) {
1.1596 + if (value[i] == ch) {
1.1597 + return i - offset;
1.1598 + }
1.1599 + }
1.1600 + return -1;
1.1601 + } else {
1.1602 + return indexOfSupplementary(ch, fromIndex);
1.1603 + }
1.1604 + }
1.1605 +
1.1606 + /**
1.1607 + * Handles (rare) calls of indexOf with a supplementary character.
1.1608 + */
1.1609 + private int indexOfSupplementary(int ch, int fromIndex) {
1.1610 + if (Character.isValidCodePoint(ch)) {
1.1611 + final char[] value = this.toCharArray();
1.1612 + final int offset = this.offset();
1.1613 + final char hi = Character.highSurrogate(ch);
1.1614 + final char lo = Character.lowSurrogate(ch);
1.1615 + final int max = offset + length() - 1;
1.1616 + for (int i = offset + fromIndex; i < max; i++) {
1.1617 + if (value[i] == hi && value[i+1] == lo) {
1.1618 + return i - offset;
1.1619 + }
1.1620 + }
1.1621 + }
1.1622 + return -1;
1.1623 + }
1.1624 +
1.1625 + /**
1.1626 + * Returns the index within this string of the last occurrence of
1.1627 + * the specified character. For values of <code>ch</code> in the
1.1628 + * range from 0 to 0xFFFF (inclusive), the index (in Unicode code
1.1629 + * units) returned is the largest value <i>k</i> such that:
1.1630 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1631 + * this.charAt(<i>k</i>) == ch
1.1632 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1633 + * is true. For other values of <code>ch</code>, it is the
1.1634 + * largest value <i>k</i> such that:
1.1635 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1636 + * this.codePointAt(<i>k</i>) == ch
1.1637 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1638 + * is true. In either case, if no such character occurs in this
1.1639 + * string, then <code>-1</code> is returned. The
1.1640 + * <code>String</code> is searched backwards starting at the last
1.1641 + * character.
1.1642 + *
1.1643 + * @param ch a character (Unicode code point).
1.1644 + * @return the index of the last occurrence of the character in the
1.1645 + * character sequence represented by this object, or
1.1646 + * <code>-1</code> if the character does not occur.
1.1647 + */
1.1648 + public int lastIndexOf(int ch) {
1.1649 + return lastIndexOf(ch, length() - 1);
1.1650 + }
1.1651 +
1.1652 + /**
1.1653 + * Returns the index within this string of the last occurrence of
1.1654 + * the specified character, searching backward starting at the
1.1655 + * specified index. For values of <code>ch</code> in the range
1.1656 + * from 0 to 0xFFFF (inclusive), the index returned is the largest
1.1657 + * value <i>k</i> such that:
1.1658 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1659 + * (this.charAt(<i>k</i>) == ch) && (<i>k</i> <= fromIndex)
1.1660 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1661 + * is true. For other values of <code>ch</code>, it is the
1.1662 + * largest value <i>k</i> such that:
1.1663 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1664 + * (this.codePointAt(<i>k</i>) == ch) && (<i>k</i> <= fromIndex)
1.1665 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1666 + * is true. In either case, if no such character occurs in this
1.1667 + * string at or before position <code>fromIndex</code>, then
1.1668 + * <code>-1</code> is returned.
1.1669 + *
1.1670 + * <p>All indices are specified in <code>char</code> values
1.1671 + * (Unicode code units).
1.1672 + *
1.1673 + * @param ch a character (Unicode code point).
1.1674 + * @param fromIndex the index to start the search from. There is no
1.1675 + * restriction on the value of <code>fromIndex</code>. If it is
1.1676 + * greater than or equal to the length of this string, it has
1.1677 + * the same effect as if it were equal to one less than the
1.1678 + * length of this string: this entire string may be searched.
1.1679 + * If it is negative, it has the same effect as if it were -1:
1.1680 + * -1 is returned.
1.1681 + * @return the index of the last occurrence of the character in the
1.1682 + * character sequence represented by this object that is less
1.1683 + * than or equal to <code>fromIndex</code>, or <code>-1</code>
1.1684 + * if the character does not occur before that point.
1.1685 + */
1.1686 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "ch", "from" }, body =
1.1687 + "if (typeof ch === 'number') ch = String.fromCharCode(ch);\n" +
1.1688 + "return this.toString().lastIndexOf(ch, from);"
1.1689 + )
1.1690 + public int lastIndexOf(int ch, int fromIndex) {
1.1691 + if (ch < Character.MIN_SUPPLEMENTARY_CODE_POINT) {
1.1692 + // handle most cases here (ch is a BMP code point or a
1.1693 + // negative value (invalid code point))
1.1694 + final char[] value = this.toCharArray();
1.1695 + final int offset = this.offset();
1.1696 + int i = offset + Math.min(fromIndex, length() - 1);
1.1697 + for (; i >= offset ; i--) {
1.1698 + if (value[i] == ch) {
1.1699 + return i - offset;
1.1700 + }
1.1701 + }
1.1702 + return -1;
1.1703 + } else {
1.1704 + return lastIndexOfSupplementary(ch, fromIndex);
1.1705 + }
1.1706 + }
1.1707 +
1.1708 + /**
1.1709 + * Handles (rare) calls of lastIndexOf with a supplementary character.
1.1710 + */
1.1711 + private int lastIndexOfSupplementary(int ch, int fromIndex) {
1.1712 + if (Character.isValidCodePoint(ch)) {
1.1713 + final char[] value = this.toCharArray();
1.1714 + final int offset = this.offset();
1.1715 + char hi = Character.highSurrogate(ch);
1.1716 + char lo = Character.lowSurrogate(ch);
1.1717 + int i = offset + Math.min(fromIndex, length() - 2);
1.1718 + for (; i >= offset; i--) {
1.1719 + if (value[i] == hi && value[i+1] == lo) {
1.1720 + return i - offset;
1.1721 + }
1.1722 + }
1.1723 + }
1.1724 + return -1;
1.1725 + }
1.1726 +
1.1727 + /**
1.1728 + * Returns the index within this string of the first occurrence of the
1.1729 + * specified substring.
1.1730 + *
1.1731 + * <p>The returned index is the smallest value <i>k</i> for which:
1.1732 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1733 + * this.startsWith(str, <i>k</i>)
1.1734 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1735 + * If no such value of <i>k</i> exists, then {@code -1} is returned.
1.1736 + *
1.1737 + * @param str the substring to search for.
1.1738 + * @return the index of the first occurrence of the specified substring,
1.1739 + * or {@code -1} if there is no such occurrence.
1.1740 + */
1.1741 + public int indexOf(String str) {
1.1742 + return indexOf(str, 0);
1.1743 + }
1.1744 +
1.1745 + /**
1.1746 + * Returns the index within this string of the first occurrence of the
1.1747 + * specified substring, starting at the specified index.
1.1748 + *
1.1749 + * <p>The returned index is the smallest value <i>k</i> for which:
1.1750 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1751 + * <i>k</i> >= fromIndex && this.startsWith(str, <i>k</i>)
1.1752 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1753 + * If no such value of <i>k</i> exists, then {@code -1} is returned.
1.1754 + *
1.1755 + * @param str the substring to search for.
1.1756 + * @param fromIndex the index from which to start the search.
1.1757 + * @return the index of the first occurrence of the specified substring,
1.1758 + * starting at the specified index,
1.1759 + * or {@code -1} if there is no such occurrence.
1.1760 + */
1.1761 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "str", "fromIndex" }, body =
1.1762 + "return this.toString().indexOf(str.toString(), fromIndex);"
1.1763 + )
1.1764 + public native int indexOf(String str, int fromIndex);
1.1765 +
1.1766 + /**
1.1767 + * Returns the index within this string of the last occurrence of the
1.1768 + * specified substring. The last occurrence of the empty string ""
1.1769 + * is considered to occur at the index value {@code this.length()}.
1.1770 + *
1.1771 + * <p>The returned index is the largest value <i>k</i> for which:
1.1772 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1773 + * this.startsWith(str, <i>k</i>)
1.1774 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1775 + * If no such value of <i>k</i> exists, then {@code -1} is returned.
1.1776 + *
1.1777 + * @param str the substring to search for.
1.1778 + * @return the index of the last occurrence of the specified substring,
1.1779 + * or {@code -1} if there is no such occurrence.
1.1780 + */
1.1781 + public int lastIndexOf(String str) {
1.1782 + return lastIndexOf(str, length());
1.1783 + }
1.1784 +
1.1785 + /**
1.1786 + * Returns the index within this string of the last occurrence of the
1.1787 + * specified substring, searching backward starting at the specified index.
1.1788 + *
1.1789 + * <p>The returned index is the largest value <i>k</i> for which:
1.1790 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1791 + * <i>k</i> <= fromIndex && this.startsWith(str, <i>k</i>)
1.1792 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1793 + * If no such value of <i>k</i> exists, then {@code -1} is returned.
1.1794 + *
1.1795 + * @param str the substring to search for.
1.1796 + * @param fromIndex the index to start the search from.
1.1797 + * @return the index of the last occurrence of the specified substring,
1.1798 + * searching backward from the specified index,
1.1799 + * or {@code -1} if there is no such occurrence.
1.1800 + */
1.1801 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "s", "from" }, body =
1.1802 + "return this.toString().lastIndexOf(s.toString(), from);"
1.1803 + )
1.1804 + public int lastIndexOf(String str, int fromIndex) {
1.1805 + return lastIndexOf(toCharArray(), offset(), length(), str.toCharArray(), str.offset(), str.length(), fromIndex);
1.1806 + }
1.1807 +
1.1808 + /**
1.1809 + * Code shared by String and StringBuffer to do searches. The
1.1810 + * source is the character array being searched, and the target
1.1811 + * is the string being searched for.
1.1812 + *
1.1813 + * @param source the characters being searched.
1.1814 + * @param sourceOffset offset of the source string.
1.1815 + * @param sourceCount count of the source string.
1.1816 + * @param target the characters being searched for.
1.1817 + * @param targetOffset offset of the target string.
1.1818 + * @param targetCount count of the target string.
1.1819 + * @param fromIndex the index to begin searching from.
1.1820 + */
1.1821 + static int lastIndexOf(char[] source, int sourceOffset, int sourceCount,
1.1822 + char[] target, int targetOffset, int targetCount,
1.1823 + int fromIndex) {
1.1824 + /*
1.1825 + * Check arguments; return immediately where possible. For
1.1826 + * consistency, don't check for null str.
1.1827 + */
1.1828 + int rightIndex = sourceCount - targetCount;
1.1829 + if (fromIndex < 0) {
1.1830 + return -1;
1.1831 + }
1.1832 + if (fromIndex > rightIndex) {
1.1833 + fromIndex = rightIndex;
1.1834 + }
1.1835 + /* Empty string always matches. */
1.1836 + if (targetCount == 0) {
1.1837 + return fromIndex;
1.1838 + }
1.1839 +
1.1840 + int strLastIndex = targetOffset + targetCount - 1;
1.1841 + char strLastChar = target[strLastIndex];
1.1842 + int min = sourceOffset + targetCount - 1;
1.1843 + int i = min + fromIndex;
1.1844 +
1.1845 + startSearchForLastChar:
1.1846 + while (true) {
1.1847 + while (i >= min && source[i] != strLastChar) {
1.1848 + i--;
1.1849 + }
1.1850 + if (i < min) {
1.1851 + return -1;
1.1852 + }
1.1853 + int j = i - 1;
1.1854 + int start = j - (targetCount - 1);
1.1855 + int k = strLastIndex - 1;
1.1856 +
1.1857 + while (j > start) {
1.1858 + if (source[j--] != target[k--]) {
1.1859 + i--;
1.1860 + continue startSearchForLastChar;
1.1861 + }
1.1862 + }
1.1863 + return start - sourceOffset + 1;
1.1864 + }
1.1865 + }
1.1866 +
1.1867 + /**
1.1868 + * Returns a new string that is a substring of this string. The
1.1869 + * substring begins with the character at the specified index and
1.1870 + * extends to the end of this string. <p>
1.1871 + * Examples:
1.1872 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1873 + * "unhappy".substring(2) returns "happy"
1.1874 + * "Harbison".substring(3) returns "bison"
1.1875 + * "emptiness".substring(9) returns "" (an empty string)
1.1876 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1877 + *
1.1878 + * @param beginIndex the beginning index, inclusive.
1.1879 + * @return the specified substring.
1.1880 + * @exception IndexOutOfBoundsException if
1.1881 + * <code>beginIndex</code> is negative or larger than the
1.1882 + * length of this <code>String</code> object.
1.1883 + */
1.1884 + public String substring(int beginIndex) {
1.1885 + return substring(beginIndex, length());
1.1886 + }
1.1887 +
1.1888 + /**
1.1889 + * Returns a new string that is a substring of this string. The
1.1890 + * substring begins at the specified <code>beginIndex</code> and
1.1891 + * extends to the character at index <code>endIndex - 1</code>.
1.1892 + * Thus the length of the substring is <code>endIndex-beginIndex</code>.
1.1893 + * <p>
1.1894 + * Examples:
1.1895 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1896 + * "hamburger".substring(4, 8) returns "urge"
1.1897 + * "smiles".substring(1, 5) returns "mile"
1.1898 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1899 + *
1.1900 + * @param beginIndex the beginning index, inclusive.
1.1901 + * @param endIndex the ending index, exclusive.
1.1902 + * @return the specified substring.
1.1903 + * @exception IndexOutOfBoundsException if the
1.1904 + * <code>beginIndex</code> is negative, or
1.1905 + * <code>endIndex</code> is larger than the length of
1.1906 + * this <code>String</code> object, or
1.1907 + * <code>beginIndex</code> is larger than
1.1908 + * <code>endIndex</code>.
1.1909 + */
1.1910 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "beginIndex", "endIndex" }, body =
1.1911 + "return this.toString().substring(beginIndex, endIndex);"
1.1912 + )
1.1913 + public String substring(int beginIndex, int endIndex) {
1.1914 + if (beginIndex < 0) {
1.1915 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(beginIndex);
1.1916 + }
1.1917 + if (endIndex > length()) {
1.1918 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(endIndex);
1.1919 + }
1.1920 + if (beginIndex > endIndex) {
1.1921 + throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(endIndex - beginIndex);
1.1922 + }
1.1923 + return ((beginIndex == 0) && (endIndex == length())) ? this :
1.1924 + new String(toCharArray(), offset() + beginIndex, endIndex - beginIndex);
1.1925 + }
1.1926 +
1.1927 + /**
1.1928 + * Returns a new character sequence that is a subsequence of this sequence.
1.1929 + *
1.1930 + * <p> An invocation of this method of the form
1.1931 + *
1.1932 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1933 + * str.subSequence(begin, end)</pre></blockquote>
1.1934 + *
1.1935 + * behaves in exactly the same way as the invocation
1.1936 + *
1.1937 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1938 + * str.substring(begin, end)</pre></blockquote>
1.1939 + *
1.1940 + * This method is defined so that the <tt>String</tt> class can implement
1.1941 + * the {@link CharSequence} interface. </p>
1.1942 + *
1.1943 + * @param beginIndex the begin index, inclusive.
1.1944 + * @param endIndex the end index, exclusive.
1.1945 + * @return the specified subsequence.
1.1946 + *
1.1947 + * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException
1.1948 + * if <tt>beginIndex</tt> or <tt>endIndex</tt> are negative,
1.1949 + * if <tt>endIndex</tt> is greater than <tt>length()</tt>,
1.1950 + * or if <tt>beginIndex</tt> is greater than <tt>startIndex</tt>
1.1951 + *
1.1952 + * @since 1.4
1.1953 + * @spec JSR-51
1.1954 + */
1.1955 + public CharSequence subSequence(int beginIndex, int endIndex) {
1.1956 + return this.substring(beginIndex, endIndex);
1.1957 + }
1.1958 +
1.1959 + /**
1.1960 + * Concatenates the specified string to the end of this string.
1.1961 + * <p>
1.1962 + * If the length of the argument string is <code>0</code>, then this
1.1963 + * <code>String</code> object is returned. Otherwise, a new
1.1964 + * <code>String</code> object is created, representing a character
1.1965 + * sequence that is the concatenation of the character sequence
1.1966 + * represented by this <code>String</code> object and the character
1.1967 + * sequence represented by the argument string.<p>
1.1968 + * Examples:
1.1969 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.1970 + * "cares".concat("s") returns "caress"
1.1971 + * "to".concat("get").concat("her") returns "together"
1.1972 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.1973 + *
1.1974 + * @param str the <code>String</code> that is concatenated to the end
1.1975 + * of this <code>String</code>.
1.1976 + * @return a string that represents the concatenation of this object's
1.1977 + * characters followed by the string argument's characters.
1.1978 + */
1.1979 + public String concat(String str) {
1.1980 + int otherLen = str.length();
1.1981 + if (otherLen == 0) {
1.1982 + return this;
1.1983 + }
1.1984 + char buf[] = new char[length() + otherLen];
1.1985 + getChars(0, length(), buf, 0);
1.1986 + str.getChars(0, otherLen, buf, length());
1.1987 + return new String(buf, 0, length() + otherLen);
1.1988 + }
1.1989 +
1.1990 + /**
1.1991 + * Returns a new string resulting from replacing all occurrences of
1.1992 + * <code>oldChar</code> in this string with <code>newChar</code>.
1.1993 + * <p>
1.1994 + * If the character <code>oldChar</code> does not occur in the
1.1995 + * character sequence represented by this <code>String</code> object,
1.1996 + * then a reference to this <code>String</code> object is returned.
1.1997 + * Otherwise, a new <code>String</code> object is created that
1.1998 + * represents a character sequence identical to the character sequence
1.1999 + * represented by this <code>String</code> object, except that every
1.2000 + * occurrence of <code>oldChar</code> is replaced by an occurrence
1.2001 + * of <code>newChar</code>.
1.2002 + * <p>
1.2003 + * Examples:
1.2004 + * <blockquote><pre>
1.2005 + * "mesquite in your cellar".replace('e', 'o')
1.2006 + * returns "mosquito in your collar"
1.2007 + * "the war of baronets".replace('r', 'y')
1.2008 + * returns "the way of bayonets"
1.2009 + * "sparring with a purple porpoise".replace('p', 't')
1.2010 + * returns "starring with a turtle tortoise"
1.2011 + * "JonL".replace('q', 'x') returns "JonL" (no change)
1.2012 + * </pre></blockquote>
1.2013 + *
1.2014 + * @param oldChar the old character.
1.2015 + * @param newChar the new character.
1.2016 + * @return a string derived from this string by replacing every
1.2017 + * occurrence of <code>oldChar</code> with <code>newChar</code>.
1.2018 + */
1.2019 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "arg1", "arg2" }, body =
1.2020 + "if (typeof arg1 === 'number') arg1 = String.fromCharCode(arg1);\n" +
1.2021 + "if (typeof arg2 === 'number') arg2 = String.fromCharCode(arg2);\n" +
1.2022 + "var s = this.toString();\n" +
1.2023 + "for (;;) {\n" +
1.2024 + " var ret = s.replace(arg1, arg2);\n" +
1.2025 + " if (ret === s) {\n" +
1.2026 + " return ret;\n" +
1.2027 + " }\n" +
1.2028 + " s = ret;\n" +
1.2029 + "}"
1.2030 + )
1.2031 + public String replace(char oldChar, char newChar) {
1.2032 + if (oldChar != newChar) {
1.2033 + int len = length();
1.2034 + int i = -1;
1.2035 + char[] val = toCharArray(); /* avoid getfield opcode */
1.2036 + int off = offset(); /* avoid getfield opcode */
1.2037 +
1.2038 + while (++i < len) {
1.2039 + if (val[off + i] == oldChar) {
1.2040 + break;
1.2041 + }
1.2042 + }
1.2043 + if (i < len) {
1.2044 + char buf[] = new char[len];
1.2045 + for (int j = 0 ; j < i ; j++) {
1.2046 + buf[j] = val[off+j];
1.2047 + }
1.2048 + while (i < len) {
1.2049 + char c = val[off + i];
1.2050 + buf[i] = (c == oldChar) ? newChar : c;
1.2051 + i++;
1.2052 + }
1.2053 + return new String(buf, 0, len);
1.2054 + }
1.2055 + }
1.2056 + return this;
1.2057 + }
1.2058 +
1.2059 + /**
1.2060 + * Tells whether or not this string matches the given <a
1.2061 + * href="../util/regex/Pattern.html#sum">regular expression</a>.
1.2062 + *
1.2063 + * <p> An invocation of this method of the form
1.2064 + * <i>str</i><tt>.matches(</tt><i>regex</i><tt>)</tt> yields exactly the
1.2065 + * same result as the expression
1.2066 + *
1.2067 + * <blockquote><tt> {@link java.util.regex.Pattern}.{@link
1.2068 + * java.util.regex.Pattern#matches(String,CharSequence)
1.2069 + * matches}(</tt><i>regex</i><tt>,</tt> <i>str</i><tt>)</tt></blockquote>
1.2070 + *
1.2071 + * @param regex
1.2072 + * the regular expression to which this string is to be matched
1.2073 + *
1.2074 + * @return <tt>true</tt> if, and only if, this string matches the
1.2075 + * given regular expression
1.2076 + *
1.2077 + * @throws PatternSyntaxException
1.2078 + * if the regular expression's syntax is invalid
1.2079 + *
1.2080 + * @see java.util.regex.Pattern
1.2081 + *
1.2082 + * @since 1.4
1.2083 + * @spec JSR-51
1.2084 + */
1.2085 + @JavaScriptBody(args = { "regex" }, body =
1.2086 + "var self = this.toString();\n"
1.2087 + + "var re = new RegExp(regex.toString());\n"
1.2088 + + "var r = re.exec(self);\n"
1.2089 + + "return r != null && r.length > 0 && self.length == r[0].length;"
1.2090 + )
1.2091 + public boolean matches(String regex) {
1.2092 + throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
1.2093 + }
1.2094 +
1.2095 + /**
1.2096 + * Returns true if and only if this string contains the specified
1.2097 + * sequence of char values.
1.2098 + *
1.2099 + * @param s the sequence to search for
1.2100 + * @return true if this string contains <code>s</code>, false otherwise
1.2101 + * @throws NullPointerException if <code>s</code> is <code>null</code>
1.2102 + * @since 1.5
1.2103 + */
1.2104 + public boolean contains(CharSequence s) {
1.2105 + return indexOf(s.toString()) > -1;
1.2106 + }
1.2107 +
1.2108 + /**
1.2109 + * Replaces the first substring of this string that matches the given <a
1.2110 + * href="../util/regex/Pattern.html#sum">regular expression</a> with the
1.2111 + * given replacement.
1.2112 + *
1.2113 + * <p> An invocation of this method of the form
1.2114 + * <i>str</i><tt>.replaceFirst(</tt><i>regex</i><tt>,</tt> <i>repl</i><tt>)</tt>
1.2115 + * yields exactly the same result as the expression
1.2116 + *
1.2117 + * <blockquote><tt>
1.2118 + * {@link java.util.regex.Pattern}.{@link java.util.regex.Pattern#compile
1.2119 + * compile}(</tt><i>regex</i><tt>).{@link
1.2120 + * java.util.regex.Pattern#matcher(java.lang.CharSequence)
1.2121 + * matcher}(</tt><i>str</i><tt>).{@link java.util.regex.Matcher#replaceFirst
1.2122 + * replaceFirst}(</tt><i>repl</i><tt>)</tt></blockquote>
1.2123 + *
1.2124 + *<p>
1.2125 + * Note that backslashes (<tt>\</tt>) and dollar signs (<tt>$</tt>) in the
1.2126 + * replacement string may cause the results to be different than if it were
1.2127 + * being treated as a literal replacement string; see
1.2128 + * {@link java.util.regex.Matcher#replaceFirst}.
1.2129 + * Use {@link java.util.regex.Matcher#quoteReplacement} to suppress the special
1.2130 + * meaning of these characters, if desired.
1.2131 + *
1.2132 + * @param regex
1.2133 + * the regular expression to which this string is to be matched
1.2134 + * @param replacement
1.2135 + * the string to be substituted for the first match
1.2136 + *
1.2137 + * @return The resulting <tt>String</tt>
1.2138 + *
1.2139 + * @throws PatternSyntaxException
1.2140 + * if the regular expression's syntax is invalid
1.2141 + *
1.2142 + * @see java.util.regex.Pattern
1.2143 + *
1.2144 + * @since 1.4
1.2145 + * @spec JSR-51
1.2146 + */
1.2147 + public String replaceFirst(String regex, String replacement) {
1.2148 + throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
1.2149 + }
1.2150 +
1.2151 + /**
1.2152 + * Replaces each substring of this string that matches the given <a
1.2153 + * href="../util/regex/Pattern.html#sum">regular expression</a> with the
1.2154 + * given replacement.
1.2155 + *
1.2156 + * <p> An invocation of this method of the form
1.2157 + * <i>str</i><tt>.replaceAll(</tt><i>regex</i><tt>,</tt> <i>repl</i><tt>)</tt>
1.2158 + * yields exactly the same result as the expression
1.2159 + *
1.2160 + * <blockquote><tt>
1.2161 + * {@link java.util.regex.Pattern}.{@link java.util.regex.Pattern#compile
1.2162 + * compile}(</tt><i>regex</i><tt>).{@link
1.2163 + * java.util.regex.Pattern#matcher(java.lang.CharSequence)
1.2164 + * matcher}(</tt><i>str</i><tt>).{@link java.util.regex.Matcher#replaceAll
1.2165 + * replaceAll}(</tt><i>repl</i><tt>)</tt></blockquote>
1.2166 + *
1.2167 + *<p>
1.2168 + * Note that backslashes (<tt>\</tt>) and dollar signs (<tt>$</tt>) in the
1.2169 + * replacement string may cause the results to be different than if it were
1.2170 + * being treated as a literal replacement string; see
1.2171 + * {@link java.util.regex.Matcher#replaceAll Matcher.replaceAll}.
1.2172 + * Use {@link java.util.regex.Matcher#quoteReplacement} to suppress the special
1.2173 + * meaning of these characters, if desired.
1.2174 + *
1.2175 + * @param regex
1.2176 + * the regular expression to which this string is to be matched
1.2177 + * @param replacement
1.2178 + * the string to be substituted for each match
1.2179 + *
1.2180 + * @return The resulting <tt>String</tt>
1.2181 + *
1.2182 + * @throws PatternSyntaxException
1.2183 + * if the regular expression's syntax is invalid
1.2184 + *
1.2185 + * @see java.util.regex.Pattern
1.2186 + *
1.2187 + * @since 1.4
1.2188 + * @spec JSR-51
1.2189 + */
1.2190 + public String replaceAll(String regex, String replacement) {
1.2191 + throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
1.2192 + }
1.2193 +
1.2194 + /**
1.2195 + * Replaces each substring of this string that matches the literal target
1.2196 + * sequence with the specified literal replacement sequence. The
1.2197 + * replacement proceeds from the beginning of the string to the end, for
1.2198 + * example, replacing "aa" with "b" in the string "aaa" will result in
1.2199 + * "ba" rather than "ab".
1.2200 + *
1.2201 + * @param target The sequence of char values to be replaced
1.2202 + * @param replacement The replacement sequence of char values
1.2203 + * @return The resulting string
1.2204 + * @throws NullPointerException if <code>target</code> or
1.2205 + * <code>replacement</code> is <code>null</code>.
1.2206 + * @since 1.5
1.2207 + */
1.2208 + public String replace(CharSequence target, CharSequence replacement) {
1.2209 + throw new UnsupportedOperationException("This one should be supported, but without dep on rest of regexp");
1.2210 + }
1.2211 +
1.2212 + /**
1.2213 + * Splits this string around matches of the given
1.2214 + * <a href="../util/regex/Pattern.html#sum">regular expression</a>.
1.2215 + *
1.2216 + * <p> The array returned by this method contains each substring of this
1.2217 + * string that is terminated by another substring that matches the given
1.2218 + * expression or is terminated by the end of the string. The substrings in
1.2219 + * the array are in the order in which they occur in this string. If the
1.2220 + * expression does not match any part of the input then the resulting array
1.2221 + * has just one element, namely this string.
1.2222 + *
1.2223 + * <p> The <tt>limit</tt> parameter controls the number of times the
1.2224 + * pattern is applied and therefore affects the length of the resulting
1.2225 + * array. If the limit <i>n</i> is greater than zero then the pattern
1.2226 + * will be applied at most <i>n</i> - 1 times, the array's
1.2227 + * length will be no greater than <i>n</i>, and the array's last entry
1.2228 + * will contain all input beyond the last matched delimiter. If <i>n</i>
1.2229 + * is non-positive then the pattern will be applied as many times as
1.2230 + * possible and the array can have any length. If <i>n</i> is zero then
1.2231 + * the pattern will be applied as many times as possible, the array can
1.2232 + * have any length, and trailing empty strings will be discarded.
1.2233 + *
1.2234 + * <p> The string <tt>"boo:and:foo"</tt>, for example, yields the
1.2235 + * following results with these parameters:
1.2236 + *
1.2237 + * <blockquote><table cellpadding=1 cellspacing=0 summary="Split example showing regex, limit, and result">
1.2238 + * <tr>
1.2239 + * <th>Regex</th>
1.2240 + * <th>Limit</th>
1.2241 + * <th>Result</th>
1.2242 + * </tr>
1.2243 + * <tr><td align=center>:</td>
1.2244 + * <td align=center>2</td>
1.2245 + * <td><tt>{ "boo", "and:foo" }</tt></td></tr>
1.2246 + * <tr><td align=center>:</td>
1.2247 + * <td align=center>5</td>
1.2248 + * <td><tt>{ "boo", "and", "foo" }</tt></td></tr>
1.2249 + * <tr><td align=center>:</td>
1.2250 + * <td align=center>-2</td>
1.2251 + * <td><tt>{ "boo", "and", "foo" }</tt></td></tr>
1.2252 + * <tr><td align=center>o</td>
1.2253 + * <td align=center>5</td>
1.2254 + * <td><tt>{ "b", "", ":and:f", "", "" }</tt></td></tr>
1.2255 + * <tr><td align=center>o</td>
1.2256 + * <td align=center>-2</td>
1.2257 + * <td><tt>{ "b", "", ":and:f", "", "" }</tt></td></tr>
1.2258 + * <tr><td align=center>o</td>
1.2259 + * <td align=center>0</td>
1.2260 + * <td><tt>{ "b", "", ":and:f" }</tt></td></tr>
1.2261 + * </table></blockquote>
1.2262 + *
1.2263 + * <p> An invocation of this method of the form
1.2264 + * <i>str.</i><tt>split(</tt><i>regex</i><tt>,</tt> <i>n</i><tt>)</tt>
1.2265 + * yields the same result as the expression
1.2266 + *
1.2267 + * <blockquote>
1.2268 + * {@link java.util.regex.Pattern}.{@link java.util.regex.Pattern#compile
1.2269 + * compile}<tt>(</tt><i>regex</i><tt>)</tt>.{@link
1.2270 + * java.util.regex.Pattern#split(java.lang.CharSequence,int)
1.2271 + * split}<tt>(</tt><i>str</i><tt>,</tt> <i>n</i><tt>)</tt>
1.2272 + * </blockquote>
1.2273 + *
1.2274 + *
1.2275 + * @param regex
1.2276 + * the delimiting regular expression
1.2277 + *
1.2278 + * @param limit
1.2279 + * the result threshold, as described above
1.2280 + *
1.2281 + * @return the array of strings computed by splitting this string
1.2282 + * around matches of the given regular expression
1.2283 + *
1.2284 + * @throws PatternSyntaxException
1.2285 + * if the regular expression's syntax is invalid
1.2286 + *
1.2287 + * @see java.util.regex.Pattern
1.2288 + *
1.2289 + * @since 1.4
1.2290 + * @spec JSR-51
1.2291 + */
1.2292 + public String[] split(String regex, int limit) {
1.2293 + throw new UnsupportedOperationException("Needs regexp");
1.2294 + }
1.2295 +
1.2296 + /**
1.2297 + * Splits this string around matches of the given <a
1.2298 + * href="../util/regex/Pattern.html#sum">regular expression</a>.
1.2299 + *
1.2300 + * <p> This method works as if by invoking the two-argument {@link
1.2301 + * #split(String, int) split} method with the given expression and a limit
1.2302 + * argument of zero. Trailing empty strings are therefore not included in
1.2303 + * the resulting array.
1.2304 + *
1.2305 + * <p> The string <tt>"boo:and:foo"</tt>, for example, yields the following
1.2306 + * results with these expressions:
1.2307 + *
1.2308 + * <blockquote><table cellpadding=1 cellspacing=0 summary="Split examples showing regex and result">
1.2309 + * <tr>
1.2310 + * <th>Regex</th>
1.2311 + * <th>Result</th>
1.2312 + * </tr>
1.2313 + * <tr><td align=center>:</td>
1.2314 + * <td><tt>{ "boo", "and", "foo" }</tt></td></tr>
1.2315 + * <tr><td align=center>o</td>
1.2316 + * <td><tt>{ "b", "", ":and:f" }</tt></td></tr>
1.2317 + * </table></blockquote>
1.2318 + *
1.2319 + *
1.2320 + * @param regex
1.2321 + * the delimiting regular expression
1.2322 + *
1.2323 + * @return the array of strings computed by splitting this string
1.2324 + * around matches of the given regular expression
1.2325 + *
1.2326 + * @throws PatternSyntaxException
1.2327 + * if the regular expression's syntax is invalid
1.2328 + *
1.2329 + * @see java.util.regex.Pattern
1.2330 + *
1.2331 + * @since 1.4
1.2332 + * @spec JSR-51
1.2333 + */
1.2334 + public String[] split(String regex) {
1.2335 + return split(regex, 0);
1.2336 + }
1.2337 +
1.2338 + /**
1.2339 + * Converts all of the characters in this <code>String</code> to lower
1.2340 + * case using the rules of the given <code>Locale</code>. Case mapping is based
1.2341 + * on the Unicode Standard version specified by the {@link java.lang.Character Character}
1.2342 + * class. Since case mappings are not always 1:1 char mappings, the resulting
1.2343 + * <code>String</code> may be a different length than the original <code>String</code>.
1.2344 + * <p>
1.2345 + * Examples of lowercase mappings are in the following table:
1.2346 + * <table border="1" summary="Lowercase mapping examples showing language code of locale, upper case, lower case, and description">
1.2347 + * <tr>
1.2348 + * <th>Language Code of Locale</th>
1.2349 + * <th>Upper Case</th>
1.2350 + * <th>Lower Case</th>
1.2351 + * <th>Description</th>
1.2352 + * </tr>
1.2353 + * <tr>
1.2354 + * <td>tr (Turkish)</td>
1.2355 + * <td>\u0130</td>
1.2356 + * <td>\u0069</td>
1.2357 + * <td>capital letter I with dot above -> small letter i</td>
1.2358 + * </tr>
1.2359 + * <tr>
1.2360 + * <td>tr (Turkish)</td>
1.2361 + * <td>\u0049</td>
1.2362 + * <td>\u0131</td>
1.2363 + * <td>capital letter I -> small letter dotless i </td>
1.2364 + * </tr>
1.2365 + * <tr>
1.2366 + * <td>(all)</td>
1.2367 + * <td>French Fries</td>
1.2368 + * <td>french fries</td>
1.2369 + * <td>lowercased all chars in String</td>
1.2370 + * </tr>
1.2371 + * <tr>
1.2372 + * <td>(all)</td>
1.2373 + * <td><img src="doc-files/capiota.gif" alt="capiota"><img src="doc-files/capchi.gif" alt="capchi">
1.2374 + * <img src="doc-files/captheta.gif" alt="captheta"><img src="doc-files/capupsil.gif" alt="capupsil">
1.2375 + * <img src="doc-files/capsigma.gif" alt="capsigma"></td>
1.2376 + * <td><img src="doc-files/iota.gif" alt="iota"><img src="doc-files/chi.gif" alt="chi">
1.2377 + * <img src="doc-files/theta.gif" alt="theta"><img src="doc-files/upsilon.gif" alt="upsilon">
1.2378 + * <img src="doc-files/sigma1.gif" alt="sigma"></td>
1.2379 + * <td>lowercased all chars in String</td>
1.2380 + * </tr>
1.2381 + * </table>
1.2382 + *
1.2383 + * @param locale use the case transformation rules for this locale
1.2384 + * @return the <code>String</code>, converted to lowercase.
1.2385 + * @see java.lang.String#toLowerCase()
1.2386 + * @see java.lang.String#toUpperCase()
1.2387 + * @see java.lang.String#toUpperCase(Locale)
1.2388 + * @since 1.1
1.2389 + */
1.2390 +// public String toLowerCase(Locale locale) {
1.2391 +// if (locale == null) {
1.2392 +// throw new NullPointerException();
1.2393 +// }
1.2394 +//
1.2395 +// int firstUpper;
1.2396 +//
1.2397 +// /* Now check if there are any characters that need to be changed. */
1.2398 +// scan: {
1.2399 +// for (firstUpper = 0 ; firstUpper < count; ) {
1.2400 +// char c = value[offset+firstUpper];
1.2401 +// if ((c >= Character.MIN_HIGH_SURROGATE) &&
1.2402 +// (c <= Character.MAX_HIGH_SURROGATE)) {
1.2403 +// int supplChar = codePointAt(firstUpper);
1.2404 +// if (supplChar != Character.toLowerCase(supplChar)) {
1.2405 +// break scan;
1.2406 +// }
1.2407 +// firstUpper += Character.charCount(supplChar);
1.2408 +// } else {
1.2409 +// if (c != Character.toLowerCase(c)) {
1.2410 +// break scan;
1.2411 +// }
1.2412 +// firstUpper++;
1.2413 +// }
1.2414 +// }
1.2415 +// return this;
1.2416 +// }
1.2417 +//
1.2418 +// char[] result = new char[count];
1.2419 +// int resultOffset = 0; /* result may grow, so i+resultOffset
1.2420 +// * is the write location in result */
1.2421 +//
1.2422 +// /* Just copy the first few lowerCase characters. */
1.2423 +// System.arraycopy(value, offset, result, 0, firstUpper);
1.2424 +//
1.2425 +// String lang = locale.getLanguage();
1.2426 +// boolean localeDependent =
1.2427 +// (lang == "tr" || lang == "az" || lang == "lt");
1.2428 +// char[] lowerCharArray;
1.2429 +// int lowerChar;
1.2430 +// int srcChar;
1.2431 +// int srcCount;
1.2432 +// for (int i = firstUpper; i < count; i += srcCount) {
1.2433 +// srcChar = (int)value[offset+i];
1.2434 +// if ((char)srcChar >= Character.MIN_HIGH_SURROGATE &&
1.2435 +// (char)srcChar <= Character.MAX_HIGH_SURROGATE) {
1.2436 +// srcChar = codePointAt(i);
1.2437 +// srcCount = Character.charCount(srcChar);
1.2438 +// } else {
1.2439 +// srcCount = 1;
1.2440 +// }
1.2441 +// if (localeDependent || srcChar == '\u03A3') { // GREEK CAPITAL LETTER SIGMA
1.2442 +// lowerChar = ConditionalSpecialCasing.toLowerCaseEx(this, i, locale);
1.2443 +// } else if (srcChar == '\u0130') { // LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I DOT
1.2444 +// lowerChar = Character.ERROR;
1.2445 +// } else {
1.2446 +// lowerChar = Character.toLowerCase(srcChar);
1.2447 +// }
1.2448 +// if ((lowerChar == Character.ERROR) ||
1.2449 +// (lowerChar >= Character.MIN_SUPPLEMENTARY_CODE_POINT)) {
1.2450 +// if (lowerChar == Character.ERROR) {
1.2451 +// if (!localeDependent && srcChar == '\u0130') {
1.2452 +// lowerCharArray =
1.2453 +// ConditionalSpecialCasing.toLowerCaseCharArray(this, i, Locale.ENGLISH);
1.2454 +// } else {
1.2455 +// lowerCharArray =
1.2456 +// ConditionalSpecialCasing.toLowerCaseCharArray(this, i, locale);
1.2457 +// }
1.2458 +// } else if (srcCount == 2) {
1.2459 +// resultOffset += Character.toChars(lowerChar, result, i + resultOffset) - srcCount;
1.2460 +// continue;
1.2461 +// } else {
1.2462 +// lowerCharArray = Character.toChars(lowerChar);
1.2463 +// }
1.2464 +//
1.2465 +// /* Grow result if needed */
1.2466 +// int mapLen = lowerCharArray.length;
1.2467 +// if (mapLen > srcCount) {
1.2468 +// char[] result2 = new char[result.length + mapLen - srcCount];
1.2469 +// System.arraycopy(result, 0, result2, 0,
1.2470 +// i + resultOffset);
1.2471 +// result = result2;
1.2472 +// }
1.2473 +// for (int x=0; x<mapLen; ++x) {
1.2474 +// result[i+resultOffset+x] = lowerCharArray[x];
1.2475 +// }
1.2476 +// resultOffset += (mapLen - srcCount);
1.2477 +// } else {
1.2478 +// result[i+resultOffset] = (char)lowerChar;
1.2479 +// }
1.2480 +// }
1.2481 +// return new String(0, count+resultOffset, result);
1.2482 +// }
1.2483 +
1.2484 + /**
1.2485 + * Converts all of the characters in this <code>String</code> to lower
1.2486 + * case using the rules of the default locale. This is equivalent to calling
1.2487 + * <code>toLowerCase(Locale.getDefault())</code>.
1.2488 + * <p>
1.2489 + * <b>Note:</b> This method is locale sensitive, and may produce unexpected
1.2490 + * results if used for strings that are intended to be interpreted locale
1.2491 + * independently.
1.2492 + * Examples are programming language identifiers, protocol keys, and HTML
1.2493 + * tags.
1.2494 + * For instance, <code>"TITLE".toLowerCase()</code> in a Turkish locale
1.2495 + * returns <code>"t\u005Cu0131tle"</code>, where '\u005Cu0131' is the
1.2496 + * LATIN SMALL LETTER DOTLESS I character.
1.2497 + * To obtain correct results for locale insensitive strings, use
1.2498 + * <code>toLowerCase(Locale.ENGLISH)</code>.
1.2499 + * <p>
1.2500 + * @return the <code>String</code>, converted to lowercase.
1.2501 + * @see java.lang.String#toLowerCase(Locale)
1.2502 + */
1.2503 + @JavaScriptBody(args = {}, body = "return this.toLowerCase();")
1.2504 + public String toLowerCase() {
1.2505 + throw new UnsupportedOperationException("Should be supported but without connection to locale");
1.2506 + }
1.2507 +
1.2508 + /**
1.2509 + * Converts all of the characters in this <code>String</code> to upper
1.2510 + * case using the rules of the given <code>Locale</code>. Case mapping is based
1.2511 + * on the Unicode Standard version specified by the {@link java.lang.Character Character}
1.2512 + * class. Since case mappings are not always 1:1 char mappings, the resulting
1.2513 + * <code>String</code> may be a different length than the original <code>String</code>.
1.2514 + * <p>
1.2515 + * Examples of locale-sensitive and 1:M case mappings are in the following table.
1.2516 + * <p>
1.2517 + * <table border="1" summary="Examples of locale-sensitive and 1:M case mappings. Shows Language code of locale, lower case, upper case, and description.">
1.2518 + * <tr>
1.2519 + * <th>Language Code of Locale</th>
1.2520 + * <th>Lower Case</th>
1.2521 + * <th>Upper Case</th>
1.2522 + * <th>Description</th>
1.2523 + * </tr>
1.2524 + * <tr>
1.2525 + * <td>tr (Turkish)</td>
1.2526 + * <td>\u0069</td>
1.2527 + * <td>\u0130</td>
1.2528 + * <td>small letter i -> capital letter I with dot above</td>
1.2529 + * </tr>
1.2530 + * <tr>
1.2531 + * <td>tr (Turkish)</td>
1.2532 + * <td>\u0131</td>
1.2533 + * <td>\u0049</td>
1.2534 + * <td>small letter dotless i -> capital letter I</td>
1.2535 + * </tr>
1.2536 + * <tr>
1.2537 + * <td>(all)</td>
1.2538 + * <td>\u00df</td>
1.2539 + * <td>\u0053 \u0053</td>
1.2540 + * <td>small letter sharp s -> two letters: SS</td>
1.2541 + * </tr>
1.2542 + * <tr>
1.2543 + * <td>(all)</td>
1.2544 + * <td>Fahrvergnügen</td>
1.2545 + * <td>FAHRVERGNÜGEN</td>
1.2546 + * <td></td>
1.2547 + * </tr>
1.2548 + * </table>
1.2549 + * @param locale use the case transformation rules for this locale
1.2550 + * @return the <code>String</code>, converted to uppercase.
1.2551 + * @see java.lang.String#toUpperCase()
1.2552 + * @see java.lang.String#toLowerCase()
1.2553 + * @see java.lang.String#toLowerCase(Locale)
1.2554 + * @since 1.1
1.2555 + */
1.2556 + /* not for javascript
1.2557 + public String toUpperCase(Locale locale) {
1.2558 + if (locale == null) {
1.2559 + throw new NullPointerException();
1.2560 + }
1.2561 +
1.2562 + int firstLower;
1.2563 +
1.2564 + // Now check if there are any characters that need to be changed.
1.2565 + scan: {
1.2566 + for (firstLower = 0 ; firstLower < count; ) {
1.2567 + int c = (int)value[offset+firstLower];
1.2568 + int srcCount;
1.2569 + if ((c >= Character.MIN_HIGH_SURROGATE) &&
1.2570 + (c <= Character.MAX_HIGH_SURROGATE)) {
1.2571 + c = codePointAt(firstLower);
1.2572 + srcCount = Character.charCount(c);
1.2573 + } else {
1.2574 + srcCount = 1;
1.2575 + }
1.2576 + int upperCaseChar = Character.toUpperCaseEx(c);
1.2577 + if ((upperCaseChar == Character.ERROR) ||
1.2578 + (c != upperCaseChar)) {
1.2579 + break scan;
1.2580 + }
1.2581 + firstLower += srcCount;
1.2582 + }
1.2583 + return this;
1.2584 + }
1.2585 +
1.2586 + char[] result = new char[count]; /* may grow *
1.2587 + int resultOffset = 0; /* result may grow, so i+resultOffset
1.2588 + * is the write location in result *
1.2589 +
1.2590 + /* Just copy the first few upperCase characters. *
1.2591 + System.arraycopy(value, offset, result, 0, firstLower);
1.2592 +
1.2593 + String lang = locale.getLanguage();
1.2594 + boolean localeDependent =
1.2595 + (lang == "tr" || lang == "az" || lang == "lt");
1.2596 + char[] upperCharArray;
1.2597 + int upperChar;
1.2598 + int srcChar;
1.2599 + int srcCount;
1.2600 + for (int i = firstLower; i < count; i += srcCount) {
1.2601 + srcChar = (int)value[offset+i];
1.2602 + if ((char)srcChar >= Character.MIN_HIGH_SURROGATE &&
1.2603 + (char)srcChar <= Character.MAX_HIGH_SURROGATE) {
1.2604 + srcChar = codePointAt(i);
1.2605 + srcCount = Character.charCount(srcChar);
1.2606 + } else {
1.2607 + srcCount = 1;
1.2608 + }
1.2609 + if (localeDependent) {
1.2610 + upperChar = ConditionalSpecialCasing.toUpperCaseEx(this, i, locale);
1.2611 + } else {
1.2612 + upperChar = Character.toUpperCaseEx(srcChar);
1.2613 + }
1.2614 + if ((upperChar == Character.ERROR) ||
1.2615 + (upperChar >= Character.MIN_SUPPLEMENTARY_CODE_POINT)) {
1.2616 + if (upperChar == Character.ERROR) {
1.2617 + if (localeDependent) {
1.2618 + upperCharArray =
1.2619 + ConditionalSpecialCasing.toUpperCaseCharArray(this, i, locale);
1.2620 + } else {
1.2621 + upperCharArray = Character.toUpperCaseCharArray(srcChar);
1.2622 + }
1.2623 + } else if (srcCount == 2) {
1.2624 + resultOffset += Character.toChars(upperChar, result, i + resultOffset) - srcCount;
1.2625 + continue;
1.2626 + } else {
1.2627 + upperCharArray = Character.toChars(upperChar);
1.2628 + }
1.2629 +
1.2630 + /* Grow result if needed *
1.2631 + int mapLen = upperCharArray.length;
1.2632 + if (mapLen > srcCount) {
1.2633 + char[] result2 = new char[result.length + mapLen - srcCount];
1.2634 + System.arraycopy(result, 0, result2, 0,
1.2635 + i + resultOffset);
1.2636 + result = result2;
1.2637 + }
1.2638 + for (int x=0; x<mapLen; ++x) {
1.2639 + result[i+resultOffset+x] = upperCharArray[x];
1.2640 + }
1.2641 + resultOffset += (mapLen - srcCount);
1.2642 + } else {
1.2643 + result[i+resultOffset] = (char)upperChar;
1.2644 + }
1.2645 + }
1.2646 + return new String(0, count+resultOffset, result);
1.2647 + }
1.2648 + */
1.2649 +
1.2650 + /**
1.2651 + * Converts all of the characters in this <code>String</code> to upper
1.2652 + * case using the rules of the default locale. This method is equivalent to
1.2653 + * <code>toUpperCase(Locale.getDefault())</code>.
1.2654 + * <p>
1.2655 + * <b>Note:</b> This method is locale sensitive, and may produce unexpected
1.2656 + * results if used for strings that are intended to be interpreted locale
1.2657 + * independently.
1.2658 + * Examples are programming language identifiers, protocol keys, and HTML
1.2659 + * tags.
1.2660 + * For instance, <code>"title".toUpperCase()</code> in a Turkish locale
1.2661 + * returns <code>"T\u005Cu0130TLE"</code>, where '\u005Cu0130' is the
1.2662 + * LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH DOT ABOVE character.
1.2663 + * To obtain correct results for locale insensitive strings, use
1.2664 + * <code>toUpperCase(Locale.ENGLISH)</code>.
1.2665 + * <p>
1.2666 + * @return the <code>String</code>, converted to uppercase.
1.2667 + * @see java.lang.String#toUpperCase(Locale)
1.2668 + */
1.2669 + @JavaScriptBody(args = {}, body = "return this.toUpperCase();")
1.2670 + public String toUpperCase() {
1.2671 + throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
1.2672 + }
1.2673 +
1.2674 + /**
1.2675 + * Returns a copy of the string, with leading and trailing whitespace
1.2676 + * omitted.
1.2677 + * <p>
1.2678 + * If this <code>String</code> object represents an empty character
1.2679 + * sequence, or the first and last characters of character sequence
1.2680 + * represented by this <code>String</code> object both have codes
1.2681 + * greater than <code>'\u0020'</code> (the space character), then a
1.2682 + * reference to this <code>String</code> object is returned.
1.2683 + * <p>
1.2684 + * Otherwise, if there is no character with a code greater than
1.2685 + * <code>'\u0020'</code> in the string, then a new
1.2686 + * <code>String</code> object representing an empty string is created
1.2687 + * and returned.
1.2688 + * <p>
1.2689 + * Otherwise, let <i>k</i> be the index of the first character in the
1.2690 + * string whose code is greater than <code>'\u0020'</code>, and let
1.2691 + * <i>m</i> be the index of the last character in the string whose code
1.2692 + * is greater than <code>'\u0020'</code>. A new <code>String</code>
1.2693 + * object is created, representing the substring of this string that
1.2694 + * begins with the character at index <i>k</i> and ends with the
1.2695 + * character at index <i>m</i>-that is, the result of
1.2696 + * <code>this.substring(<i>k</i>, <i>m</i>+1)</code>.
1.2697 + * <p>
1.2698 + * This method may be used to trim whitespace (as defined above) from
1.2699 + * the beginning and end of a string.
1.2700 + *
1.2701 + * @return A copy of this string with leading and trailing white
1.2702 + * space removed, or this string if it has no leading or
1.2703 + * trailing white space.
1.2704 + */
1.2705 + public String trim() {
1.2706 + int len = length();
1.2707 + int st = 0;
1.2708 + int off = offset(); /* avoid getfield opcode */
1.2709 + char[] val = toCharArray(); /* avoid getfield opcode */
1.2710 +
1.2711 + while ((st < len) && (val[off + st] <= ' ')) {
1.2712 + st++;
1.2713 + }
1.2714 + while ((st < len) && (val[off + len - 1] <= ' ')) {
1.2715 + len--;
1.2716 + }
1.2717 + return ((st > 0) || (len < length())) ? substring(st, len) : this;
1.2718 + }
1.2719 +
1.2720 + /**
1.2721 + * This object (which is already a string!) is itself returned.
1.2722 + *
1.2723 + * @return the string itself.
1.2724 + */
1.2725 + @JavaScriptBody(args = {}, body = "return this.toString();")
1.2726 + public String toString() {
1.2727 + return this;
1.2728 + }
1.2729 +
1.2730 + /**
1.2731 + * Converts this string to a new character array.
1.2732 + *
1.2733 + * @return a newly allocated character array whose length is the length
1.2734 + * of this string and whose contents are initialized to contain
1.2735 + * the character sequence represented by this string.
1.2736 + */
1.2737 + public char[] toCharArray() {
1.2738 + char result[] = new char[length()];
1.2739 + getChars(0, length(), result, 0);
1.2740 + return result;
1.2741 + }
1.2742 +
1.2743 + /**
1.2744 + * Returns a formatted string using the specified format string and
1.2745 + * arguments.
1.2746 + *
1.2747 + * <p> The locale always used is the one returned by {@link
1.2748 + * java.util.Locale#getDefault() Locale.getDefault()}.
1.2749 + *
1.2750 + * @param format
1.2751 + * A <a href="../util/Formatter.html#syntax">format string</a>
1.2752 + *
1.2753 + * @param args
1.2754 + * Arguments referenced by the format specifiers in the format
1.2755 + * string. If there are more arguments than format specifiers, the
1.2756 + * extra arguments are ignored. The number of arguments is
1.2757 + * variable and may be zero. The maximum number of arguments is
1.2758 + * limited by the maximum dimension of a Java array as defined by
1.2759 + * <cite>The Java™ Virtual Machine Specification</cite>.
1.2760 + * The behaviour on a
1.2761 + * <tt>null</tt> argument depends on the <a
1.2762 + * href="../util/Formatter.html#syntax">conversion</a>.
1.2763 + *
1.2764 + * @throws IllegalFormatException
1.2765 + * If a format string contains an illegal syntax, a format
1.2766 + * specifier that is incompatible with the given arguments,
1.2767 + * insufficient arguments given the format string, or other
1.2768 + * illegal conditions. For specification of all possible
1.2769 + * formatting errors, see the <a
1.2770 + * href="../util/Formatter.html#detail">Details</a> section of the
1.2771 + * formatter class specification.
1.2772 + *
1.2773 + * @throws NullPointerException
1.2774 + * If the <tt>format</tt> is <tt>null</tt>
1.2775 + *
1.2776 + * @return A formatted string
1.2777 + *
1.2778 + * @see java.util.Formatter
1.2779 + * @since 1.5
1.2780 + */
1.2781 + public static String format(String format, Object ... args) {
1.2782 + throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
1.2783 + }
1.2784 +
1.2785 + /**
1.2786 + * Returns a formatted string using the specified locale, format string,
1.2787 + * and arguments.
1.2788 + *
1.2789 + * @param l
1.2790 + * The {@linkplain java.util.Locale locale} to apply during
1.2791 + * formatting. If <tt>l</tt> is <tt>null</tt> then no localization
1.2792 + * is applied.
1.2793 + *
1.2794 + * @param format
1.2795 + * A <a href="../util/Formatter.html#syntax">format string</a>
1.2796 + *
1.2797 + * @param args
1.2798 + * Arguments referenced by the format specifiers in the format
1.2799 + * string. If there are more arguments than format specifiers, the
1.2800 + * extra arguments are ignored. The number of arguments is
1.2801 + * variable and may be zero. The maximum number of arguments is
1.2802 + * limited by the maximum dimension of a Java array as defined by
1.2803 + * <cite>The Java™ Virtual Machine Specification</cite>.
1.2804 + * The behaviour on a
1.2805 + * <tt>null</tt> argument depends on the <a
1.2806 + * href="../util/Formatter.html#syntax">conversion</a>.
1.2807 + *
1.2808 + * @throws IllegalFormatException
1.2809 + * If a format string contains an illegal syntax, a format
1.2810 + * specifier that is incompatible with the given arguments,
1.2811 + * insufficient arguments given the format string, or other
1.2812 + * illegal conditions. For specification of all possible
1.2813 + * formatting errors, see the <a
1.2814 + * href="../util/Formatter.html#detail">Details</a> section of the
1.2815 + * formatter class specification
1.2816 + *
1.2817 + * @throws NullPointerException
1.2818 + * If the <tt>format</tt> is <tt>null</tt>
1.2819 + *
1.2820 + * @return A formatted string
1.2821 + *
1.2822 + * @see java.util.Formatter
1.2823 + * @since 1.5
1.2824 + */
1.2825 +// public static String format(Locale l, String format, Object ... args) {
1.2826 +// return new Formatter(l).format(format, args).toString();
1.2827 +// }
1.2828 +
1.2829 + /**
1.2830 + * Returns the string representation of the <code>Object</code> argument.
1.2831 + *
1.2832 + * @param obj an <code>Object</code>.
1.2833 + * @return if the argument is <code>null</code>, then a string equal to
1.2834 + * <code>"null"</code>; otherwise, the value of
1.2835 + * <code>obj.toString()</code> is returned.
1.2836 + * @see java.lang.Object#toString()
1.2837 + */
1.2838 + public static String valueOf(Object obj) {
1.2839 + return (obj == null) ? "null" : obj.toString();
1.2840 + }
1.2841 +
1.2842 + /**
1.2843 + * Returns the string representation of the <code>char</code> array
1.2844 + * argument. The contents of the character array are copied; subsequent
1.2845 + * modification of the character array does not affect the newly
1.2846 + * created string.
1.2847 + *
1.2848 + * @param data a <code>char</code> array.
1.2849 + * @return a newly allocated string representing the same sequence of
1.2850 + * characters contained in the character array argument.
1.2851 + */
1.2852 + public static String valueOf(char data[]) {
1.2853 + return new String(data);
1.2854 + }
1.2855 +
1.2856 + /**
1.2857 + * Returns the string representation of a specific subarray of the
1.2858 + * <code>char</code> array argument.
1.2859 + * <p>
1.2860 + * The <code>offset</code> argument is the index of the first
1.2861 + * character of the subarray. The <code>count</code> argument
1.2862 + * specifies the length of the subarray. The contents of the subarray
1.2863 + * are copied; subsequent modification of the character array does not
1.2864 + * affect the newly created string.
1.2865 + *
1.2866 + * @param data the character array.
1.2867 + * @param offset the initial offset into the value of the
1.2868 + * <code>String</code>.
1.2869 + * @param count the length of the value of the <code>String</code>.
1.2870 + * @return a string representing the sequence of characters contained
1.2871 + * in the subarray of the character array argument.
1.2872 + * @exception IndexOutOfBoundsException if <code>offset</code> is
1.2873 + * negative, or <code>count</code> is negative, or
1.2874 + * <code>offset+count</code> is larger than
1.2875 + * <code>data.length</code>.
1.2876 + */
1.2877 + public static String valueOf(char data[], int offset, int count) {
1.2878 + return new String(data, offset, count);
1.2879 + }
1.2880 +
1.2881 + /**
1.2882 + * Returns a String that represents the character sequence in the
1.2883 + * array specified.
1.2884 + *
1.2885 + * @param data the character array.
1.2886 + * @param offset initial offset of the subarray.
1.2887 + * @param count length of the subarray.
1.2888 + * @return a <code>String</code> that contains the characters of the
1.2889 + * specified subarray of the character array.
1.2890 + */
1.2891 + public static String copyValueOf(char data[], int offset, int count) {
1.2892 + // All public String constructors now copy the data.
1.2893 + return new String(data, offset, count);
1.2894 + }
1.2895 +
1.2896 + /**
1.2897 + * Returns a String that represents the character sequence in the
1.2898 + * array specified.
1.2899 + *
1.2900 + * @param data the character array.
1.2901 + * @return a <code>String</code> that contains the characters of the
1.2902 + * character array.
1.2903 + */
1.2904 + public static String copyValueOf(char data[]) {
1.2905 + return copyValueOf(data, 0, data.length);
1.2906 + }
1.2907 +
1.2908 + /**
1.2909 + * Returns the string representation of the <code>boolean</code> argument.
1.2910 + *
1.2911 + * @param b a <code>boolean</code>.
1.2912 + * @return if the argument is <code>true</code>, a string equal to
1.2913 + * <code>"true"</code> is returned; otherwise, a string equal to
1.2914 + * <code>"false"</code> is returned.
1.2915 + */
1.2916 + public static String valueOf(boolean b) {
1.2917 + return b ? "true" : "false";
1.2918 + }
1.2919 +
1.2920 + /**
1.2921 + * Returns the string representation of the <code>char</code>
1.2922 + * argument.
1.2923 + *
1.2924 + * @param c a <code>char</code>.
1.2925 + * @return a string of length <code>1</code> containing
1.2926 + * as its single character the argument <code>c</code>.
1.2927 + */
1.2928 + public static String valueOf(char c) {
1.2929 + char data[] = {c};
1.2930 + return new String(data, 0, 1);
1.2931 + }
1.2932 +
1.2933 + /**
1.2934 + * Returns the string representation of the <code>int</code> argument.
1.2935 + * <p>
1.2936 + * The representation is exactly the one returned by the
1.2937 + * <code>Integer.toString</code> method of one argument.
1.2938 + *
1.2939 + * @param i an <code>int</code>.
1.2940 + * @return a string representation of the <code>int</code> argument.
1.2941 + * @see java.lang.Integer#toString(int, int)
1.2942 + */
1.2943 + public static String valueOf(int i) {
1.2944 + return Integer.toString(i);
1.2945 + }
1.2946 +
1.2947 + /**
1.2948 + * Returns the string representation of the <code>long</code> argument.
1.2949 + * <p>
1.2950 + * The representation is exactly the one returned by the
1.2951 + * <code>Long.toString</code> method of one argument.
1.2952 + *
1.2953 + * @param l a <code>long</code>.
1.2954 + * @return a string representation of the <code>long</code> argument.
1.2955 + * @see java.lang.Long#toString(long)
1.2956 + */
1.2957 + public static String valueOf(long l) {
1.2958 + return Long.toString(l);
1.2959 + }
1.2960 +
1.2961 + /**
1.2962 + * Returns the string representation of the <code>float</code> argument.
1.2963 + * <p>
1.2964 + * The representation is exactly the one returned by the
1.2965 + * <code>Float.toString</code> method of one argument.
1.2966 + *
1.2967 + * @param f a <code>float</code>.
1.2968 + * @return a string representation of the <code>float</code> argument.
1.2969 + * @see java.lang.Float#toString(float)
1.2970 + */
1.2971 + public static String valueOf(float f) {
1.2972 + return Float.toString(f);
1.2973 + }
1.2974 +
1.2975 + /**
1.2976 + * Returns the string representation of the <code>double</code> argument.
1.2977 + * <p>
1.2978 + * The representation is exactly the one returned by the
1.2979 + * <code>Double.toString</code> method of one argument.
1.2980 + *
1.2981 + * @param d a <code>double</code>.
1.2982 + * @return a string representation of the <code>double</code> argument.
1.2983 + * @see java.lang.Double#toString(double)
1.2984 + */
1.2985 + public static String valueOf(double d) {
1.2986 + return Double.toString(d);
1.2987 + }
1.2988 +
1.2989 + /**
1.2990 + * Returns a canonical representation for the string object.
1.2991 + * <p>
1.2992 + * A pool of strings, initially empty, is maintained privately by the
1.2993 + * class <code>String</code>.
1.2994 + * <p>
1.2995 + * When the intern method is invoked, if the pool already contains a
1.2996 + * string equal to this <code>String</code> object as determined by
1.2997 + * the {@link #equals(Object)} method, then the string from the pool is
1.2998 + * returned. Otherwise, this <code>String</code> object is added to the
1.2999 + * pool and a reference to this <code>String</code> object is returned.
1.3000 + * <p>
1.3001 + * It follows that for any two strings <code>s</code> and <code>t</code>,
1.3002 + * <code>s.intern() == t.intern()</code> is <code>true</code>
1.3003 + * if and only if <code>s.equals(t)</code> is <code>true</code>.
1.3004 + * <p>
1.3005 + * All literal strings and string-valued constant expressions are
1.3006 + * interned. String literals are defined in section 3.10.5 of the
1.3007 + * <cite>The Java™ Language Specification</cite>.
1.3008 + *
1.3009 + * @return a string that has the same contents as this string, but is
1.3010 + * guaranteed to be from a pool of unique strings.
1.3011 + */
1.3012 + public native String intern();
1.3013 +}