public final class StringContent extends Object implements AbstractDocument.Content, Serializable
It is generally recommended that the gap buffer or piece table implementations be used instead. This buffer does not scale up to large sizes.
Warning:
Serialized objects of this class will not be compatible with
future Swing releases. The current serialization support is
appropriate for short term storage or RMI between applications running
the same version of Swing. As of 1.4, support for long term storage
of all JavaBeans™
has been added to the java.beans
package.
Please see XMLEncoder
.
Constructor and Description |
---|
StringContent()
Creates a new StringContent object.
|
StringContent(int initialLength)
Creates a new StringContent object, with the initial
size specified.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
Position |
createPosition(int offset)
Creates a position within the content that will
track change as the content is mutated.
|
void |
getChars(int where,
int len,
Segment chars)
Retrieves a portion of the content.
|
protected Vector |
getPositionsInRange(Vector v,
int offset,
int length)
Returns a Vector containing instances of UndoPosRef for the
Positions in the range
offset to offset + length . |
String |
getString(int where,
int len)
Retrieves a portion of the content.
|
UndoableEdit |
insertString(int where,
String str)
Inserts a string into the content.
|
int |
length()
Returns the length of the content.
|
UndoableEdit |
remove(int where,
int nitems)
Removes part of the content.
|
protected void |
updateUndoPositions(Vector positions)
Resets the location for all the UndoPosRef instances
in
positions . |
public StringContent()
public StringContent(int initialLength)
initialLength
- the initial sizepublic int length()
length
in interface AbstractDocument.Content
AbstractDocument.Content.length()
public UndoableEdit insertString(int where, String str) throws BadLocationException
insertString
in interface AbstractDocument.Content
where
- the starting position >= 0 && < length()str
- the non-null string to insertBadLocationException
- if the specified position is invalidAbstractDocument.Content.insertString(int, java.lang.String)
public UndoableEdit remove(int where, int nitems) throws BadLocationException
remove
in interface AbstractDocument.Content
where
- the starting position >= 0nitems
- the number of characters to remove >= 0BadLocationException
- if the specified position is invalidAbstractDocument.Content.remove(int, int)
public String getString(int where, int len) throws BadLocationException
getString
in interface AbstractDocument.Content
where
- the starting position >= 0len
- the length to retrieve >= 0BadLocationException
- if the specified position is invalidAbstractDocument.Content.getString(int, int)
public void getChars(int where, int len, Segment chars) throws BadLocationException
getChars
in interface AbstractDocument.Content
where
- the starting position >= 0len
- the number of characters to retrieve >= 0chars
- the Segment object to return the characters inBadLocationException
- if the specified position is invalidAbstractDocument.Content.getChars(int, int, javax.swing.text.Segment)
public Position createPosition(int offset) throws BadLocationException
createPosition
in interface AbstractDocument.Content
offset
- the offset to create a position for >= 0BadLocationException
- if the specified position is invalidprotected Vector getPositionsInRange(Vector v, int offset, int length)
offset
to offset
+ length
.
If v
is not null the matching Positions are placed in
there. The vector with the resulting Positions are returned.
This is meant for internal usage, and is generally not of interest to subclasses.
v
- the Vector to use, with a new one created on nulloffset
- the starting offset >= 0length
- the length >= 0protected void updateUndoPositions(Vector positions)
positions
.
This is meant for internal usage, and is generally not of interest to subclasses.
positions
- the positions of the instances Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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