The Java Tutorials have been written for JDK 8. Examples and practices described in this page don't take advantage of improvements introduced in later releases and might use technology no longer available.
See Java Language Changes for a summary of updated language features in Java SE 9 and subsequent releases.
See JDK Release Notes for information about new features, enhancements, and removed or deprecated options for all JDK releases.
Service providers for internationalization enable the plug-in of locale-dependent data and services. Because locale-dependent data and services can be plugged-in, third parties are able to provide implementations of most locale-sensitive classes in the java.text
and java.util
packages.
A service is a set of programming interfaces and classes that provide access to a specific application's functionality or feature. A service provider interface (SPI) is the set of public interfaces and abstract classes that a service defines. A service provider implements the SPI. Service providers enable you to create extensible applications, which you can extend without modifying its original code base. You can enhance their functionality with new plug-ins or modules. For more information about service providers and extensible applications, see Creating Extensible Applications.
You can use service providers for internationalization to provide custom implementations of the following locale-sensitive classes:
BreakIterator
objectsCollator
objectsLocale
classDateFormat
objectsDateFormatSymbols
objectsNumberFormat
objectsDecimalFormatSymbols
objectsThe corresponding SPIs are contained both in java.text.spi
and in java.util.spi
packages:
java.util.spi |
java.text.spi |
For example, if you want to provide a NumberFormat
object for a new locale, implement the java.text.spi.NumberFormatProvider
class and implement these methods:
getCurrencyInstance(Locale locale)
getIntegerInstance(Locale locale)
getNumberInstance(Locale locale)
getPercentInstance(Locale locale)
Locale loc = new Locale("da", "DK"); NumberFormat nf = NumberFormatProvider.getNumberInstance(loc);
These methods first check whether the Java runtime environment supports the requested locale; if so, the methods use that support. Otherwise, the methods invoke the getAvailableLocales
methods of installed providers for the appropriate interface to find a provider that supports the requested locale.
For an in-depth example of how to use service providers for internationalization, see
Installing a Custom Resource Bundle as an Extension. This section shows you how to implement the
ResourceBundleControlProvider
interface, which enables you to use any custom ResourceBundle.Control
classes without any additional changes to the source code of your application.