ComponentOrientation (Java Platform SE 6) (original) (raw)



java.awt

Class ComponentOrientation

java.lang.Object extended by java.awt.ComponentOrientation

All Implemented Interfaces:

Serializable


public final class ComponentOrientation

extends Object

implements Serializable

The ComponentOrientation class encapsulates the language-sensitive orientation that is to be used to order the elements of a component or of text. It is used to reflect the differences in this ordering between Western alphabets, Middle Eastern (such as Hebrew), and Far Eastern (such as Japanese).

Fundamentally, this governs items (such as characters) which are laid out in lines, with the lines then laid out in a block. This also applies to items in a widget: for example, in a check box where the box is positioned relative to the text.

There are four different orientations used in modern languages as in the following table.

LT RT TL TR
A B C C B A A D G G D A D E F F E D B E H H E B G H I I H G C F I I F C

(In the header, the two-letter abbreviation represents the item direction in the first letter, and the line direction in the second. For example, LT means "items left-to-right, lines top-to-bottom", TL means "items top-to-bottom, lines left-to-right", and so on.)

The orientations are:

if (orientation == LEFT_TO_RIGHT) { ... } else if (orientation == RIGHT_TO_LEFT) { ... } else { // Oops }

This is unsafe, since more constants may be added in the future and since it is not guaranteed that orientation objects will be unique.

See Also:

Serialized Form


Field Summary
static ComponentOrientation LEFT_TO_RIGHT Items run left to right and lines flow top to bottom Examples: English, French.
static ComponentOrientation RIGHT_TO_LEFT Items run right to left and lines flow top to bottom Examples: Arabic, Hebrew.
static ComponentOrientation UNKNOWN Indicates that a component's orientation has not been set.
Method Summary
static ComponentOrientation getOrientation(Locale locale) Returns the orientation that is appropriate for the given locale.
static ComponentOrientation getOrientation(ResourceBundle bdl) Deprecated. As of J2SE 1.4, use getOrientation(java.util.Locale).
boolean isHorizontal() Are lines horizontal? This will return true for horizontal, left-to-right writing systems such as Roman.
boolean isLeftToRight() HorizontalLines: Do items run left-to-right? Vertical Lines: Do lines run left-to-right? This will return true for horizontal, left-to-right writing systems such as Roman.
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object
clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, [wait](../../java/lang/Object.html#wait%28long, int%29)
Field Detail

LEFT_TO_RIGHT

public static final ComponentOrientation LEFT_TO_RIGHT

Items run left to right and lines flow top to bottom Examples: English, French.


RIGHT_TO_LEFT

public static final ComponentOrientation RIGHT_TO_LEFT

Items run right to left and lines flow top to bottom Examples: Arabic, Hebrew.


UNKNOWN

public static final ComponentOrientation UNKNOWN

Indicates that a component's orientation has not been set. To preserve the behavior of existing applications, isLeftToRight will return true for this value.

Method Detail

isHorizontal

public boolean isHorizontal()

Are lines horizontal? This will return true for horizontal, left-to-right writing systems such as Roman.


isLeftToRight

public boolean isLeftToRight()

HorizontalLines: Do items run left-to-right?
Vertical Lines: Do lines run left-to-right?
This will return true for horizontal, left-to-right writing systems such as Roman.


getOrientation

public static ComponentOrientation getOrientation(Locale locale)

Returns the orientation that is appropriate for the given locale.

Parameters:

locale - the specified locale


getOrientation

@Deprecated public static ComponentOrientation getOrientation(ResourceBundle bdl)

Deprecated. As of J2SE 1.4, use getOrientation(java.util.Locale).

Returns the orientation appropriate for the given ResourceBundle's localization. Three approaches are tried, in the following order:

  1. Retrieve a ComponentOrientation object from the ResourceBundle using the string "Orientation" as the key.
  2. Use the ResourceBundle.getLocale to determine the bundle's locale, then return the orientation for that locale.
  3. Return the default locale's orientation.


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For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Developer Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.

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