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  1. /*
  2.  * Copyright (c) 1996, 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  3.  * ORACLE PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms.
  4.  *
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  12.  *
  13.  *
  14.  *
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  19.  *
  20.  *
  21.  *
  22.  *
  23.  *
  24.  */
  25.  
  26. /*
  27.  * (C) Copyright Taligent, Inc. 1996, 1997 - All Rights Reserved
  28.  * (C) Copyright IBM Corp. 1996 - 1998 - All Rights Reserved
  29.  *
  30.  * The original version of this source code and documentation
  31.  * is copyrighted and owned by Taligent, Inc., a wholly-owned
  32.  * subsidiary of IBM. These materials are provided under terms
  33.  * of a License Agreement between Taligent and Sun. This technology
  34.  * is protected by multiple US and International patents.
  35.  *
  36.  * This notice and attribution to Taligent may not be removed.
  37.  * Taligent is a registered trademark of Taligent, Inc.
  38.  *
  39.  */
  40.  
  41. package java.util;
  42.  
  43. import java.io.IOException;
  44. import java.io.ObjectInputStream;
  45. import java.io.ObjectOutputStream;
  46. import java.io.ObjectStreamField;
  47. import java.io.Serializable;
  48. import java.security.AccessController;
  49. import java.text.MessageFormat;
  50. import java.util.spi.LocaleNameProvider;
  51.  
  52. import sun.security.action.GetPropertyAction;
  53. import sun.util.locale.BaseLocale;
  54. import sun.util.locale.InternalLocaleBuilder;
  55. import sun.util.locale.LanguageTag;
  56. import sun.util.locale.LocaleExtensions;
  57. import sun.util.locale.LocaleMatcher;
  58. import sun.util.locale.LocaleObjectCache;
  59. import sun.util.locale.LocaleSyntaxException;
  60. import sun.util.locale.LocaleUtils;
  61. import sun.util.locale.ParseStatus;
  62. import sun.util.locale.provider.LocaleProviderAdapter;
  63. import sun.util.locale.provider.LocaleResources;
  64. import sun.util.locale.provider.LocaleServiceProviderPool;
  65. import sun.util.locale.provider.ResourceBundleBasedAdapter;
  66.  
  67. /**
  68.  * A <code>Locale</code> object represents a specific geographical, political,
  69.  * or cultural region. An operation that requires a <code>Locale</code> to perform
  70.  * its task is called <em>locale-sensitive</em> and uses the <code>Locale</code>
  71.  * to tailor information for the user. For example, displaying a number
  72.  * is a locale-sensitive operation&mdash; the number should be formatted
  73.  * according to the customs and conventions of the user's native country,
  74.  * region, or culture.
  75.  *
  76.  * <p> The {@code Locale} class implements IETF BCP 47 which is composed of
  77.  * <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647">RFC 4647 "Matching of Language
  78.  * Tags"</a> and <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5646">RFC 5646 "Tags
  79.  * for Identifying Languages"</a> with support for the LDML (UTS#35, "Unicode
  80.  * Locale Data Markup Language") BCP 47-compatible extensions for locale data
  81.  * exchange.
  82.  *
  83.  * <p> A <code>Locale</code> object logically consists of the fields
  84.  * described below.
  85.  *
  86.  * <dl>
  87.  *   <dt><a name="def_language"><b>language</b></a></dt>
  88.  *
  89.  *   <dd>ISO 639 alpha-2 or alpha-3 language code, or registered
  90.  *   language subtags up to 8 alpha letters (for future enhancements).
  91.  *   When a language has both an alpha-2 code and an alpha-3 code, the
  92.  *   alpha-2 code must be used.  You can find a full list of valid
  93.  *   language codes in the IANA Language Subtag Registry (search for
  94.  *   "Type: language").  The language field is case insensitive, but
  95.  *   <code>Locale</code> always canonicalizes to lower case.</dd>
  96.  *
  97.  *   <dd>Well-formed language values have the form
  98.  *   <code>[a-zA-Z]{2,8}</code>.  Note that this is not the the full
  99.  *   BCP47 language production, since it excludes extlang.  They are
  100.  *   not needed since modern three-letter language codes replace
  101.  *   them.</dd>
  102.  *
  103.  *   <dd>Example: "en" (English), "ja" (Japanese), "kok" (Konkani)</dd>
  104.  *
  105.  *   <dt><a name="def_script"><b>script</b></a></dt>
  106.  *
  107.  *   <dd>ISO 15924 alpha-4 script code.  You can find a full list of
  108.  *   valid script codes in the IANA Language Subtag Registry (search
  109.  *   for "Type: script").  The script field is case insensitive, but
  110.  *   <code>Locale</code> always canonicalizes to title case (the first
  111.  *   letter is upper case and the rest of the letters are lower
  112.  *   case).</dd>
  113.  *
  114.  *   <dd>Well-formed script values have the form
  115.  *   <code>[a-zA-Z]{4}</code></dd>
  116.  *
  117.  *   <dd>Example: "Latn" (Latin), "Cyrl" (Cyrillic)</dd>
  118.  *
  119.  *   <dt><a name="def_region"><b>country (region)</b></a></dt>
  120.  *
  121.  *   <dd>ISO 3166 alpha-2 country code or UN M.49 numeric-3 area code.
  122.  *   You can find a full list of valid country and region codes in the
  123.  *   IANA Language Subtag Registry (search for "Type: region").  The
  124.  *   country (region) field is case insensitive, but
  125.  *   <code>Locale</code> always canonicalizes to upper case.</dd>
  126.  *
  127.  *   <dd>Well-formed country/region values have
  128.  *   the form <code>[a-zA-Z]{2} | [0-9]{3}</code></dd>
  129.  *
  130.  *   <dd>Example: "US" (United States), "FR" (France), "029"
  131.  *   (Caribbean)</dd>
  132.  *
  133.  *   <dt><a name="def_variant"><b>variant</b></a></dt>
  134.  *
  135.  *   <dd>Any arbitrary value used to indicate a variation of a
  136.  *   <code>Locale</code>.  Where there are two or more variant values
  137.  *   each indicating its own semantics, these values should be ordered
  138.  *   by importance, with most important first, separated by
  139.  *   underscore('_').  The variant field is case sensitive.</dd>
  140.  *
  141.  *   <dd>Note: IETF BCP 47 places syntactic restrictions on variant
  142.  *   subtags.  Also BCP 47 subtags are strictly used to indicate
  143.  *   additional variations that define a language or its dialects that
  144.  *   are not covered by any combinations of language, script and
  145.  *   region subtags.  You can find a full list of valid variant codes
  146.  *   in the IANA Language Subtag Registry (search for "Type: variant").
  147.  *
  148.  *   <p>However, the variant field in <code>Locale</code> has
  149.  *   historically been used for any kind of variation, not just
  150.  *   language variations.  For example, some supported variants
  151.  *   available in Java SE Runtime Environments indicate alternative
  152.  *   cultural behaviors such as calendar type or number script.  In
  153.  *   BCP 47 this kind of information, which does not identify the
  154.  *   language, is supported by extension subtags or private use
  155.  *   subtags.</dd>
  156.  *
  157.  *   <dd>Well-formed variant values have the form <code>SUBTAG
  158.  *   (('_'|'-') SUBTAG)*</code> where <code>SUBTAG =
  159.  *   [0-9][0-9a-zA-Z]{3} | [0-9a-zA-Z]{5,8}</code>. (Note: BCP 47 only
  160.  *   uses hyphen ('-') as a delimiter, this is more lenient).</dd>
  161.  *
  162.  *   <dd>Example: "polyton" (Polytonic Greek), "POSIX"</dd>
  163.  *
  164.  *   <dt><a name="def_extensions"><b>extensions</b></a></dt>
  165.  *
  166.  *   <dd>A map from single character keys to string values, indicating
  167.  *   extensions apart from language identification.  The extensions in
  168.  *   <code>Locale</code> implement the semantics and syntax of BCP 47
  169.  *   extension subtags and private use subtags. The extensions are
  170.  *   case insensitive, but <code>Locale</code> canonicalizes all
  171.  *   extension keys and values to lower case. Note that extensions
  172.  *   cannot have empty values.</dd>
  173.  *
  174.  *   <dd>Well-formed keys are single characters from the set
  175.  *   <code>[0-9a-zA-Z]</code>.  Well-formed values have the form
  176.  *   <code>SUBTAG ('-' SUBTAG)*</code> where for the key 'x'
  177.  *   <code>SUBTAG = [0-9a-zA-Z]{1,8}</code> and for other keys
  178.  *   <code>SUBTAG = [0-9a-zA-Z]{2,8}</code> (that is, 'x' allows
  179.  *   single-character subtags).</dd>
  180.  *
  181.  *   <dd>Example: key="u"/value="ca-japanese" (Japanese Calendar),
  182.  *   key="x"/value="java-1-7"</dd>
  183.  * </dl>
  184.  *
  185.  * <b>Note:</b> Although BCP 47 requires field values to be registered
  186.  * in the IANA Language Subtag Registry, the <code>Locale</code> class
  187.  * does not provide any validation features.  The <code>Builder</code>
  188.  * only checks if an individual field satisfies the syntactic
  189.  * requirement (is well-formed), but does not validate the value
  190.  * itself.  See {@link Builder} for details.
  191.  *
  192.  * <h3><a name="def_locale_extension">Unicode locale/language extension</a></h3>
  193.  *
  194.  * <p>UTS#35, "Unicode Locale Data Markup Language" defines optional
  195.  * attributes and keywords to override or refine the default behavior
  196.  * associated with a locale.  A keyword is represented by a pair of
  197.  * key and type.  For example, "nu-thai" indicates that Thai local
  198.  * digits (value:"thai") should be used for formatting numbers
  199.  * (key:"nu").
  200.  *
  201.  * <p>The keywords are mapped to a BCP 47 extension value using the
  202.  * extension key 'u' ({@link #UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION}).  The above
  203.  * example, "nu-thai", becomes the extension "u-nu-thai".code
  204.  *
  205.  * <p>Thus, when a <code>Locale</code> object contains Unicode locale
  206.  * attributes and keywords,
  207.  * <code>getExtension(UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION)</code> will return a
  208.  * String representing this information, for example, "nu-thai".  The
  209.  * <code>Locale</code> class also provides {@link
  210.  * #getUnicodeLocaleAttributes}, {@link #getUnicodeLocaleKeys}, and
  211.  * {@link #getUnicodeLocaleType} which allow you to access Unicode
  212.  * locale attributes and key/type pairs directly.  When represented as
  213.  * a string, the Unicode Locale Extension lists attributes
  214.  * alphabetically, followed by key/type sequences with keys listed
  215.  * alphabetically (the order of subtags comprising a key's type is
  216.  * fixed when the type is defined)
  217.  *
  218.  * <p>A well-formed locale key has the form
  219.  * <code>[0-9a-zA-Z]{2}</code>.  A well-formed locale type has the
  220.  * form <code>"" | [0-9a-zA-Z]{3,8} ('-' [0-9a-zA-Z]{3,8})*</code> (it
  221.  * can be empty, or a series of subtags 3-8 alphanums in length).  A
  222.  * well-formed locale attribute has the form
  223.  * <code>[0-9a-zA-Z]{3,8}</code> (it is a single subtag with the same
  224.  * form as a locale type subtag).
  225.  *
  226.  * <p>The Unicode locale extension specifies optional behavior in
  227.  * locale-sensitive services.  Although the LDML specification defines
  228.  * various keys and values, actual locale-sensitive service
  229.  * implementations in a Java Runtime Environment might not support any
  230.  * particular Unicode locale attributes or key/type pairs.
  231.  *
  232.  * <h4>Creating a Locale</h4>
  233.  *
  234.  * <p>There are several different ways to create a <code>Locale</code>
  235.  * object.
  236.  *
  237.  * <h5>Builder</h5>
  238.  *
  239.  * <p>Using {@link Builder} you can construct a <code>Locale</code> object
  240.  * that conforms to BCP 47 syntax.
  241.  *
  242.  * <h5>Constructors</h5>
  243.  *
  244.  * <p>The <code>Locale</code> class provides three constructors:
  245.  * <blockquote>
  246.  * <pre>
  247.  *     {@link #Locale(String language)}
  248.  *     {@link #Locale(String language, String country)}
  249.  *     {@link #Locale(String language, String country, String variant)}
  250.  * </pre>
  251.  * </blockquote>
  252.  * These constructors allow you to create a <code>Locale</code> object
  253.  * with language, country and variant, but you cannot specify
  254.  * script or extensions.
  255.  *
  256.  * <h5>Factory Methods</h5>
  257.  *
  258.  * <p>The method {@link #forLanguageTag} creates a <code>Locale</code>
  259.  * object for a well-formed BCP 47 language tag.
  260.  *
  261.  * <h5>Locale Constants</h5>
  262.  *
  263.  * <p>The <code>Locale</code> class provides a number of convenient constants
  264.  * that you can use to create <code>Locale</code> objects for commonly used
  265.  * locales. For example, the following creates a <code>Locale</code> object
  266.  * for the United States:
  267.  * <blockquote>
  268.  * <pre>
  269.  *     Locale.US
  270.  * </pre>
  271.  * </blockquote>
  272.  *
  273.  * <h4><a name="LocaleMatching">Locale Matching</a></h4>
  274.  *
  275.  * <p>If an application or a system is internationalized and provides localized
  276.  * resources for multiple locales, it sometimes needs to find one or more
  277.  * locales (or language tags) which meet each user's specific preferences. Note
  278.  * that a term "language tag" is used interchangeably with "locale" in this
  279.  * locale matching documentation.
  280.  *
  281.  * <p>In order to do matching a user's preferred locales to a set of language
  282.  * tags, <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647">RFC 4647 Matching of
  283.  * Language Tags</a> defines two mechanisms: filtering and lookup.
  284.  * <em>Filtering</em> is used to get all matching locales, whereas
  285.  * <em>lookup</em> is to choose the best matching locale.
  286.  * Matching is done case-insensitively. These matching mechanisms are described
  287.  * in the following sections.
  288.  *
  289.  * <p>A user's preference is called a <em>Language Priority List</em> and is
  290.  * expressed as a list of language ranges. There are syntactically two types of
  291.  * language ranges: basic and extended. See
  292.  * {@link Locale.LanguageRange Locale.LanguageRange} for details.
  293.  *
  294.  * <h5>Filtering</h5>
  295.  *
  296.  * <p>The filtering operation returns all matching language tags. It is defined
  297.  * in RFC 4647 as follows:
  298.  * "In filtering, each language range represents the least specific language
  299.  * tag (that is, the language tag with fewest number of subtags) that is an
  300.  * acceptable match. All of the language tags in the matching set of tags will
  301.  * have an equal or greater number of subtags than the language range. Every
  302.  * non-wildcard subtag in the language range will appear in every one of the
  303.  * matching language tags."
  304.  *
  305.  * <p>There are two types of filtering: filtering for basic language ranges
  306.  * (called "basic filtering") and filtering for extended language ranges
  307.  * (called "extended filtering"). They may return different results by what
  308.  * kind of language ranges are included in the given Language Priority List.
  309.  * {@link Locale.FilteringMode} is a parameter to specify how filtering should
  310.  * be done.
  311.  *
  312.  * <h5>Lookup</h5>
  313.  *
  314.  * <p>The lookup operation returns the best matching language tags. It is
  315.  * defined in RFC 4647 as follows:
  316.  * "By contrast with filtering, each language range represents the most
  317.  * specific tag that is an acceptable match.  The first matching tag found,
  318.  * according to the user's priority, is considered the closest match and is the
  319.  * item returned."
  320.  *
  321.  * <p>For example, if a Language Priority List consists of two language ranges,
  322.  * {@code "zh-Hant-TW"} and {@code "en-US"}, in prioritized order, lookup
  323.  * method progressively searches the language tags below in order to find the
  324.  * best matching language tag.
  325.  * <blockquote>
  326.  * <pre>
  327.  *    1. zh-Hant-TW
  328.  *    2. zh-Hant
  329.  *    3. zh
  330.  *    4. en-US
  331.  *    5. en
  332.  * </pre>
  333.  * </blockquote>
  334.  * If there is a language tag which matches completely to a language range
  335.  * above, the language tag is returned.
  336.  *
  337.  * <p>{@code "*"} is the special language range, and it is ignored in lookup.
  338.  *
  339.  * <p>If multiple language tags match as a result of the subtag {@code '*'}
  340.  * included in a language range, the first matching language tag returned by
  341.  * an {@link Iterator} over a {@link Collection} of language tags is treated as
  342.  * the best matching one.
  343.  *
  344.  * <h4>Use of Locale</h4>
  345.  *
  346.  * <p>Once you've created a <code>Locale</code> you can query it for information
  347.  * about itself. Use <code>getCountry</code> to get the country (or region)
  348.  * code and <code>getLanguage</code> to get the language code.
  349.  * You can use <code>getDisplayCountry</code> to get the
  350.  * name of the country suitable for displaying to the user. Similarly,
  351.  * you can use <code>getDisplayLanguage</code> to get the name of
  352.  * the language suitable for displaying to the user. Interestingly,
  353.  * the <code>getDisplayXXX</code> methods are themselves locale-sensitive
  354.  * and have two versions: one that uses the default
  355.  * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale and one
  356.  * that uses the locale specified as an argument.
  357.  *
  358.  * <p>The Java Platform provides a number of classes that perform locale-sensitive
  359.  * operations. For example, the <code>NumberFormat</code> class formats
  360.  * numbers, currency, and percentages in a locale-sensitive manner. Classes
  361.  * such as <code>NumberFormat</code> have several convenience methods
  362.  * for creating a default object of that type. For example, the
  363.  * <code>NumberFormat</code> class provides these three convenience methods
  364.  * for creating a default <code>NumberFormat</code> object:
  365.  * <blockquote>
  366.  * <pre>
  367.  *     NumberFormat.getInstance()
  368.  *     NumberFormat.getCurrencyInstance()
  369.  *     NumberFormat.getPercentInstance()
  370.  * </pre>
  371.  * </blockquote>
  372.  * Each of these methods has two variants; one with an explicit locale
  373.  * and one without; the latter uses the default
  374.  * {@link Locale.Category#FORMAT FORMAT} locale:
  375.  * <blockquote>
  376.  * <pre>
  377.  *     NumberFormat.getInstance(myLocale)
  378.  *     NumberFormat.getCurrencyInstance(myLocale)
  379.  *     NumberFormat.getPercentInstance(myLocale)
  380.  * </pre>
  381.  * </blockquote>
  382.  * A <code>Locale</code> is the mechanism for identifying the kind of object
  383.  * (<code>NumberFormat</code>) that you would like to get. The locale is
  384.  * <STRONG>just</STRONG> a mechanism for identifying objects,
  385.  * <STRONG>not</STRONG> a container for the objects themselves.
  386.  *
  387.  * <h4>Compatibility</h4>
  388.  *
  389.  * <p>In order to maintain compatibility with existing usage, Locale's
  390.  * constructors retain their behavior prior to the Java Runtime
  391.  * Environment version 1.7.  The same is largely true for the
  392.  * <code>toString</code> method. Thus Locale objects can continue to
  393.  * be used as they were. In particular, clients who parse the output
  394.  * of toString into language, country, and variant fields can continue
  395.  * to do so (although this is strongly discouraged), although the
  396.  * variant field will have additional information in it if script or
  397.  * extensions are present.
  398.  *
  399.  * <p>In addition, BCP 47 imposes syntax restrictions that are not
  400.  * imposed by Locale's constructors. This means that conversions
  401.  * between some Locales and BCP 47 language tags cannot be made without
  402.  * losing information. Thus <code>toLanguageTag</code> cannot
  403.  * represent the state of locales whose language, country, or variant
  404.  * do not conform to BCP 47.
  405.  *
  406.  * <p>Because of these issues, it is recommended that clients migrate
  407.  * away from constructing non-conforming locales and use the
  408.  * <code>forLanguageTag</code> and <code>Locale.Builder</code> APIs instead.
  409.  * Clients desiring a string representation of the complete locale can
  410.  * then always rely on <code>toLanguageTag</code> for this purpose.
  411.  *
  412.  * <h5><a name="special_cases_constructor">Special cases</a></h5>
  413.  *
  414.  * <p>For compatibility reasons, two
  415.  * non-conforming locales are treated as special cases.  These are
  416.  * <b><tt>ja_JP_JP</tt></b> and <b><tt>th_TH_TH</tt></b>. These are ill-formed
  417.  * in BCP 47 since the variants are too short. To ease migration to BCP 47,
  418.  * these are treated specially during construction.  These two cases (and only
  419.  * these) cause a constructor to generate an extension, all other values behave
  420.  * exactly as they did prior to Java 7.
  421.  *
  422.  * <p>Java has used <tt>ja_JP_JP</tt> to represent Japanese as used in
  423.  * Japan together with the Japanese Imperial calendar. This is now
  424.  * representable using a Unicode locale extension, by specifying the
  425.  * Unicode locale key <tt>ca</tt> (for "calendar") and type
  426.  * <tt>japanese</tt>. When the Locale constructor is called with the
  427.  * arguments "ja", "JP", "JP", the extension "u-ca-japanese" is
  428.  * automatically added.
  429.  *
  430.  * <p>Java has used <tt>th_TH_TH</tt> to represent Thai as used in
  431.  * Thailand together with Thai digits. This is also now representable using
  432.  * a Unicode locale extension, by specifying the Unicode locale key
  433.  * <tt>nu</tt> (for "number") and value <tt>thai</tt>. When the Locale
  434.  * constructor is called with the arguments "th", "TH", "TH", the
  435.  * extension "u-nu-thai" is automatically added.
  436.  *
  437.  * <h5>Serialization</h5>
  438.  *
  439.  * <p>During serialization, writeObject writes all fields to the output
  440.  * stream, including extensions.
  441.  *
  442.  * <p>During deserialization, readResolve adds extensions as described
  443.  * in <a href="#special_cases_constructor">Special Cases</a>, only
  444.  * for the two cases th_TH_TH and ja_JP_JP.
  445.  *
  446.  * <h5>Legacy language codes</h5>
  447.  *
  448.  * <p>Locale's constructor has always converted three language codes to
  449.  * their earlier, obsoleted forms: <tt>he</tt> maps to <tt>iw</tt>,
  450.  * <tt>yi</tt> maps to <tt>ji</tt>, and <tt>id</tt> maps to
  451.  * <tt>in</tt>.  This continues to be the case, in order to not break
  452.  * backwards compatibility.
  453.  *
  454.  * <p>The APIs added in 1.7 map between the old and new language codes,
  455.  * maintaining the old codes internal to Locale (so that
  456.  * <code>getLanguage</code> and <code>toString</code> reflect the old
  457.  * code), but using the new codes in the BCP 47 language tag APIs (so
  458.  * that <code>toLanguageTag</code> reflects the new one). This
  459.  * preserves the equivalence between Locales no matter which code or
  460.  * API is used to construct them. Java's default resource bundle
  461.  * lookup mechanism also implements this mapping, so that resources
  462.  * can be named using either convention, see {@link ResourceBundle.Control}.
  463.  *
  464.  * <h5>Three-letter language/country(region) codes</h5>
  465.  *
  466.  * <p>The Locale constructors have always specified that the language
  467.  * and the country param be two characters in length, although in
  468.  * practice they have accepted any length.  The specification has now
  469.  * been relaxed to allow language codes of two to eight characters and
  470.  * country (region) codes of two to three characters, and in
  471.  * particular, three-letter language codes and three-digit region
  472.  * codes as specified in the IANA Language Subtag Registry.  For
  473.  * compatibility, the implementation still does not impose a length
  474.  * constraint.
  475.  *
  476.  * @see Builder
  477.  * @see ResourceBundle
  478.  * @see java.text.Format
  479.  * @see java.text.NumberFormat
  480.  * @see java.text.Collator
  481.  * @author Mark Davis
  482.  * @since 1.1
  483.  */
  484. public final class Locale implements Cloneable, Serializable {
  485.  
  486.     static private final  Cache LOCALECACHE = new Cache();
  487.  
  488.     /** Useful constant for language.
  489.      */
  490.     static public final Locale ENGLISH = createConstant("en", "");
  491.  
  492.     /** Useful constant for language.
  493.      */
  494.     static public final Locale FRENCH = createConstant("fr", "");
  495.  
  496.     /** Useful constant for language.
  497.      */
  498.     static public final Locale GERMAN = createConstant("de", "");
  499.  
  500.     /** Useful constant for language.
  501.      */
  502.     static public final Locale ITALIAN = createConstant("it", "");
  503.  
  504.     /** Useful constant for language.
  505.      */
  506.     static public final Locale JAPANESE = createConstant("ja", "");
  507.  
  508.     /** Useful constant for language.
  509.      */
  510.     static public final Locale KOREAN = createConstant("ko", "");
  511.  
  512.     /** Useful constant for language.
  513.      */
  514.     static public final Locale CHINESE = createConstant("zh", "");
  515.  
  516.     /** Useful constant for language.
  517.      */
  518.     static public final Locale SIMPLIFIED_CHINESE = createConstant("zh", "CN");
  519.  
  520.     /** Useful constant for language.
  521.      */
  522.     static public final Locale TRADITIONAL_CHINESE = createConstant("zh", "TW");
  523.  
  524.     /** Useful constant for country.
  525.      */
  526.     static public final Locale FRANCE = createConstant("fr", "FR");
  527.  
  528.     /** Useful constant for country.
  529.      */
  530.     static public final Locale GERMANY = createConstant("de", "DE");
  531.  
  532.     /** Useful constant for country.
  533.      */
  534.     static public final Locale ITALY = createConstant("it", "IT");
  535.  
  536.     /** Useful constant for country.
  537.      */
  538.     static public final Locale JAPAN = createConstant("ja", "JP");
  539.  
  540.     /** Useful constant for country.
  541.      */
  542.     static public final Locale KOREA = createConstant("ko", "KR");
  543.  
  544.     /** Useful constant for country.
  545.      */
  546.     static public final Locale CHINA = SIMPLIFIED_CHINESE;
  547.  
  548.     /** Useful constant for country.
  549.      */
  550.     static public final Locale PRC = SIMPLIFIED_CHINESE;
  551.  
  552.     /** Useful constant for country.
  553.      */
  554.     static public final Locale TAIWAN = TRADITIONAL_CHINESE;
  555.  
  556.     /** Useful constant for country.
  557.      */
  558.     static public final Locale UK = createConstant("en", "GB");
  559.  
  560.     /** Useful constant for country.
  561.      */
  562.     static public final Locale US = createConstant("en", "US");
  563.  
  564.     /** Useful constant for country.
  565.      */
  566.     static public final Locale CANADA = createConstant("en", "CA");
  567.  
  568.     /** Useful constant for country.
  569.      */
  570.     static public final Locale CANADA_FRENCH = createConstant("fr", "CA");
  571.  
  572.     /**
  573.      * Useful constant for the root locale.  The root locale is the locale whose
  574.      * language, country, and variant are empty ("") strings.  This is regarded
  575.      * as the base locale of all locales, and is used as the language/country
  576.      * neutral locale for the locale sensitive operations.
  577.      *
  578.      * @since 1.6
  579.      */
  580.     static public final Locale ROOT = createConstant("", "");
  581.  
  582.     /**
  583.      * The key for the private use extension ('x').
  584.      *
  585.      * @see #getExtension(char)
  586.      * @see Builder#setExtension(char, String)
  587.      * @since 1.7
  588.      */
  589.     static public final char PRIVATE_USE_EXTENSION = 'x';
  590.  
  591.     /**
  592.      * The key for Unicode locale extension ('u').
  593.      *
  594.      * @see #getExtension(char)
  595.      * @see Builder#setExtension(char, String)
  596.      * @since 1.7
  597.      */
  598.     static public final char UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION = 'u';
  599.  
  600.     /** serialization ID
  601.      */
  602.     static final long serialVersionUID = 9149081749638150636L;
  603.  
  604.     /**
  605.      * Display types for retrieving localized names from the name providers.
  606.      */
  607.     private static final int DISPLAY_LANGUAGE = 0;
  608.     private static final int DISPLAY_COUNTRY  = 1;
  609.     private static final int DISPLAY_VARIANT  = 2;
  610.     private static final int DISPLAY_SCRIPT   = 3;
  611.  
  612.     /**
  613.      * Private constructor used by getInstance method
  614.      */
  615.     private Locale(BaseLocale baseLocale, LocaleExtensions extensions) {
  616.         this.baseLocale = baseLocale;
  617.         this.localeExtensions = extensions;
  618.     }
  619.  
  620.     /**
  621.      * Construct a locale from language, country and variant.
  622.      * This constructor normalizes the language value to lowercase and
  623.      * the country value to uppercase.
  624.      * <p>
  625.      * <b>Note:</b>
  626.      * <ul>
  627.      * <li>ISO 639 is not a stable standard; some of the language codes it defines
  628.      * (specifically "iw", "ji", and "in") have changed.  This constructor accepts both the
  629.      * old codes ("iw", "ji", and "in") and the new codes ("he", "yi", and "id"), but all other
  630.      * API on Locale will return only the OLD codes.
  631.      * <li>For backward compatibility reasons, this constructor does not make
  632.      * any syntactic checks on the input.
  633.      * <li>The two cases ("ja", "JP", "JP") and ("th", "TH", "TH") are handled specially,
  634.      * see <a href="#special_cases_constructor">Special Cases</a> for more information.
  635.      * </ul>
  636.      *
  637.      * @param language An ISO 639 alpha-2 or alpha-3 language code, or a language subtag
  638.      * up to 8 characters in length.  See the <code>Locale</code> class description about
  639.      * valid language values.
  640.      * @param country An ISO 3166 alpha-2 country code or a UN M.49 numeric-3 area code.
  641.      * See the <code>Locale</code> class description about valid country values.
  642.      * @param variant Any arbitrary value used to indicate a variation of a <code>Locale</code>.
  643.      * See the <code>Locale</code> class description for the details.
  644.      * @exception NullPointerException thrown if any argument is null.
  645.      */
  646.     public Locale(String language, String country, String variant) {
  647.         if (language== null || country == null || variant == null) {
  648.             throw new NullPointerException();
  649.         }
  650.         baseLocale = BaseLocale.getInstance(convertOldISOCodes(language), "", country, variant);
  651.         localeExtensions = getCompatibilityExtensions(language, "", country, variant);
  652.     }
  653.  
  654.     /**
  655.      * Construct a locale from language and country.
  656.      * This constructor normalizes the language value to lowercase and
  657.      * the country value to uppercase.
  658.      * <p>
  659.      * <b>Note:</b>
  660.      * <ul>
  661.      * <li>ISO 639 is not a stable standard; some of the language codes it defines
  662.      * (specifically "iw", "ji", and "in") have changed.  This constructor accepts both the
  663.      * old codes ("iw", "ji", and "in") and the new codes ("he", "yi", and "id"), but all other
  664.      * API on Locale will return only the OLD codes.
  665.      * <li>For backward compatibility reasons, this constructor does not make
  666.      * any syntactic checks on the input.
  667.      * </ul>
  668.      *
  669.      * @param language An ISO 639 alpha-2 or alpha-3 language code, or a language subtag
  670.      * up to 8 characters in length.  See the <code>Locale</code> class description about
  671.      * valid language values.
  672.      * @param country An ISO 3166 alpha-2 country code or a UN M.49 numeric-3 area code.
  673.      * See the <code>Locale</code> class description about valid country values.
  674.      * @exception NullPointerException thrown if either argument is null.
  675.      */
  676.     public Locale(String language, String country) {
  677.         this(language, country, "");
  678.     }
  679.  
  680.     /**
  681.      * Construct a locale from a language code.
  682.      * This constructor normalizes the language value to lowercase.
  683.      * <p>
  684.      * <b>Note:</b>
  685.      * <ul>
  686.      * <li>ISO 639 is not a stable standard; some of the language codes it defines
  687.      * (specifically "iw", "ji", and "in") have changed.  This constructor accepts both the
  688.      * old codes ("iw", "ji", and "in") and the new codes ("he", "yi", and "id"), but all other
  689.      * API on Locale will return only the OLD codes.
  690.      * <li>For backward compatibility reasons, this constructor does not make
  691.      * any syntactic checks on the input.
  692.      * </ul>
  693.      *
  694.      * @param language An ISO 639 alpha-2 or alpha-3 language code, or a language subtag
  695.      * up to 8 characters in length.  See the <code>Locale</code> class description about
  696.      * valid language values.
  697.      * @exception NullPointerException thrown if argument is null.
  698.      * @since 1.4
  699.      */
  700.     public Locale(String language) {
  701.         this(language, "", "");
  702.     }
  703.  
  704.     /**
  705.      * This method must be called only for creating the Locale.*
  706.      * constants due to making shortcuts.
  707.      */
  708.     private static Locale createConstant(String lang, String country) {
  709.         BaseLocale base = BaseLocale.createInstance(lang, country);
  710.         return getInstance(base, null);
  711.     }
  712.  
  713.     /**
  714.      * Returns a <code>Locale</code> constructed from the given
  715.      * <code>language</code>, <code>country</code> and
  716.      * <code>variant</code>. If the same <code>Locale</code> instance
  717.      * is available in the cache, then that instance is
  718.      * returned. Otherwise, a new <code>Locale</code> instance is
  719.      * created and cached.
  720.      *
  721.      * @param language lowercase 2 to 8 language code.
  722.      * @param country uppercase two-letter ISO-3166 code and numric-3 UN M.49 area code.
  723.      * @param variant vendor and browser specific code. See class description.
  724.      * @return the <code>Locale</code> instance requested
  725.      * @exception NullPointerException if any argument is null.
  726.      */
  727.     static Locale getInstance(String language, String country, String variant) {
  728.         return getInstance(language, "", country, variant, null);
  729.     }
  730.  
  731.     static Locale getInstance(String language, String script, String country,
  732.                                       String variant, LocaleExtensions extensions) {
  733.         if (language== null || script == null || country == null || variant == null) {
  734.             throw new NullPointerException();
  735.         }
  736.  
  737.         if (extensions == null) {
  738.             extensions = getCompatibilityExtensions(language, script, country, variant);
  739.         }
  740.  
  741.         BaseLocale baseloc = BaseLocale.getInstance(language, script, country, variant);
  742.         return getInstance(baseloc, extensions);
  743.     }
  744.  
  745.     static Locale getInstance(BaseLocale baseloc, LocaleExtensions extensions) {
  746.         LocaleKey key = new LocaleKey(baseloc, extensions);
  747.         return LOCALECACHE.get(key);
  748.     }
  749.  
  750.     private static class Cache extends LocaleObjectCache<LocaleKey, Locale> {
  751.         private Cache() {
  752.         }
  753.  
  754.         @Override
  755.         protected Locale createObject(LocaleKey key) {
  756.             return new Locale(key.base, key.exts);
  757.         }
  758.     }
  759.  
  760.     private static final class LocaleKey {
  761.         private final BaseLocale base;
  762.         private final LocaleExtensions exts;
  763.         private final int hash;
  764.  
  765.         private LocaleKey(BaseLocale baseLocale, LocaleExtensions extensions) {
  766.             base = baseLocale;
  767.             exts = extensions;
  768.  
  769.             // Calculate the hash value here because it's always used.
  770.             int h = base.hashCode();
  771.             if (exts != null) {
  772.                 h ^= exts.hashCode();
  773.             }
  774.             hash = h;
  775.         }
  776.  
  777.         @Override
  778.         public boolean equals(Object obj) {
  779.             if (this == obj) {
  780.                 return true;
  781.             }
  782.             if (!(obj instanceof LocaleKey)) {
  783.                 return false;
  784.             }
  785.             LocaleKey other = (LocaleKey)obj;
  786.             if (hash != other.hash || !base.equals(other.base)) {
  787.                 return false;
  788.             }
  789.             if (exts == null) {
  790.                 return other.exts == null;
  791.             }
  792.             return exts.equals(other.exts);
  793.         }
  794.  
  795.         @Override
  796.         public int hashCode() {
  797.             return hash;
  798.         }
  799.     }
  800.  
  801.     /**
  802.      * Gets the current value of the default locale for this instance
  803.      * of the Java Virtual Machine.
  804.      * <p>
  805.      * The Java Virtual Machine sets the default locale during startup
  806.      * based on the host environment. It is used by many locale-sensitive
  807.      * methods if no locale is explicitly specified.
  808.      * It can be changed using the
  809.      * {@link #setDefault(java.util.Locale) setDefault} method.
  810.      *
  811.      * @return the default locale for this instance of the Java Virtual Machine
  812.      */
  813.     public static Locale getDefault() {
  814.         // do not synchronize this method - see 4071298
  815.         return defaultLocale;
  816.     }
  817.  
  818.     /**
  819.      * Gets the current value of the default locale for the specified Category
  820.      * for this instance of the Java Virtual Machine.
  821.      * <p>
  822.      * The Java Virtual Machine sets the default locale during startup based
  823.      * on the host environment. It is used by many locale-sensitive methods
  824.      * if no locale is explicitly specified. It can be changed using the
  825.      * setDefault(Locale.Category, Locale) method.
  826.      *
  827.      * @param category - the specified category to get the default locale
  828.      * @throws NullPointerException - if category is null
  829.      * @return the default locale for the specified Category for this instance
  830.      *     of the Java Virtual Machine
  831.      * @see #setDefault(Locale.Category, Locale)
  832.      * @since 1.7
  833.      */
  834.     public static Locale getDefault(Locale.Category category) {
  835.         // do not synchronize this method - see 4071298
  836.         switch (category) {
  837.         case DISPLAY:
  838.             if (defaultDisplayLocale == null) {
  839.                 synchronized(Locale.class) {
  840.                     if (defaultDisplayLocale == null) {
  841.                         defaultDisplayLocale = initDefault(category);
  842.                     }
  843.                 }
  844.             }
  845.             return defaultDisplayLocale;
  846.         case FORMAT:
  847.             if (defaultFormatLocale == null) {
  848.                 synchronized(Locale.class) {
  849.                     if (defaultFormatLocale == null) {
  850.                         defaultFormatLocale = initDefault(category);
  851.                     }
  852.                 }
  853.             }
  854.             return defaultFormatLocale;
  855.         default:
  856.             assert false: "Unknown Category";
  857.         }
  858.         return getDefault();
  859.     }
  860.  
  861.     private static Locale initDefault() {
  862.         String language, region, script, country, variant;
  863.         language = AccessController.doPrivileged(
  864.             new GetPropertyAction("user.language", "en"));
  865.         // for compatibility, check for old user.region property
  866.         region = AccessController.doPrivileged(
  867.             new GetPropertyAction("user.region"));
  868.         if (region != null) {
  869.             // region can be of form country, country_variant, or _variant
  870.             int i = region.indexOf('_');
  871.             if (i >= 0) {
  872.                 country = region.substring(0, i);
  873.                 variant = region.substring(i + 1);
  874.             } else {
  875.                 country = region;
  876.                 variant = "";
  877.             }
  878.             script = "";
  879.         } else {
  880.             script = AccessController.doPrivileged(
  881.                 new GetPropertyAction("user.script", ""));
  882.             country = AccessController.doPrivileged(
  883.                 new GetPropertyAction("user.country", ""));
  884.             variant = AccessController.doPrivileged(
  885.                 new GetPropertyAction("user.variant", ""));
  886.         }
  887.  
  888.         return getInstance(language, script, country, variant, null);
  889.     }
  890.  
  891.     private static Locale initDefault(Locale.Category category) {
  892.         return getInstance(
  893.             AccessController.doPrivileged(
  894.                 new GetPropertyAction(category.languageKey, defaultLocale.getLanguage())),
  895.             AccessController.doPrivileged(
  896.                 new GetPropertyAction(category.scriptKey, defaultLocale.getScript())),
  897.             AccessController.doPrivileged(
  898.                 new GetPropertyAction(category.countryKey, defaultLocale.getCountry())),
  899.             AccessController.doPrivileged(
  900.                 new GetPropertyAction(category.variantKey, defaultLocale.getVariant())),
  901.             null);
  902.     }
  903.  
  904.     /**
  905.      * Sets the default locale for this instance of the Java Virtual Machine.
  906.      * This does not affect the host locale.
  907.      * <p>
  908.      * If there is a security manager, its <code>checkPermission</code>
  909.      * method is called with a <code>PropertyPermission("user.language", "write")</code>
  910.      * permission before the default locale is changed.
  911.      * <p>
  912.      * The Java Virtual Machine sets the default locale during startup
  913.      * based on the host environment. It is used by many locale-sensitive
  914.      * methods if no locale is explicitly specified.
  915.      * <p>
  916.      * Since changing the default locale may affect many different areas
  917.      * of functionality, this method should only be used if the caller
  918.      * is prepared to reinitialize locale-sensitive code running
  919.      * within the same Java Virtual Machine.
  920.      * <p>
  921.      * By setting the default locale with this method, all of the default
  922.      * locales for each Category are also set to the specified default locale.
  923.      *
  924.      * @throws SecurityException
  925.      *        if a security manager exists and its
  926.      *        <code>checkPermission</code> method doesn't allow the operation.
  927.      * @throws NullPointerException if <code>newLocale</code> is null
  928.      * @param newLocale the new default locale
  929.      * @see SecurityManager#checkPermission
  930.      * @see java.util.PropertyPermission
  931.      */
  932.     public static synchronized void setDefault(Locale newLocale) {
  933.         setDefault(Category.DISPLAY, newLocale);
  934.         setDefault(Category.FORMAT, newLocale);
  935.         defaultLocale = newLocale;
  936.     }
  937.  
  938.     /**
  939.      * Sets the default locale for the specified Category for this instance
  940.      * of the Java Virtual Machine. This does not affect the host locale.
  941.      * <p>
  942.      * If there is a security manager, its checkPermission method is called
  943.      * with a PropertyPermission("user.language", "write") permission before
  944.      * the default locale is changed.
  945.      * <p>
  946.      * The Java Virtual Machine sets the default locale during startup based
  947.      * on the host environment. It is used by many locale-sensitive methods
  948.      * if no locale is explicitly specified.
  949.      * <p>
  950.      * Since changing the default locale may affect many different areas of
  951.      * functionality, this method should only be used if the caller is
  952.      * prepared to reinitialize locale-sensitive code running within the
  953.      * same Java Virtual Machine.
  954.      * <p>
  955.      *
  956.      * @param category - the specified category to set the default locale
  957.      * @param newLocale - the new default locale
  958.      * @throws SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its
  959.      *     checkPermission method doesn't allow the operation.
  960.      * @throws NullPointerException - if category and/or newLocale is null
  961.      * @see SecurityManager#checkPermission(java.security.Permission)
  962.      * @see PropertyPermission
  963.      * @see #getDefault(Locale.Category)
  964.      * @since 1.7
  965.      */
  966.     public static synchronized void setDefault(Locale.Category category,
  967.         Locale newLocale) {
  968.         if (category == null)
  969.             throw new NullPointerException("Category cannot be NULL");
  970.         if (newLocale == null)
  971.             throw new NullPointerException("Can't set default locale to NULL");
  972.  
  973.         SecurityManager sm = System.getSecurityManager();
  974.         if (sm != null) sm.checkPermission(new PropertyPermission
  975.                         ("user.language", "write"));
  976.         switch (category) {
  977.         case DISPLAY:
  978.             defaultDisplayLocale = newLocale;
  979.             break;
  980.         case FORMAT:
  981.             defaultFormatLocale = newLocale;
  982.             break;
  983.         default:
  984.             assert false: "Unknown Category";
  985.         }
  986.     }
  987.  
  988.     /**
  989.      * Returns an array of all installed locales.
  990.      * The returned array represents the union of locales supported
  991.      * by the Java runtime environment and by installed
  992.      * {@link java.util.spi.LocaleServiceProvider LocaleServiceProvider}
  993.      * implementations.  It must contain at least a <code>Locale</code>
  994.      * instance equal to {@link java.util.Locale#US Locale.US}.
  995.      *
  996.      * @return An array of installed locales.
  997.      */
  998.     public static Locale[] getAvailableLocales() {
  999.         return LocaleServiceProviderPool.getAllAvailableLocales();
  1000.     }
  1001.  
  1002.     /**
  1003.      * Returns a list of all 2-letter country codes defined in ISO 3166.
  1004.      * Can be used to create Locales.
  1005.      * <p>
  1006.      * <b>Note:</b> The <code>Locale</code> class also supports other codes for
  1007.      * country (region), such as 3-letter numeric UN M.49 area codes.
  1008.      * Therefore, the list returned by this method does not contain ALL valid
  1009.      * codes that can be used to create Locales.
  1010.      *
  1011.      * @return An array of ISO 3166 two-letter country codes.
  1012.      */
  1013.     public static String[] getISOCountries() {
  1014.         if (isoCountries == null) {
  1015.             isoCountries = getISO2Table(LocaleISOData.isoCountryTable);
  1016.         }
  1017.         String[] result = new String[isoCountries.length];
  1018.         System.arraycopy(isoCountries, 0, result, 0, isoCountries.length);
  1019.         return result;
  1020.     }
  1021.  
  1022.     /**
  1023.      * Returns a list of all 2-letter language codes defined in ISO 639.
  1024.      * Can be used to create Locales.
  1025.      * <p>
  1026.      * <b>Note:</b>
  1027.      * <ul>
  1028.      * <li>ISO 639 is not a stable standard&mdash; some languages' codes have changed.
  1029.      * The list this function returns includes both the new and the old codes for the
  1030.      * languages whose codes have changed.
  1031.      * <li>The <code>Locale</code> class also supports language codes up to
  1032.      * 8 characters in length.  Therefore, the list returned by this method does
  1033.      * not contain ALL valid codes that can be used to create Locales.
  1034.      * </ul>
  1035.      *
  1036.      * @return Am array of ISO 639 two-letter language codes.
  1037.      */
  1038.     public static String[] getISOLanguages() {
  1039.         if (isoLanguages == null) {
  1040.             isoLanguages = getISO2Table(LocaleISOData.isoLanguageTable);
  1041.         }
  1042.         String[] result = new String[isoLanguages.length];
  1043.         System.arraycopy(isoLanguages, 0, result, 0, isoLanguages.length);
  1044.         return result;
  1045.     }
  1046.  
  1047.     private static String[] getISO2Table(String table) {
  1048.         int len = table.length() / 5;
  1049.         String[] isoTable = new String[len];
  1050.         for (int i = 0, j = 0; i < len; i++, j += 5) {
  1051.             isoTable[i] = table.substring(j, j + 2);
  1052.         }
  1053.         return isoTable;
  1054.     }
  1055.  
  1056.     /**
  1057.      * Returns the language code of this Locale.
  1058.      *
  1059.      * <p><b>Note:</b> ISO 639 is not a stable standard&mdash; some languages' codes have changed.
  1060.      * Locale's constructor recognizes both the new and the old codes for the languages
  1061.      * whose codes have changed, but this function always returns the old code.  If you
  1062.      * want to check for a specific language whose code has changed, don't do
  1063.      * <pre>
  1064.      * if (locale.getLanguage().equals("he")) // BAD!
  1065.      *    ...
  1066.      * </pre>
  1067.      * Instead, do
  1068.      * <pre>
  1069.      * if (locale.getLanguage().equals(new Locale("he").getLanguage()))
  1070.      *    ...
  1071.      * </pre>
  1072.      * @return The language code, or the empty string if none is defined.
  1073.      * @see #getDisplayLanguage
  1074.      */
  1075.     public String getLanguage() {
  1076.         return baseLocale.getLanguage();
  1077.     }
  1078.  
  1079.     /**
  1080.      * Returns the script for this locale, which should
  1081.      * either be the empty string or an ISO 15924 4-letter script
  1082.      * code. The first letter is uppercase and the rest are
  1083.      * lowercase, for example, 'Latn', 'Cyrl'.
  1084.      *
  1085.      * @return The script code, or the empty string if none is defined.
  1086.      * @see #getDisplayScript
  1087.      * @since 1.7
  1088.      */
  1089.     public String getScript() {
  1090.         return baseLocale.getScript();
  1091.     }
  1092.  
  1093.     /**
  1094.      * Returns the country/region code for this locale, which should
  1095.      * either be the empty string, an uppercase ISO 3166 2-letter code,
  1096.      * or a UN M.49 3-digit code.
  1097.      *
  1098.      * @return The country/region code, or the empty string if none is defined.
  1099.      * @see #getDisplayCountry
  1100.      */
  1101.     public String getCountry() {
  1102.         return baseLocale.getRegion();
  1103.     }
  1104.  
  1105.     /**
  1106.      * Returns the variant code for this locale.
  1107.      *
  1108.      * @return The variant code, or the empty string if none is defined.
  1109.      * @see #getDisplayVariant
  1110.      */
  1111.     public String getVariant() {
  1112.         return baseLocale.getVariant();
  1113.     }
  1114.  
  1115.     /**
  1116.      * Returns {@code true} if this {@code Locale} has any <a href="#def_extensions">
  1117.      * extensions</a>.
  1118.      *
  1119.      * @return {@code true} if this {@code Locale} has any extensions
  1120.      * @since 1.8
  1121.      */
  1122.     public boolean hasExtensions() {
  1123.         return localeExtensions != null;
  1124.     }
  1125.  
  1126.     /**
  1127.      * Returns a copy of this {@code Locale} with no <a href="#def_extensions">
  1128.      * extensions</a>. If this {@code Locale} has no extensions, this {@code Locale}
  1129.      * is returned.
  1130.      *
  1131.      * @return a copy of this {@code Locale} with no extensions, or {@code this}
  1132.      *         if {@code this} has no extensions
  1133.      * @since 1.8
  1134.      */
  1135.     public Locale stripExtensions() {
  1136.         return hasExtensions() ? Locale.getInstance(baseLocale, null) : this;
  1137.     }
  1138.  
  1139.     /**
  1140.      * Returns the extension (or private use) value associated with
  1141.      * the specified key, or null if there is no extension
  1142.      * associated with the key. To be well-formed, the key must be one
  1143.      * of <code>[0-9A-Za-z]</code>. Keys are case-insensitive, so
  1144.      * for example 'z' and 'Z' represent the same extension.
  1145.      *
  1146.      * @param key the extension key
  1147.      * @return The extension, or null if this locale defines no
  1148.      * extension for the specified key.
  1149.      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if key is not well-formed
  1150.      * @see #PRIVATE_USE_EXTENSION
  1151.      * @see #UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION
  1152.      * @since 1.7
  1153.      */
  1154.     public String getExtension(char key) {
  1155.         if (!LocaleExtensions.isValidKey(key)) {
  1156.             throw new IllegalArgumentException("Ill-formed extension key: " + key);
  1157.         }
  1158.         return hasExtensions() ? localeExtensions.getExtensionValue(key) : null;
  1159.     }
  1160.  
  1161.     /**
  1162.      * Returns the set of extension keys associated with this locale, or the
  1163.      * empty set if it has no extensions. The returned set is unmodifiable.
  1164.      * The keys will all be lower-case.
  1165.      *
  1166.      * @return The set of extension keys, or the empty set if this locale has
  1167.      * no extensions.
  1168.      * @since 1.7
  1169.      */
  1170.     public Set<Character> getExtensionKeys() {
  1171.         if (!hasExtensions()) {
  1172.             return Collections.emptySet();
  1173.         }
  1174.         return localeExtensions.getKeys();
  1175.     }
  1176.  
  1177.     /**
  1178.      * Returns the set of unicode locale attributes associated with
  1179.      * this locale, or the empty set if it has no attributes. The
  1180.      * returned set is unmodifiable.
  1181.      *
  1182.      * @return The set of attributes.
  1183.      * @since 1.7
  1184.      */
  1185.     public Set<String> getUnicodeLocaleAttributes() {
  1186.         if (!hasExtensions()) {
  1187.             return Collections.emptySet();
  1188.         }
  1189.         return localeExtensions.getUnicodeLocaleAttributes();
  1190.     }
  1191.  
  1192.     /**
  1193.      * Returns the Unicode locale type associated with the specified Unicode locale key
  1194.      * for this locale. Returns the empty string for keys that are defined with no type.
  1195.      * Returns null if the key is not defined. Keys are case-insensitive. The key must
  1196.      * be two alphanumeric characters ([0-9a-zA-Z]), or an IllegalArgumentException is
  1197.      * thrown.
  1198.      *
  1199.      * @param key the Unicode locale key
  1200.      * @return The Unicode locale type associated with the key, or null if the
  1201.      * locale does not define the key.
  1202.      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the key is not well-formed
  1203.      * @throws NullPointerException if <code>key</code> is null
  1204.      * @since 1.7
  1205.      */
  1206.     public String getUnicodeLocaleType(String key) {
  1207.         if (!isUnicodeExtensionKey(key)) {
  1208.             throw new IllegalArgumentException("Ill-formed Unicode locale key: " + key);
  1209.         }
  1210.         return hasExtensions() ? localeExtensions.getUnicodeLocaleType(key) : null;
  1211.     }
  1212.  
  1213.     /**
  1214.      * Returns the set of Unicode locale keys defined by this locale, or the empty set if
  1215.      * this locale has none.  The returned set is immutable.  Keys are all lower case.
  1216.      *
  1217.      * @return The set of Unicode locale keys, or the empty set if this locale has
  1218.      * no Unicode locale keywords.
  1219.      * @since 1.7
  1220.      */
  1221.     public Set<String> getUnicodeLocaleKeys() {
  1222.         if (localeExtensions == null) {
  1223.             return Collections.emptySet();
  1224.         }
  1225.         return localeExtensions.getUnicodeLocaleKeys();
  1226.     }
  1227.  
  1228.     /**
  1229.      * Package locale method returning the Locale's BaseLocale,
  1230.      * used by ResourceBundle
  1231.      * @return base locale of this Locale
  1232.      */
  1233.     BaseLocale getBaseLocale() {
  1234.         return baseLocale;
  1235.     }
  1236.  
  1237.     /**
  1238.      * Package private method returning the Locale's LocaleExtensions,
  1239.      * used by ResourceBundle.
  1240.      * @return locale exnteions of this Locale,
  1241.      *         or {@code null} if no extensions are defined
  1242.      */
  1243.      LocaleExtensions getLocaleExtensions() {
  1244.          return localeExtensions;
  1245.      }
  1246.  
  1247.     /**
  1248.      * Returns a string representation of this <code>Locale</code>
  1249.      * object, consisting of language, country, variant, script,
  1250.      * and extensions as below:
  1251.      * <blockquote>
  1252.      * language + "_" + country + "_" + (variant + "_#" | "#") + script + "-" + extensions
  1253.      * </blockquote>
  1254.      *
  1255.      * Language is always lower case, country is always upper case, script is always title
  1256.      * case, and extensions are always lower case.  Extensions and private use subtags
  1257.      * will be in canonical order as explained in {@link #toLanguageTag}.
  1258.      *
  1259.      * <p>When the locale has neither script nor extensions, the result is the same as in
  1260.      * Java 6 and prior.
  1261.      *
  1262.      * <p>If both the language and country fields are missing, this function will return
  1263.      * the empty string, even if the variant, script, or extensions field is present (you
  1264.      * can't have a locale with just a variant, the variant must accompany a well-formed
  1265.      * language or country code).
  1266.      *
  1267.      * <p>If script or extensions are present and variant is missing, no underscore is
  1268.      * added before the "#".
  1269.      *
  1270.      * <p>This behavior is designed to support debugging and to be compatible with
  1271.      * previous uses of <code>toString</code> that expected language, country, and variant
  1272.      * fields only.  To represent a Locale as a String for interchange purposes, use
  1273.      * {@link #toLanguageTag}.
  1274.      *
  1275.      * <p>Examples: <ul>
  1276.      * <li><tt>en</tt></li>
  1277.      * <li><tt>de_DE</tt></li>
  1278.      * <li><tt>_GB</tt></li>
  1279.      * <li><tt>en_US_WIN</tt></li>
  1280.      * <li><tt>de__POSIX</tt></li>
  1281.      * <li><tt>zh_CN_#Hans</tt></li>
  1282.      * <li><tt>zh_TW_#Hant-x-java</tt></li>
  1283.      * <li><tt>th_TH_TH_#u-nu-thai</tt></li></ul>
  1284.      *
  1285.      * @return A string representation of the Locale, for debugging.
  1286.      * @see #getDisplayName
  1287.      * @see #toLanguageTag
  1288.      */
  1289.     @Override
  1290.     public final String toString() {
  1291.         boolean l = (baseLocale.getLanguage().length() != 0);
  1292.         boolean s = (baseLocale.getScript().length() != 0);
  1293.         boolean r = (baseLocale.getRegion().length() != 0);
  1294.         boolean v = (baseLocale.getVariant().length() != 0);
  1295.         boolean e = (localeExtensions != null && localeExtensions.getID().length() != 0);
  1296.  
  1297.         StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder(baseLocale.getLanguage());
  1298.         if (r || (l && (v || s || e))) {
  1299.             result.append('_')
  1300.                 .append(baseLocale.getRegion()); // This may just append '_'
  1301.         }
  1302.         if (v && (l || r)) {
  1303.             result.append('_')
  1304.                 .append(baseLocale.getVariant());
  1305.         }
  1306.  
  1307.         if (s && (l || r)) {
  1308.             result.append("_#")
  1309.                 .append(baseLocale.getScript());
  1310.         }
  1311.  
  1312.         if (e && (l || r)) {
  1313.             result.append('_');
  1314.             if (!s) {
  1315.                 result.append('#');
  1316.             }
  1317.             result.append(localeExtensions.getID());
  1318.         }
  1319.  
  1320.         return result.toString();
  1321.     }
  1322.  
  1323.     /**
  1324.      * Returns a well-formed IETF BCP 47 language tag representing
  1325.      * this locale.
  1326.      *
  1327.      * <p>If this <code>Locale</code> has a language, country, or
  1328.      * variant that does not satisfy the IETF BCP 47 language tag
  1329.      * syntax requirements, this method handles these fields as
  1330.      * described below:
  1331.      *
  1332.      * <p><b>Language:</b> If language is empty, or not <a
  1333.      * href="#def_language" >well-formed</a> (for example "a" or
  1334.      * "e2"), it will be emitted as "und" (Undetermined).
  1335.      *
  1336.      * <p><b>Country:</b> If country is not <a
  1337.      * href="#def_region">well-formed</a> (for example "12" or "USA"),
  1338.      * it will be omitted.
  1339.      *
  1340.      * <p><b>Variant:</b> If variant <b>is</b> <a
  1341.      * href="#def_variant">well-formed</a>, each sub-segment
  1342.      * (delimited by '-' or '_') is emitted as a subtag.  Otherwise:
  1343.      * <ul>
  1344.      *
  1345.      * <li>if all sub-segments match <code>[0-9a-zA-Z]{1,8}</code>
  1346.      * (for example "WIN" or "Oracle_JDK_Standard_Edition"), the first
  1347.      * ill-formed sub-segment and all following will be appended to
  1348.      * the private use subtag.  The first appended subtag will be
  1349.      * "lvariant", followed by the sub-segments in order, separated by
  1350.      * hyphen. For example, "x-lvariant-WIN",
  1351.      * "Oracle-x-lvariant-JDK-Standard-Edition".
  1352.      *
  1353.      * <li>if any sub-segment does not match
  1354.      * <code>[0-9a-zA-Z]{1,8}</code>, the variant will be truncated
  1355.      * and the problematic sub-segment and all following sub-segments
  1356.      * will be omitted.  If the remainder is non-empty, it will be
  1357.      * emitted as a private use subtag as above (even if the remainder
  1358.      * turns out to be well-formed).  For example,
  1359.      * "Solaris_isjustthecoolestthing" is emitted as
  1360.      * "x-lvariant-Solaris", not as "solaris".</li></ul>
  1361.      *
  1362.      * <p><b>Special Conversions:</b> Java supports some old locale
  1363.      * representations, including deprecated ISO language codes,
  1364.      * for compatibility. This method performs the following
  1365.      * conversions:
  1366.      * <ul>
  1367.      *
  1368.      * <li>Deprecated ISO language codes "iw", "ji", and "in" are
  1369.      * converted to "he", "yi", and "id", respectively.
  1370.      *
  1371.      * <li>A locale with language "no", country "NO", and variant
  1372.      * "NY", representing Norwegian Nynorsk (Norway), is converted
  1373.      * to a language tag "nn-NO".</li></ul>
  1374.      *
  1375.      * <p><b>Note:</b> Although the language tag created by this
  1376.      * method is well-formed (satisfies the syntax requirements
  1377.      * defined by the IETF BCP 47 specification), it is not
  1378.      * necessarily a valid BCP 47 language tag.  For example,
  1379.      * <pre>
  1380.      *   new Locale("xx", "YY").toLanguageTag();</pre>
  1381.      *
  1382.      * will return "xx-YY", but the language subtag "xx" and the
  1383.      * region subtag "YY" are invalid because they are not registered
  1384.      * in the IANA Language Subtag Registry.
  1385.      *
  1386.      * @return a BCP47 language tag representing the locale
  1387.      * @see #forLanguageTag(String)
  1388.      * @since 1.7
  1389.      */
  1390.     public String toLanguageTag() {
  1391.         if (languageTag != null) {
  1392.             return languageTag;
  1393.         }
  1394.  
  1395.         LanguageTag tag = LanguageTag.parseLocale(baseLocale, localeExtensions);
  1396.         StringBuilder buf = new StringBuilder();
  1397.  
  1398.         String subtag = tag.getLanguage();
  1399.         if (subtag.length() > 0) {
  1400.             buf.append(LanguageTag.canonicalizeLanguage(subtag));
  1401.         }
  1402.  
  1403.         subtag = tag.getScript();
  1404.         if (subtag.length() > 0) {
  1405.             buf.append(LanguageTag.SEP);
  1406.             buf.append(LanguageTag.canonicalizeScript(subtag));
  1407.         }
  1408.  
  1409.         subtag = tag.getRegion();
  1410.         if (subtag.length() > 0) {
  1411.             buf.append(LanguageTag.SEP);
  1412.             buf.append(LanguageTag.canonicalizeRegion(subtag));
  1413.         }
  1414.  
  1415.         List<String>subtags = tag.getVariants();
  1416.         for (String s : subtags) {
  1417.             buf.append(LanguageTag.SEP);
  1418.             // preserve casing
  1419.             buf.append(s);
  1420.         }
  1421.  
  1422.         subtags = tag.getExtensions();
  1423.         for (String s : subtags) {
  1424.             buf.append(LanguageTag.SEP);
  1425.             buf.append(LanguageTag.canonicalizeExtension(s));
  1426.         }
  1427.  
  1428.         subtag = tag.getPrivateuse();
  1429.         if (subtag.length() > 0) {
  1430.             if (buf.length() > 0) {
  1431.                 buf.append(LanguageTag.SEP);
  1432.             }
  1433.             buf.append(LanguageTag.PRIVATEUSE).append(LanguageTag.SEP);
  1434.             // preserve casing
  1435.             buf.append(subtag);
  1436.         }
  1437.  
  1438.         String langTag = buf.toString();
  1439.         synchronized (this) {
  1440.             if (languageTag == null) {
  1441.                 languageTag = langTag;
  1442.             }
  1443.         }
  1444.         return languageTag;
  1445.     }
  1446.  
  1447.     /**
  1448.      * Returns a locale for the specified IETF BCP 47 language tag string.
  1449.      *
  1450.      * <p>If the specified language tag contains any ill-formed subtags,
  1451.      * the first such subtag and all following subtags are ignored.  Compare
  1452.      * to {@link Locale.Builder#setLanguageTag} which throws an exception
  1453.      * in this case.
  1454.      *
  1455.      * <p>The following <b>conversions</b> are performed:<ul>
  1456.      *
  1457.      * <li>The language code "und" is mapped to language "".
  1458.      *
  1459.      * <li>The language codes "he", "yi", and "id" are mapped to "iw",
  1460.      * "ji", and "in" respectively. (This is the same canonicalization
  1461.      * that's done in Locale's constructors.)
  1462.      *
  1463.      * <li>The portion of a private use subtag prefixed by "lvariant",
  1464.      * if any, is removed and appended to the variant field in the
  1465.      * result locale (without case normalization).  If it is then
  1466.      * empty, the private use subtag is discarded:
  1467.      *
  1468.      * <pre>
  1469.      *     Locale loc;
  1470.      *     loc = Locale.forLanguageTag("en-US-x-lvariant-POSIX");
  1471.      *     loc.getVariant(); // returns "POSIX"
  1472.      *     loc.getExtension('x'); // returns null
  1473.      *
  1474.      *     loc = Locale.forLanguageTag("de-POSIX-x-URP-lvariant-Abc-Def");
  1475.      *     loc.getVariant(); // returns "POSIX_Abc_Def"
  1476.      *     loc.getExtension('x'); // returns "urp"
  1477.      * </pre>
  1478.      *
  1479.      * <li>When the languageTag argument contains an extlang subtag,
  1480.      * the first such subtag is used as the language, and the primary
  1481.      * language subtag and other extlang subtags are ignored:
  1482.      *
  1483.      * <pre>
  1484.      *     Locale.forLanguageTag("ar-aao").getLanguage(); // returns "aao"
  1485.      *     Locale.forLanguageTag("en-abc-def-us").toString(); // returns "abc_US"
  1486.      * </pre>
  1487.      *
  1488.      * <li>Case is normalized except for variant tags, which are left
  1489.      * unchanged.  Language is normalized to lower case, script to
  1490.      * title case, country to upper case, and extensions to lower
  1491.      * case.
  1492.      *
  1493.      * <li>If, after processing, the locale would exactly match either
  1494.      * ja_JP_JP or th_TH_TH with no extensions, the appropriate
  1495.      * extensions are added as though the constructor had been called:
  1496.      *
  1497.      * <pre>
  1498.      *    Locale.forLanguageTag("ja-JP-x-lvariant-JP").toLanguageTag();
  1499.      *    // returns "ja-JP-u-ca-japanese-x-lvariant-JP"
  1500.      *    Locale.forLanguageTag("th-TH-x-lvariant-TH").toLanguageTag();
  1501.      *    // returns "th-TH-u-nu-thai-x-lvariant-TH"
  1502.      * </pre></ul>
  1503.      *
  1504.      * <p>This implements the 'Language-Tag' production of BCP47, and
  1505.      * so supports grandfathered (regular and irregular) as well as
  1506.      * private use language tags.  Stand alone private use tags are
  1507.      * represented as empty language and extension 'x-whatever',
  1508.      * and grandfathered tags are converted to their canonical replacements
  1509.      * where they exist.
  1510.      *
  1511.      * <p>Grandfathered tags with canonical replacements are as follows:
  1512.      *
  1513.      * <table summary="Grandfathered tags with canonical replacements">
  1514.      * <tbody align="center">
  1515.      * <tr><th>grandfathered tag</th><th>&nbsp;</th><th>modern replacement</th></tr>
  1516.      * <tr><td>art-lojban</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>jbo</td></tr>
  1517.      * <tr><td>i-ami</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>ami</td></tr>
  1518.      * <tr><td>i-bnn</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>bnn</td></tr>
  1519.      * <tr><td>i-hak</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>hak</td></tr>
  1520.      * <tr><td>i-klingon</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>tlh</td></tr>
  1521.      * <tr><td>i-lux</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>lb</td></tr>
  1522.      * <tr><td>i-navajo</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>nv</td></tr>
  1523.      * <tr><td>i-pwn</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>pwn</td></tr>
  1524.      * <tr><td>i-tao</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>tao</td></tr>
  1525.      * <tr><td>i-tay</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>tay</td></tr>
  1526.      * <tr><td>i-tsu</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>tsu</td></tr>
  1527.      * <tr><td>no-bok</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>nb</td></tr>
  1528.      * <tr><td>no-nyn</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>nn</td></tr>
  1529.      * <tr><td>sgn-BE-FR</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>sfb</td></tr>
  1530.      * <tr><td>sgn-BE-NL</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>vgt</td></tr>
  1531.      * <tr><td>sgn-CH-DE</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>sgg</td></tr>
  1532.      * <tr><td>zh-guoyu</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>cmn</td></tr>
  1533.      * <tr><td>zh-hakka</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>hak</td></tr>
  1534.      * <tr><td>zh-min-nan</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>nan</td></tr>
  1535.      * <tr><td>zh-xiang</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>hsn</td></tr>
  1536.      * </tbody>
  1537.      * </table>
  1538.      *
  1539.      * <p>Grandfathered tags with no modern replacement will be
  1540.      * converted as follows:
  1541.      *
  1542.      * <table summary="Grandfathered tags with no modern replacement">
  1543.      * <tbody align="center">
  1544.      * <tr><th>grandfathered tag</th><th>&nbsp;</th><th>converts to</th></tr>
  1545.      * <tr><td>cel-gaulish</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>xtg-x-cel-gaulish</td></tr>
  1546.      * <tr><td>en-GB-oed</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>en-GB-x-oed</td></tr>
  1547.      * <tr><td>i-default</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>en-x-i-default</td></tr>
  1548.      * <tr><td>i-enochian</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>und-x-i-enochian</td></tr>
  1549.      * <tr><td>i-mingo</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>see-x-i-mingo</td></tr>
  1550.      * <tr><td>zh-min</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>nan-x-zh-min</td></tr>
  1551.      * </tbody>
  1552.      * </table>
  1553.      *
  1554.      * <p>For a list of all grandfathered tags, see the
  1555.      * IANA Language Subtag Registry (search for "Type: grandfathered").
  1556.      *
  1557.      * <p><b>Note</b>: there is no guarantee that <code>toLanguageTag</code>
  1558.      * and <code>forLanguageTag</code> will round-trip.
  1559.      *
  1560.      * @param languageTag the language tag
  1561.      * @return The locale that best represents the language tag.
  1562.      * @throws NullPointerException if <code>languageTag</code> is <code>null</code>
  1563.      * @see #toLanguageTag()
  1564.      * @see java.util.Locale.Builder#setLanguageTag(String)
  1565.      * @since 1.7
  1566.      */
  1567.     public static Locale forLanguageTag(String languageTag) {
  1568.         LanguageTag tag = LanguageTag.parse(languageTag, null);
  1569.         InternalLocaleBuilder bldr = new InternalLocaleBuilder();
  1570.         bldr.setLanguageTag(tag);
  1571.         BaseLocale base = bldr.getBaseLocale();
  1572.         LocaleExtensions exts = bldr.getLocaleExtensions();
  1573.         if (exts == null && base.getVariant().length() > 0) {
  1574.             exts = getCompatibilityExtensions(base.getLanguage(), base.getScript(),
  1575.                                               base.getRegion(), base.getVariant());
  1576.         }
  1577.         return getInstance(base, exts);
  1578.     }
  1579.  
  1580.     /**
  1581.      * Returns a three-letter abbreviation of this locale's language.
  1582.      * If the language matches an ISO 639-1 two-letter code, the
  1583.      * corresponding ISO 639-2/T three-letter lowercase code is
  1584.      * returned.  The ISO 639-2 language codes can be found on-line,
  1585.      * see "Codes for the Representation of Names of Languages Part 2:
  1586.      * Alpha-3 Code".  If the locale specifies a three-letter
  1587.      * language, the language is returned as is.  If the locale does
  1588.      * not specify a language the empty string is returned.
  1589.      *
  1590.      * @return A three-letter abbreviation of this locale's language.
  1591.      * @exception MissingResourceException Throws MissingResourceException if
  1592.      * three-letter language abbreviation is not available for this locale.
  1593.      */
  1594.     public String getISO3Language() throws MissingResourceException {
  1595.         String lang = baseLocale.getLanguage();
  1596.         if (lang.length() == 3) {
  1597.             return lang;
  1598.         }
  1599.  
  1600.         String language3 = getISO3Code(lang, LocaleISOData.isoLanguageTable);
  1601.         if (language3 == null) {
  1602.             throw new MissingResourceException("Couldn't find 3-letter language code for "
  1603.                     + lang, "FormatData_" + toString(), "ShortLanguage");
  1604.         }
  1605.         return language3;
  1606.     }
  1607.  
  1608.     /**
  1609.      * Returns a three-letter abbreviation for this locale's country.
  1610.      * If the country matches an ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code, the
  1611.      * corresponding ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 uppercase code is returned.
  1612.      * If the locale doesn't specify a country, this will be the empty
  1613.      * string.
  1614.      *
  1615.      * <p>The ISO 3166-1 codes can be found on-line.
  1616.      *
  1617.      * @return A three-letter abbreviation of this locale's country.
  1618.      * @exception MissingResourceException Throws MissingResourceException if the
  1619.      * three-letter country abbreviation is not available for this locale.
  1620.      */
  1621.     public String getISO3Country() throws MissingResourceException {
  1622.         String country3 = getISO3Code(baseLocale.getRegion(), LocaleISOData.isoCountryTable);
  1623.         if (country3 == null) {
  1624.             throw new MissingResourceException("Couldn't find 3-letter country code for "
  1625.                     + baseLocale.getRegion(), "FormatData_" + toString(), "ShortCountry");
  1626.         }
  1627.         return country3;
  1628.     }
  1629.  
  1630.     private static String getISO3Code(String iso2Code, String table) {
  1631.         int codeLength = iso2Code.length();
  1632.         if (codeLength == 0) {
  1633.             return "";
  1634.         }
  1635.  
  1636.         int tableLength = table.length();
  1637.         int index = tableLength;
  1638.         if (codeLength == 2) {
  1639.             char c1 = iso2Code.charAt(0);
  1640.             char c2 = iso2Code.charAt(1);
  1641.             for (index = 0; index < tableLength; index += 5) {
  1642.                 if (table.charAt(index) == c1
  1643.                     && table.charAt(index + 1) == c2) {
  1644.                     break;
  1645.                 }
  1646.             }
  1647.         }
  1648.         return index < tableLength ? table.substring(index + 2, index + 5) : null;
  1649.     }
  1650.  
  1651.     /**
  1652.      * Returns a name for the locale's language that is appropriate for display to the
  1653.      * user.
  1654.      * If possible, the name returned will be localized for the default
  1655.      * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale.
  1656.      * For example, if the locale is fr_FR and the default
  1657.      * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale
  1658.      * is en_US, getDisplayLanguage() will return "French"; if the locale is en_US and
  1659.      * the default {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale is fr_FR,
  1660.      * getDisplayLanguage() will return "anglais".
  1661.      * If the name returned cannot be localized for the default
  1662.      * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale,
  1663.      * (say, we don't have a Japanese name for Croatian),
  1664.      * this function falls back on the English name, and uses the ISO code as a last-resort
  1665.      * value.  If the locale doesn't specify a language, this function returns the empty string.
  1666.      *
  1667.      * @return The name of the display language.
  1668.      */
  1669.     public final String getDisplayLanguage() {
  1670.         return getDisplayLanguage(getDefault(Category.DISPLAY));
  1671.     }
  1672.  
  1673.     /**
  1674.      * Returns a name for the locale's language that is appropriate for display to the
  1675.      * user.
  1676.      * If possible, the name returned will be localized according to inLocale.
  1677.      * For example, if the locale is fr_FR and inLocale
  1678.      * is en_US, getDisplayLanguage() will return "French"; if the locale is en_US and
  1679.      * inLocale is fr_FR, getDisplayLanguage() will return "anglais".
  1680.      * If the name returned cannot be localized according to inLocale,
  1681.      * (say, we don't have a Japanese name for Croatian),
  1682.      * this function falls back on the English name, and finally
  1683.      * on the ISO code as a last-resort value.  If the locale doesn't specify a language,
  1684.      * this function returns the empty string.
  1685.      *
  1686.      * @param inLocale The locale for which to retrieve the display language.
  1687.      * @return The name of the display language appropriate to the given locale.
  1688.      * @exception NullPointerException if <code>inLocale</code> is <code>null</code>
  1689.      */
  1690.     public String getDisplayLanguage(Locale inLocale) {
  1691.         return getDisplayString(baseLocale.getLanguage(), inLocale, DISPLAY_LANGUAGE);
  1692.     }
  1693.  
  1694.     /**
  1695.      * Returns a name for the the locale's script that is appropriate for display to
  1696.      * the user. If possible, the name will be localized for the default
  1697.      * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale.  Returns
  1698.      * the empty string if this locale doesn't specify a script code.
  1699.      *
  1700.      * @return the display name of the script code for the current default
  1701.      *     {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale
  1702.      * @since 1.7
  1703.      */
  1704.     public String getDisplayScript() {
  1705.         return getDisplayScript(getDefault(Category.DISPLAY));
  1706.     }
  1707.  
  1708.     /**
  1709.      * Returns a name for the locale's script that is appropriate
  1710.      * for display to the user. If possible, the name will be
  1711.      * localized for the given locale. Returns the empty string if
  1712.      * this locale doesn't specify a script code.
  1713.      *
  1714.      * @param inLocale The locale for which to retrieve the display script.
  1715.      * @return the display name of the script code for the current default
  1716.      * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale
  1717.      * @throws NullPointerException if <code>inLocale</code> is <code>null</code>
  1718.      * @since 1.7
  1719.      */
  1720.     public String getDisplayScript(Locale inLocale) {
  1721.         return getDisplayString(baseLocale.getScript(), inLocale, DISPLAY_SCRIPT);
  1722.     }
  1723.  
  1724.     /**
  1725.      * Returns a name for the locale's country that is appropriate for display to the
  1726.      * user.
  1727.      * If possible, the name returned will be localized for the default
  1728.      * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale.
  1729.      * For example, if the locale is fr_FR and the default
  1730.      * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale
  1731.      * is en_US, getDisplayCountry() will return "France"; if the locale is en_US and
  1732.      * the default {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale is fr_FR,
  1733.      * getDisplayCountry() will return "Etats-Unis".
  1734.      * If the name returned cannot be localized for the default
  1735.      * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale,
  1736.      * (say, we don't have a Japanese name for Croatia),
  1737.      * this function falls back on the English name, and uses the ISO code as a last-resort
  1738.      * value.  If the locale doesn't specify a country, this function returns the empty string.
  1739.      *
  1740.      * @return The name of the country appropriate to the locale.
  1741.      */
  1742.     public final String getDisplayCountry() {
  1743.         return getDisplayCountry(getDefault(Category.DISPLAY));
  1744.     }
  1745.  
  1746.     /**
  1747.      * Returns a name for the locale's country that is appropriate for display to the
  1748.      * user.
  1749.      * If possible, the name returned will be localized according to inLocale.
  1750.      * For example, if the locale is fr_FR and inLocale
  1751.      * is en_US, getDisplayCountry() will return "France"; if the locale is en_US and
  1752.      * inLocale is fr_FR, getDisplayCountry() will return "Etats-Unis".
  1753.      * If the name returned cannot be localized according to inLocale.
  1754.      * (say, we don't have a Japanese name for Croatia),
  1755.      * this function falls back on the English name, and finally
  1756.      * on the ISO code as a last-resort value.  If the locale doesn't specify a country,
  1757.      * this function returns the empty string.
  1758.      *
  1759.      * @param inLocale The locale for which to retrieve the display country.
  1760.      * @return The name of the country appropriate to the given locale.
  1761.      * @exception NullPointerException if <code>inLocale</code> is <code>null</code>
  1762.      */
  1763.     public String getDisplayCountry(Locale inLocale) {
  1764.         return getDisplayString(baseLocale.getRegion(), inLocale, DISPLAY_COUNTRY);
  1765.     }
  1766.  
  1767.     private String getDisplayString(String code, Locale inLocale, int type) {
  1768.         if (code.length() == 0) {
  1769.             return "";
  1770.         }
  1771.  
  1772.         if (inLocale == null) {
  1773.             throw new NullPointerException();
  1774.         }
  1775.  
  1776.         LocaleServiceProviderPool pool =
  1777.             LocaleServiceProviderPool.getPool(LocaleNameProvider.class);
  1778.         String key = (type == DISPLAY_VARIANT ? "%%"+code : code);
  1779.         String result = pool.getLocalizedObject(
  1780.                                 LocaleNameGetter.INSTANCE,
  1781.                                 inLocale, key, type, code);
  1782.             if (result != null) {
  1783.                 return result;
  1784.             }
  1785.  
  1786.         return code;
  1787.     }
  1788.  
  1789.     /**
  1790.      * Returns a name for the locale's variant code that is appropriate for display to the
  1791.      * user.  If possible, the name will be localized for the default
  1792.      * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale.  If the locale
  1793.      * doesn't specify a variant code, this function returns the empty string.
  1794.      *
  1795.      * @return The name of the display variant code appropriate to the locale.
  1796.      */
  1797.     public final String getDisplayVariant() {
  1798.         return getDisplayVariant(getDefault(Category.DISPLAY));
  1799.     }
  1800.  
  1801.     /**
  1802.      * Returns a name for the locale's variant code that is appropriate for display to the
  1803.      * user.  If possible, the name will be localized for inLocale.  If the locale
  1804.      * doesn't specify a variant code, this function returns the empty string.
  1805.      *
  1806.      * @param inLocale The locale for which to retrieve the display variant code.
  1807.      * @return The name of the display variant code appropriate to the given locale.
  1808.      * @exception NullPointerException if <code>inLocale</code> is <code>null</code>
  1809.      */
  1810.     public String getDisplayVariant(Locale inLocale) {
  1811.         if (baseLocale.getVariant().length() == 0)
  1812.             return "";
  1813.  
  1814.         LocaleResources lr = LocaleProviderAdapter.forJRE().getLocaleResources(inLocale);
  1815.  
  1816.         String names[] = getDisplayVariantArray(inLocale);
  1817.  
  1818.         // Get the localized patterns for formatting a list, and use
  1819.         // them to format the list.
  1820.         return formatList(names,
  1821.                           lr.getLocaleName("ListPattern"),
  1822.                           lr.getLocaleName("ListCompositionPattern"));
  1823.     }
  1824.  
  1825.     /**
  1826.      * Returns a name for the locale that is appropriate for display to the
  1827.      * user. This will be the values returned by getDisplayLanguage(),
  1828.      * getDisplayScript(), getDisplayCountry(), and getDisplayVariant() assembled
  1829.      * into a single string. The the non-empty values are used in order,
  1830.      * with the second and subsequent names in parentheses.  For example:
  1831.      * <blockquote>
  1832.      * language (script, country, variant)<br>
  1833.      * language (country)<br>
  1834.      * language (variant)<br>
  1835.      * script (country)<br>
  1836.      * country<br>
  1837.      * </blockquote>
  1838.      * depending on which fields are specified in the locale.  If the
  1839.      * language, script, country, and variant fields are all empty,
  1840.      * this function returns the empty string.
  1841.      *
  1842.      * @return The name of the locale appropriate to display.
  1843.      */
  1844.     public final String getDisplayName() {
  1845.         return getDisplayName(getDefault(Category.DISPLAY));
  1846.     }
  1847.  
  1848.     /**
  1849.      * Returns a name for the locale that is appropriate for display
  1850.      * to the user.  This will be the values returned by
  1851.      * getDisplayLanguage(), getDisplayScript(),getDisplayCountry(),
  1852.      * and getDisplayVariant() assembled into a single string.
  1853.      * The non-empty values are used in order,
  1854.      * with the second and subsequent names in parentheses.  For example:
  1855.      * <blockquote>
  1856.      * language (script, country, variant)<br>
  1857.      * language (country)<br>
  1858.      * language (variant)<br>
  1859.      * script (country)<br>
  1860.      * country<br>
  1861.      * </blockquote>
  1862.      * depending on which fields are specified in the locale.  If the
  1863.      * language, script, country, and variant fields are all empty,
  1864.      * this function returns the empty string.
  1865.      *
  1866.      * @param inLocale The locale for which to retrieve the display name.
  1867.      * @return The name of the locale appropriate to display.
  1868.      * @throws NullPointerException if <code>inLocale</code> is <code>null</code>
  1869.      */
  1870.     public String getDisplayName(Locale inLocale) {
  1871.         LocaleResources lr =  LocaleProviderAdapter.forJRE().getLocaleResources(inLocale);
  1872.  
  1873.         String languageName = getDisplayLanguage(inLocale);
  1874.         String scriptName = getDisplayScript(inLocale);
  1875.         String countryName = getDisplayCountry(inLocale);
  1876.         String[] variantNames = getDisplayVariantArray(inLocale);
  1877.  
  1878.         // Get the localized patterns for formatting a display name.
  1879.         String displayNamePattern = lr.getLocaleName("DisplayNamePattern");
  1880.         String listPattern = lr.getLocaleName("ListPattern");
  1881.         String listCompositionPattern = lr.getLocaleName("ListCompositionPattern");
  1882.  
  1883.         // The display name consists of a main name, followed by qualifiers.
  1884.         // Typically, the format is "MainName (Qualifier, Qualifier)" but this
  1885.         // depends on what pattern is stored in the display locale.
  1886.         String   mainName       = null;
  1887.         String[] qualifierNames = null;
  1888.  
  1889.         // The main name is the language, or if there is no language, the script,
  1890.         // then if no script, the country. If there is no language/script/country
  1891.         // (an anomalous situation) then the display name is simply the variant's
  1892.         // display name.
  1893.         if (languageName.length() == 0 && scriptName.length() == 0 && countryName.length() == 0) {
  1894.             if (variantNames.length == 0) {
  1895.                 return "";
  1896.             } else {
  1897.                 return formatList(variantNames, listPattern, listCompositionPattern);
  1898.             }
  1899.         }
  1900.         ArrayList<String> names = new ArrayList<>(4);
  1901.         if (languageName.length() != 0) {
  1902.             names.add(languageName);
  1903.         }
  1904.         if (scriptName.length() != 0) {
  1905.             names.add(scriptName);
  1906.         }
  1907.         if (countryName.length() != 0) {
  1908.             names.add(countryName);
  1909.         }
  1910.         if (variantNames.length != 0) {
  1911.             names.addAll(Arrays.asList(variantNames));
  1912.         }
  1913.  
  1914.         // The first one in the main name
  1915.         mainName = names.get(0);
  1916.  
  1917.         // Others are qualifiers
  1918.         int numNames = names.size();
  1919.         qualifierNames = (numNames > 1) ?
  1920.                 names.subList(1, numNames).toArray(new String[numNames - 1]) : new String[0];
  1921.  
  1922.         // Create an array whose first element is the number of remaining
  1923.         // elements.  This serves as a selector into a ChoiceFormat pattern from
  1924.         // the resource.  The second and third elements are the main name and
  1925.         // the qualifier; if there are no qualifiers, the third element is
  1926.         // unused by the format pattern.
  1927.         Object[] displayNames = {
  1928.             new Integer(qualifierNames.length != 0 ? 2 : 1),
  1929.             mainName,
  1930.             // We could also just call formatList() and have it handle the empty
  1931.             // list case, but this is more efficient, and we want it to be
  1932.             // efficient since all the language-only locales will not have any
  1933.             // qualifiers.
  1934.             qualifierNames.length != 0 ? formatList(qualifierNames, listPattern, listCompositionPattern) : null
  1935.         };
  1936.  
  1937.         if (displayNamePattern != null) {
  1938.             return new MessageFormat(displayNamePattern).format(displayNames);
  1939.         }
  1940.         else {
  1941.             // If we cannot get the message format pattern, then we use a simple
  1942.             // hard-coded pattern.  This should not occur in practice unless the
  1943.             // installation is missing some core files (FormatData etc.).
  1944.             StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
  1945.             result.append((String)displayNames[1]);
  1946.             if (displayNames.length > 2) {
  1947.                 result.append(" (");
  1948.                 result.append((String)displayNames[2]);
  1949.                 result.append(')');
  1950.             }
  1951.             return result.toString();
  1952.         }
  1953.     }
  1954.  
  1955.     /**
  1956.      * Overrides Cloneable.
  1957.      */
  1958.     @Override
  1959.     public Object clone()
  1960.     {
  1961.         try {
  1962.             Locale that = (Locale)super.clone();
  1963.             return that;
  1964.         } catch (CloneNotSupportedException e) {
  1965.             throw new InternalError(e);
  1966.         }
  1967.     }
  1968.  
  1969.     /**
  1970.      * Override hashCode.
  1971.      * Since Locales are often used in hashtables, caches the value
  1972.      * for speed.
  1973.      */
  1974.     @Override
  1975.     public int hashCode() {
  1976.         int hc = hashCodeValue;
  1977.         if (hc == 0) {
  1978.             hc = baseLocale.hashCode();
  1979.             if (localeExtensions != null) {
  1980.                 hc ^= localeExtensions.hashCode();
  1981.             }
  1982.             hashCodeValue = hc;
  1983.         }
  1984.         return hc;
  1985.     }
  1986.  
  1987.     // Overrides
  1988.  
  1989.     /**
  1990.      * Returns true if this Locale is equal to another object.  A Locale is
  1991.      * deemed equal to another Locale with identical language, script, country,
  1992.      * variant and extensions, and unequal to all other objects.
  1993.      *
  1994.      * @return true if this Locale is equal to the specified object.
  1995.      */
  1996.     @Override
  1997.     public boolean equals(Object obj) {
  1998.         if (this == obj)                      // quick check
  1999.             return true;
  2000.         if (!(obj instanceof Locale))
  2001.             return false;
  2002.         BaseLocale otherBase = ((Locale)obj).baseLocale;
  2003.         if (!baseLocale.equals(otherBase)) {
  2004.             return false;
  2005.         }
  2006.         if (localeExtensions == null) {
  2007.             return ((Locale)obj).localeExtensions == null;
  2008.         }
  2009.         return localeExtensions.equals(((Locale)obj).localeExtensions);
  2010.     }
  2011.  
  2012.     // ================= privates =====================================
  2013.  
  2014.     private transient BaseLocale baseLocale;
  2015.     private transient LocaleExtensions localeExtensions;
  2016.  
  2017.     /**
  2018.      * Calculated hashcode
  2019.      */
  2020.     private transient volatile int hashCodeValue = 0;
  2021.  
  2022.     private volatile static Locale defaultLocale = initDefault();
  2023.     private volatile static Locale defaultDisplayLocale = null;
  2024.     private volatile static Locale defaultFormatLocale = null;
  2025.  
  2026.     private transient volatile String languageTag;
  2027.  
  2028.     /**
  2029.      * Return an array of the display names of the variant.
  2030.      * @param bundle the ResourceBundle to use to get the display names
  2031.      * @return an array of display names, possible of zero length.
  2032.      */
  2033.     private String[] getDisplayVariantArray(Locale inLocale) {
  2034.         // Split the variant name into tokens separated by '_'.
  2035.         StringTokenizer tokenizer = new StringTokenizer(baseLocale.getVariant(), "_");
  2036.         String[] names = new String[tokenizer.countTokens()];
  2037.  
  2038.         // For each variant token, lookup the display name.  If
  2039.         // not found, use the variant name itself.
  2040.         for (int i=0; i<names.length; ++i) {
  2041.             names[i] = getDisplayString(tokenizer.nextToken(),
  2042.                                 inLocale, DISPLAY_VARIANT);
  2043.         }
  2044.  
  2045.         return names;
  2046.     }
  2047.  
  2048.     /**
  2049.      * Format a list using given pattern strings.
  2050.      * If either of the patterns is null, then a the list is
  2051.      * formatted by concatenation with the delimiter ','.
  2052.      * @param stringList the list of strings to be formatted.
  2053.      * @param listPattern should create a MessageFormat taking 0-3 arguments
  2054.      * and formatting them into a list.
  2055.      * @param listCompositionPattern should take 2 arguments
  2056.      * and is used by composeList.
  2057.      * @return a string representing the list.
  2058.      */
  2059.     private static String formatList(String[] stringList, String listPattern, String listCompositionPattern) {
  2060.         // If we have no list patterns, compose the list in a simple,
  2061.         // non-localized way.
  2062.         if (listPattern == null || listCompositionPattern == null) {
  2063.             StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
  2064.             for (int i = 0; i < stringList.length; ++i) {
  2065.                 if (i > 0) {
  2066.                     result.append(',');
  2067.                 }
  2068.                 result.append(stringList[i]);
  2069.             }
  2070.             return result.toString();
  2071.         }
  2072.  
  2073.         // Compose the list down to three elements if necessary
  2074.         if (stringList.length > 3) {
  2075.             MessageFormat format = new MessageFormat(listCompositionPattern);
  2076.             stringList = composeList(format, stringList);
  2077.         }
  2078.  
  2079.         // Rebuild the argument list with the list length as the first element
  2080.         Object[] args = new Object[stringList.length + 1];
  2081.         System.arraycopy(stringList, 0, args, 1, stringList.length);
  2082.         args[0] = new Integer(stringList.length);
  2083.  
  2084.         // Format it using the pattern in the resource
  2085.         MessageFormat format = new MessageFormat(listPattern);
  2086.         return format.format(args);
  2087.     }
  2088.  
  2089.     /**
  2090.      * Given a list of strings, return a list shortened to three elements.
  2091.      * Shorten it by applying the given format to the first two elements
  2092.      * recursively.
  2093.      * @param format a format which takes two arguments
  2094.      * @param list a list of strings
  2095.      * @return if the list is three elements or shorter, the same list;
  2096.      * otherwise, a new list of three elements.
  2097.      */
  2098.     private static String[] composeList(MessageFormat format, String[] list) {
  2099.         if (list.length <= 3) return list;
  2100.  
  2101.         // Use the given format to compose the first two elements into one
  2102.         String[] listItems = { list[0], list[1] };
  2103.         String newItem = format.format(listItems);
  2104.  
  2105.         // Form a new list one element shorter
  2106.         String[] newList = new String[list.length-1];
  2107.         System.arraycopy(list, 2, newList, 1, newList.length-1);
  2108.         newList[0] = newItem;
  2109.  
  2110.         // Recurse
  2111.         return composeList(format, newList);
  2112.     }
  2113.  
  2114.     // Duplicate of sun.util.locale.UnicodeLocaleExtension.isKey in order to
  2115.     // avoid its class loading.
  2116.     private static boolean isUnicodeExtensionKey(String s) {
  2117.         // 2alphanum
  2118.         return (s.length() == 2) && LocaleUtils.isAlphaNumericString(s);
  2119.     }
  2120.  
  2121.     /**
  2122.      * @serialField language    String
  2123.      *      language subtag in lower case. (See <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getLanguage()">getLanguage()</a>)
  2124.      * @serialField country     String
  2125.      *      country subtag in upper case. (See <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getCountry()">getCountry()</a>)
  2126.      * @serialField variant     String
  2127.      *      variant subtags separated by LOWLINE characters. (See <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getVariant()">getVariant()</a>)
  2128.      * @serialField hashcode    int
  2129.      *      deprecated, for forward compatibility only
  2130.      * @serialField script      String
  2131.      *      script subtag in title case (See <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getScript()">getScript()</a>)
  2132.      * @serialField extensions  String
  2133.      *      canonical representation of extensions, that is,
  2134.      *      BCP47 extensions in alphabetical order followed by
  2135.      *      BCP47 private use subtags, all in lower case letters
  2136.      *      separated by HYPHEN-MINUS characters.
  2137.      *      (See <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getExtensionKeys()">getExtensionKeys()</a>,
  2138.      *      <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getExtension(char)">getExtension(char)</a>)
  2139.      */
  2140.     private static final ObjectStreamField[] serialPersistentFields = {
  2141.         new ObjectStreamField("language", String.class),
  2142.         new ObjectStreamField("country", String.class),
  2143.         new ObjectStreamField("variant", String.class),
  2144.         new ObjectStreamField("hashcode", int.class),
  2145.         new ObjectStreamField("script", String.class),
  2146.         new ObjectStreamField("extensions", String.class),
  2147.     };
  2148.  
  2149.     /**
  2150.      * Serializes this <code>Locale</code> to the specified <code>ObjectOutputStream</code>.
  2151.      * @param out the <code>ObjectOutputStream</code> to write
  2152.      * @throws IOException
  2153.      * @since 1.7
  2154.      */
  2155.     private void writeObject(ObjectOutputStream out) throws IOException {
  2156.         ObjectOutputStream.PutField fields = out.putFields();
  2157.         fields.put("language", baseLocale.getLanguage());
  2158.         fields.put("script", baseLocale.getScript());
  2159.         fields.put("country", baseLocale.getRegion());
  2160.         fields.put("variant", baseLocale.getVariant());
  2161.         fields.put("extensions", localeExtensions == null ? "" : localeExtensions.getID());
  2162.         fields.put("hashcode", -1); // place holder just for backward support
  2163.         out.writeFields();
  2164.     }
  2165.  
  2166.     /**
  2167.      * Deserializes this <code>Locale</code>.
  2168.      * @param in the <code>ObjectInputStream</code> to read
  2169.      * @throws IOException
  2170.      * @throws ClassNotFoundException
  2171.      * @throws IllformedLocaleException
  2172.      * @since 1.7
  2173.      */
  2174.     private void readObject(ObjectInputStream in) throws IOException, ClassNotFoundException {
  2175.         ObjectInputStream.GetField fields = in.readFields();
  2176.         String language = (String)fields.get("language", "");
  2177.         String script = (String)fields.get("script", "");
  2178.         String country = (String)fields.get("country", "");
  2179.         String variant = (String)fields.get("variant", "");
  2180.         String extStr = (String)fields.get("extensions", "");
  2181.         baseLocale = BaseLocale.getInstance(convertOldISOCodes(language), script, country, variant);
  2182.         if (extStr.length() > 0) {
  2183.             try {
  2184.                 InternalLocaleBuilder bldr = new InternalLocaleBuilder();
  2185.                 bldr.setExtensions(extStr);
  2186.                 localeExtensions = bldr.getLocaleExtensions();
  2187.             } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
  2188.                 throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage());
  2189.             }
  2190.         } else {
  2191.             localeExtensions = null;
  2192.         }
  2193.     }
  2194.  
  2195.     /**
  2196.      * Returns a cached <code>Locale</code> instance equivalent to
  2197.      * the deserialized <code>Locale</code>. When serialized
  2198.      * language, country and variant fields read from the object data stream
  2199.      * are exactly "ja", "JP", "JP" or "th", "TH", "TH" and script/extensions
  2200.      * fields are empty, this method supplies <code>UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION</code>
  2201.      * "ca"/"japanese" (calendar type is "japanese") or "nu"/"thai" (number script
  2202.      * type is "thai"). See <a href="Locale.html#special_cases_constructor">Special Cases</a>
  2203.      * for more information.
  2204.      *
  2205.      * @return an instance of <code>Locale</code> equivalent to
  2206.      * the deserialized <code>Locale</code>.
  2207.      * @throws java.io.ObjectStreamException
  2208.      */
  2209.     private Object readResolve() throws java.io.ObjectStreamException {
  2210.         return getInstance(baseLocale.getLanguage(), baseLocale.getScript(),
  2211.                 baseLocale.getRegion(), baseLocale.getVariant(), localeExtensions);
  2212.     }
  2213.  
  2214.     private static volatile String[] isoLanguages = null;
  2215.  
  2216.     private static volatile String[] isoCountries = null;
  2217.  
  2218.     private static String convertOldISOCodes(String language) {
  2219.         // we accept both the old and the new ISO codes for the languages whose ISO
  2220.         // codes have changed, but we always store the OLD code, for backward compatibility
  2221.         language = LocaleUtils.toLowerString(language).intern();
  2222.         if (language == "he") {
  2223.             return "iw";
  2224.         } else if (language == "yi") {
  2225.             return "ji";
  2226.         } else if (language == "id") {
  2227.             return "in";
  2228.         } else {
  2229.             return language;
  2230.         }
  2231.     }
  2232.  
  2233.     private static LocaleExtensions getCompatibilityExtensions(String language,
  2234.                                                                String script,
  2235.                                                                String country,
  2236.                                                                String variant) {
  2237.         LocaleExtensions extensions = null;
  2238.         // Special cases for backward compatibility support
  2239.         if (LocaleUtils.caseIgnoreMatch(language, "ja")
  2240.                 && script.length() == 0
  2241.                 && LocaleUtils.caseIgnoreMatch(country, "jp")
  2242.                 && "JP".equals(variant)) {
  2243.             // ja_JP_JP -> u-ca-japanese (calendar = japanese)
  2244.             extensions = LocaleExtensions.CALENDAR_JAPANESE;
  2245.         } else if (LocaleUtils.caseIgnoreMatch(language, "th")
  2246.                 && script.length() == 0
  2247.                 && LocaleUtils.caseIgnoreMatch(country, "th")
  2248.                 && "TH".equals(variant)) {
  2249.             // th_TH_TH -> u-nu-thai (numbersystem = thai)
  2250.             extensions = LocaleExtensions.NUMBER_THAI;
  2251.         }
  2252.         return extensions;
  2253.     }
  2254.  
  2255.     /**
  2256.      * Obtains a localized locale names from a LocaleNameProvider
  2257.      * implementation.
  2258.      */
  2259.     private static class LocaleNameGetter
  2260.         implements LocaleServiceProviderPool.LocalizedObjectGetter<LocaleNameProvider, String> {
  2261.         private static final LocaleNameGetter INSTANCE = new LocaleNameGetter();
  2262.  
  2263.         @Override
  2264.         public String getObject(LocaleNameProvider localeNameProvider,
  2265.                                 Locale locale,
  2266.                                 String key,
  2267.                                 Object... params) {
  2268.             assert params.length == 2;
  2269.             int type = (Integer)params[0];
  2270.             String code = (String)params[1];
  2271.  
  2272.             switch(type) {
  2273.             case DISPLAY_LANGUAGE:
  2274.                 return localeNameProvider.getDisplayLanguage(code, locale);
  2275.             case DISPLAY_COUNTRY:
  2276.                 return localeNameProvider.getDisplayCountry(code, locale);
  2277.             case DISPLAY_VARIANT:
  2278.                 return localeNameProvider.getDisplayVariant(code, locale);
  2279.             case DISPLAY_SCRIPT:
  2280.                 return localeNameProvider.getDisplayScript(code, locale);
  2281.             default:
  2282.                 assert false; // shouldn't happen
  2283.             }
  2284.  
  2285.             return null;
  2286.         }
  2287.     }
  2288.  
  2289.     /**
  2290.      * Enum for locale categories.  These locale categories are used to get/set
  2291.      * the default locale for the specific functionality represented by the
  2292.      * category.
  2293.      *
  2294.      * @see #getDefault(Locale.Category)
  2295.      * @see #setDefault(Locale.Category, Locale)
  2296.      * @since 1.7
  2297.      */
  2298.     public enum Category {
  2299.  
  2300.         /**
  2301.          * Category used to represent the default locale for
  2302.          * displaying user interfaces.
  2303.          */
  2304.         DISPLAY("user.language.display",
  2305.                 "user.script.display",
  2306.                 "user.country.display",
  2307.                 "user.variant.display"),
  2308.  
  2309.         /**
  2310.          * Category used to represent the default locale for
  2311.          * formatting dates, numbers, and/or currencies.
  2312.          */
  2313.         FORMAT("user.language.format",
  2314.                "user.script.format",
  2315.                "user.country.format",
  2316.                "user.variant.format");
  2317.  
  2318.         Category(String languageKey, String scriptKey, String countryKey, String variantKey) {
  2319.             this.languageKey = languageKey;
  2320.             this.scriptKey = scriptKey;
  2321.             this.countryKey = countryKey;
  2322.             this.variantKey = variantKey;
  2323.         }
  2324.  
  2325.         final String languageKey;
  2326.         final String scriptKey;
  2327.         final String countryKey;
  2328.         final String variantKey;
  2329.     }
  2330.  
  2331.     /**
  2332.      * <code>Builder</code> is used to build instances of <code>Locale</code>
  2333.      * from values configured by the setters.  Unlike the <code>Locale</code>
  2334.      * constructors, the <code>Builder</code> checks if a value configured by a
  2335.      * setter satisfies the syntax requirements defined by the <code>Locale</code>
  2336.      * class.  A <code>Locale</code> object created by a <code>Builder</code> is
  2337.      * well-formed and can be transformed to a well-formed IETF BCP 47 language tag
  2338.      * without losing information.
  2339.      *
  2340.      * <p><b>Note:</b> The <code>Locale</code> class does not provide any
  2341.      * syntactic restrictions on variant, while BCP 47 requires each variant
  2342.      * subtag to be 5 to 8 alphanumerics or a single numeric followed by 3
  2343.      * alphanumerics.  The method <code>setVariant</code> throws
  2344.      * <code>IllformedLocaleException</code> for a variant that does not satisfy
  2345.      * this restriction. If it is necessary to support such a variant, use a
  2346.      * Locale constructor.  However, keep in mind that a <code>Locale</code>
  2347.      * object created this way might lose the variant information when
  2348.      * transformed to a BCP 47 language tag.
  2349.      *
  2350.      * <p>The following example shows how to create a <code>Locale</code> object
  2351.      * with the <code>Builder</code>.
  2352.      * <blockquote>
  2353.      * <pre>
  2354.      *     Locale aLocale = new Builder().setLanguage("sr").setScript("Latn").setRegion("RS").build();
  2355.      * </pre>
  2356.      * </blockquote>
  2357.      *
  2358.      * <p>Builders can be reused; <code>clear()</code> resets all
  2359.      * fields to their default values.
  2360.      *
  2361.      * @see Locale#forLanguageTag
  2362.      * @since 1.7
  2363.      */
  2364.     public static final class Builder {
  2365.         private final InternalLocaleBuilder localeBuilder;
  2366.  
  2367.         /**
  2368.          * Constructs an empty Builder. The default value of all
  2369.          * fields, extensions, and private use information is the
  2370.          * empty string.
  2371.          */
  2372.         public Builder() {
  2373.             localeBuilder = new InternalLocaleBuilder();
  2374.         }
  2375.  
  2376.         /**
  2377.          * Resets the <code>Builder</code> to match the provided
  2378.          * <code>locale</code>.  Existing state is discarded.
  2379.          *
  2380.          * <p>All fields of the locale must be well-formed, see {@link Locale}.
  2381.          *
  2382.          * <p>Locales with any ill-formed fields cause
  2383.          * <code>IllformedLocaleException</code> to be thrown, except for the
  2384.          * following three cases which are accepted for compatibility
  2385.          * reasons:<ul>
  2386.          * <li>Locale("ja", "JP", "JP") is treated as "ja-JP-u-ca-japanese"
  2387.          * <li>Locale("th", "TH", "TH") is treated as "th-TH-u-nu-thai"
  2388.          * <li>Locale("no", "NO", "NY") is treated as "nn-NO"</ul>
  2389.          *
  2390.          * @param locale the locale
  2391.          * @return This builder.
  2392.          * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>locale</code> has
  2393.          * any ill-formed fields.
  2394.          * @throws NullPointerException if <code>locale</code> is null.
  2395.          */
  2396.         public Builder setLocale(Locale locale) {
  2397.             try {
  2398.                 localeBuilder.setLocale(locale.baseLocale, locale.localeExtensions);
  2399.             } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
  2400.                 throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
  2401.             }
  2402.             return this;
  2403.         }
  2404.  
  2405.         /**
  2406.          * Resets the Builder to match the provided IETF BCP 47
  2407.          * language tag.  Discards the existing state.  Null and the
  2408.          * empty string cause the builder to be reset, like {@link
  2409.          * #clear}.  Grandfathered tags (see {@link
  2410.          * Locale#forLanguageTag}) are converted to their canonical
  2411.          * form before being processed.  Otherwise, the language tag
  2412.          * must be well-formed (see {@link Locale}) or an exception is
  2413.          * thrown (unlike <code>Locale.forLanguageTag</code>, which
  2414.          * just discards ill-formed and following portions of the
  2415.          * tag).
  2416.          *
  2417.          * @param languageTag the language tag
  2418.          * @return This builder.
  2419.          * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>languageTag</code> is ill-formed
  2420.          * @see Locale#forLanguageTag(String)
  2421.          */
  2422.         public Builder setLanguageTag(String languageTag) {
  2423.             ParseStatus sts = new ParseStatus();
  2424.             LanguageTag tag = LanguageTag.parse(languageTag, sts);
  2425.             if (sts.isError()) {
  2426.                 throw new IllformedLocaleException(sts.getErrorMessage(), sts.getErrorIndex());
  2427.             }
  2428.             localeBuilder.setLanguageTag(tag);
  2429.             return this;
  2430.         }
  2431.  
  2432.         /**
  2433.          * Sets the language.  If <code>language</code> is the empty string or
  2434.          * null, the language in this <code>Builder</code> is removed.  Otherwise,
  2435.          * the language must be <a href="./Locale.html#def_language">well-formed</a>
  2436.          * or an exception is thrown.
  2437.          *
  2438.          * <p>The typical language value is a two or three-letter language
  2439.          * code as defined in ISO639.
  2440.          *
  2441.          * @param language the language
  2442.          * @return This builder.
  2443.          * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>language</code> is ill-formed
  2444.          */
  2445.         public Builder setLanguage(String language) {
  2446.             try {
  2447.                 localeBuilder.setLanguage(language);
  2448.             } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
  2449.                 throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
  2450.             }
  2451.             return this;
  2452.         }
  2453.  
  2454.         /**
  2455.          * Sets the script. If <code>script</code> is null or the empty string,
  2456.          * the script in this <code>Builder</code> is removed.
  2457.          * Otherwise, the script must be <a href="./Locale.html#def_script">well-formed</a> or an
  2458.          * exception is thrown.
  2459.          *
  2460.          * <p>The typical script value is a four-letter script code as defined by ISO 15924.
  2461.          *
  2462.          * @param script the script
  2463.          * @return This builder.
  2464.          * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>script</code> is ill-formed
  2465.          */
  2466.         public Builder setScript(String script) {
  2467.             try {
  2468.                 localeBuilder.setScript(script);
  2469.             } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
  2470.                 throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
  2471.             }
  2472.             return this;
  2473.         }
  2474.  
  2475.         /**
  2476.          * Sets the region.  If region is null or the empty string, the region
  2477.          * in this <code>Builder</code> is removed.  Otherwise,
  2478.          * the region must be <a href="./Locale.html#def_region">well-formed</a> or an
  2479.          * exception is thrown.
  2480.          *
  2481.          * <p>The typical region value is a two-letter ISO 3166 code or a
  2482.          * three-digit UN M.49 area code.
  2483.          *
  2484.          * <p>The country value in the <code>Locale</code> created by the
  2485.          * <code>Builder</code> is always normalized to upper case.
  2486.          *
  2487.          * @param region the region
  2488.          * @return This builder.
  2489.          * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>region</code> is ill-formed
  2490.          */
  2491.         public Builder setRegion(String region) {
  2492.             try {
  2493.                 localeBuilder.setRegion(region);
  2494.             } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
  2495.                 throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
  2496.             }
  2497.             return this;
  2498.         }
  2499.  
  2500.         /**
  2501.          * Sets the variant.  If variant is null or the empty string, the
  2502.          * variant in this <code>Builder</code> is removed.  Otherwise, it
  2503.          * must consist of one or more <a href="./Locale.html#def_variant">well-formed</a>
  2504.          * subtags, or an exception is thrown.
  2505.          *
  2506.          * <p><b>Note:</b> This method checks if <code>variant</code>
  2507.          * satisfies the IETF BCP 47 variant subtag's syntax requirements,
  2508.          * and normalizes the value to lowercase letters.  However,
  2509.          * the <code>Locale</code> class does not impose any syntactic
  2510.          * restriction on variant, and the variant value in
  2511.          * <code>Locale</code> is case sensitive.  To set such a variant,
  2512.          * use a Locale constructor.
  2513.          *
  2514.          * @param variant the variant
  2515.          * @return This builder.
  2516.          * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>variant</code> is ill-formed
  2517.          */
  2518.         public Builder setVariant(String variant) {
  2519.             try {
  2520.                 localeBuilder.setVariant(variant);
  2521.             } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
  2522.                 throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
  2523.             }
  2524.             return this;
  2525.         }
  2526.  
  2527.         /**
  2528.          * Sets the extension for the given key. If the value is null or the
  2529.          * empty string, the extension is removed.  Otherwise, the extension
  2530.          * must be <a href="./Locale.html#def_extensions">well-formed</a> or an exception
  2531.          * is thrown.
  2532.          *
  2533.          * <p><b>Note:</b> The key {@link Locale#UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION
  2534.          * UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION} ('u') is used for the Unicode locale extension.
  2535.          * Setting a value for this key replaces any existing Unicode locale key/type
  2536.          * pairs with those defined in the extension.
  2537.          *
  2538.          * <p><b>Note:</b> The key {@link Locale#PRIVATE_USE_EXTENSION
  2539.          * PRIVATE_USE_EXTENSION} ('x') is used for the private use code. To be
  2540.          * well-formed, the value for this key needs only to have subtags of one to
  2541.          * eight alphanumeric characters, not two to eight as in the general case.
  2542.          *
  2543.          * @param key the extension key
  2544.          * @param value the extension value
  2545.          * @return This builder.
  2546.          * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>key</code> is illegal
  2547.          * or <code>value</code> is ill-formed
  2548.          * @see #setUnicodeLocaleKeyword(String, String)
  2549.          */
  2550.         public Builder setExtension(char key, String value) {
  2551.             try {
  2552.                 localeBuilder.setExtension(key, value);
  2553.             } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
  2554.                 throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
  2555.             }
  2556.             return this;
  2557.         }
  2558.  
  2559.         /**
  2560.          * Sets the Unicode locale keyword type for the given key.  If the type
  2561.          * is null, the Unicode keyword is removed.  Otherwise, the key must be
  2562.          * non-null and both key and type must be <a
  2563.          * href="./Locale.html#def_locale_extension">well-formed</a> or an exception
  2564.          * is thrown.
  2565.          *
  2566.          * <p>Keys and types are converted to lower case.
  2567.          *
  2568.          * <p><b>Note</b>:Setting the 'u' extension via {@link #setExtension}
  2569.          * replaces all Unicode locale keywords with those defined in the
  2570.          * extension.
  2571.          *
  2572.          * @param key the Unicode locale key
  2573.          * @param type the Unicode locale type
  2574.          * @return This builder.
  2575.          * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>key</code> or <code>type</code>
  2576.          * is ill-formed
  2577.          * @throws NullPointerException if <code>key</code> is null
  2578.          * @see #setExtension(char, String)
  2579.          */
  2580.         public Builder setUnicodeLocaleKeyword(String key, String type) {
  2581.             try {
  2582.                 localeBuilder.setUnicodeLocaleKeyword(key, type);
  2583.             } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
  2584.                 throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
  2585.             }
  2586.             return this;
  2587.         }
  2588.  
  2589.         /**
  2590.          * Adds a unicode locale attribute, if not already present, otherwise
  2591.          * has no effect.  The attribute must not be null and must be <a
  2592.          * href="./Locale.html#def_locale_extension">well-formed</a> or an exception
  2593.          * is thrown.
  2594.          *
  2595.          * @param attribute the attribute
  2596.          * @return This builder.
  2597.          * @throws NullPointerException if <code>attribute</code> is null
  2598.          * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>attribute</code> is ill-formed
  2599.          * @see #setExtension(char, String)
  2600.          */
  2601.         public Builder addUnicodeLocaleAttribute(String attribute) {
  2602.             try {
  2603.                 localeBuilder.addUnicodeLocaleAttribute(attribute);
  2604.             } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
  2605.                 throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
  2606.             }
  2607.             return this;
  2608.         }
  2609.  
  2610.         /**
  2611.          * Removes a unicode locale attribute, if present, otherwise has no
  2612.          * effect.  The attribute must not be null and must be <a
  2613.          * href="./Locale.html#def_locale_extension">well-formed</a> or an exception
  2614.          * is thrown.
  2615.          *
  2616.          * <p>Attribute comparision for removal is case-insensitive.
  2617.          *
  2618.          * @param attribute the attribute
  2619.          * @return This builder.
  2620.          * @throws NullPointerException if <code>attribute</code> is null
  2621.          * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>attribute</code> is ill-formed
  2622.          * @see #setExtension(char, String)
  2623.          */
  2624.         public Builder removeUnicodeLocaleAttribute(String attribute) {
  2625.             try {
  2626.                 localeBuilder.removeUnicodeLocaleAttribute(attribute);
  2627.             } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
  2628.                 throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
  2629.             }
  2630.             return this;
  2631.         }
  2632.  
  2633.         /**
  2634.          * Resets the builder to its initial, empty state.
  2635.          *
  2636.          * @return This builder.
  2637.          */
  2638.         public Builder clear() {
  2639.             localeBuilder.clear();
  2640.             return this;
  2641.         }
  2642.  
  2643.         /**
  2644.          * Resets the extensions to their initial, empty state.
  2645.          * Language, script, region and variant are unchanged.
  2646.          *
  2647.          * @return This builder.
  2648.          * @see #setExtension(char, String)
  2649.          */
  2650.         public Builder clearExtensions() {
  2651.             localeBuilder.clearExtensions();
  2652.             return this;
  2653.         }
  2654.  
  2655.         /**
  2656.          * Returns an instance of <code>Locale</code> created from the fields set
  2657.          * on this builder.
  2658.          *
  2659.          * <p>This applies the conversions listed in {@link Locale#forLanguageTag}
  2660.          * when constructing a Locale. (Grandfathered tags are handled in
  2661.          * {@link #setLanguageTag}.)
  2662.          *
  2663.          * @return A Locale.
  2664.          */
  2665.         public Locale build() {
  2666.             BaseLocale baseloc = localeBuilder.getBaseLocale();
  2667.             LocaleExtensions extensions = localeBuilder.getLocaleExtensions();
  2668.             if (extensions == null && baseloc.getVariant().length() > 0) {
  2669.                 extensions = getCompatibilityExtensions(baseloc.getLanguage(), baseloc.getScript(),
  2670.                         baseloc.getRegion(), baseloc.getVariant());
  2671.             }
  2672.             return Locale.getInstance(baseloc, extensions);
  2673.         }
  2674.     }
  2675.  
  2676.     /**
  2677.      * This enum provides constants to select a filtering mode for locale
  2678.      * matching. Refer to <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647">RFC 4647
  2679.      * Matching of Language Tags</a> for details.
  2680.      *
  2681.      * <p>As an example, think of two Language Priority Lists each of which
  2682.      * includes only one language range and a set of following language tags:
  2683.      *
  2684.      * <pre>
  2685.      *    de (German)
  2686.      *    de-DE (German, Germany)
  2687.      *    de-Deva (German, in Devanagari script)
  2688.      *    de-Deva-DE (German, in Devanagari script, Germany)
  2689.      *    de-DE-1996 (German, Germany, orthography of 1996)
  2690.      *    de-Latn-DE (German, in Latin script, Germany)
  2691.      *    de-Latn-DE-1996 (German, in Latin script, Germany, orthography of 1996)
  2692.      * </pre>
  2693.      *
  2694.      * The filtering method will behave as follows:
  2695.      *
  2696.      * <table cellpadding=2 summary="Filtering method behavior">
  2697.      * <tr>
  2698.      * <th>Filtering Mode</th>
  2699.      * <th>Language Priority List: {@code "de-DE"}</th>
  2700.      * <th>Language Priority List: {@code "de-*-DE"}</th>
  2701.      * </tr>
  2702.      * <tr>
  2703.      * <td valign=top>
  2704.      * {@link FilteringMode#AUTOSELECT_FILTERING AUTOSELECT_FILTERING}
  2705.      * </td>
  2706.      * <td valign=top>
  2707.      * Performs <em>basic</em> filtering and returns {@code "de-DE"} and
  2708.      * {@code "de-DE-1996"}.
  2709.      * </td>
  2710.      * <td valign=top>
  2711.      * Performs <em>extended</em> filtering and returns {@code "de-DE"},
  2712.      * {@code "de-Deva-DE"}, {@code "de-DE-1996"}, {@code "de-Latn-DE"}, and
  2713.      * {@code "de-Latn-DE-1996"}.
  2714.      * </td>
  2715.      * </tr>
  2716.      * <tr>
  2717.      * <td valign=top>
  2718.      * {@link FilteringMode#EXTENDED_FILTERING EXTENDED_FILTERING}
  2719.      * </td>
  2720.      * <td valign=top>
  2721.      * Performs <em>extended</em> filtering and returns {@code "de-DE"},
  2722.      * {@code "de-Deva-DE"}, {@code "de-DE-1996"}, {@code "de-Latn-DE"}, and
  2723.      * {@code "de-Latn-DE-1996"}.
  2724.      * </td>
  2725.      * <td valign=top>Same as above.</td>
  2726.      * </tr>
  2727.      * <tr>
  2728.      * <td valign=top>
  2729.      * {@link FilteringMode#IGNORE_EXTENDED_RANGES IGNORE_EXTENDED_RANGES}
  2730.      * </td>
  2731.      * <td valign=top>
  2732.      * Performs <em>basic</em> filtering and returns {@code "de-DE"} and
  2733.      * {@code "de-DE-1996"}.
  2734.      * </td>
  2735.      * <td valign=top>
  2736.      * Performs <em>basic</em> filtering and returns {@code null} because
  2737.      * nothing matches.
  2738.      * </td>
  2739.      * </tr>
  2740.      * <tr>
  2741.      * <td valign=top>
  2742.      * {@link FilteringMode#MAP_EXTENDED_RANGES MAP_EXTENDED_RANGES}
  2743.      * </td>
  2744.      * <td valign=top>Same as above.</td>
  2745.      * <td valign=top>
  2746.      * Performs <em>basic</em> filtering and returns {@code "de-DE"} and
  2747.      * {@code "de-DE-1996"} because {@code "de-*-DE"} is mapped to
  2748.      * {@code "de-DE"}.
  2749.      * </td>
  2750.      * </tr>
  2751.      * <tr>
  2752.      * <td valign=top>
  2753.      * {@link FilteringMode#REJECT_EXTENDED_RANGES REJECT_EXTENDED_RANGES}
  2754.      * </td>
  2755.      * <td valign=top>Same as above.</td>
  2756.      * <td valign=top>
  2757.      * Throws {@link IllegalArgumentException} because {@code "de-*-DE"} is
  2758.      * not a valid basic language range.
  2759.      * </td>
  2760.      * </tr>
  2761.      * </table>
  2762.      *
  2763.      * @see #filter(List, Collection, FilteringMode)
  2764.      * @see #filterTags(List, Collection, FilteringMode)
  2765.      *
  2766.      * @since 1.8
  2767.      */
  2768.     public static enum FilteringMode {
  2769.         /**
  2770.          * Specifies automatic filtering mode based on the given Language
  2771.          * Priority List consisting of language ranges. If all of the ranges
  2772.          * are basic, basic filtering is selected. Otherwise, extended
  2773.          * filtering is selected.
  2774.          */
  2775.         AUTOSELECT_FILTERING,
  2776.  
  2777.         /**
  2778.          * Specifies extended filtering.
  2779.          */
  2780.         EXTENDED_FILTERING,
  2781.  
  2782.         /**
  2783.          * Specifies basic filtering: Note that any extended language ranges
  2784.          * included in the given Language Priority List are ignored.
  2785.          */
  2786.         IGNORE_EXTENDED_RANGES,
  2787.  
  2788.         /**
  2789.          * Specifies basic filtering: If any extended language ranges are
  2790.          * included in the given Language Priority List, they are mapped to the
  2791.          * basic language range. Specifically, a language range starting with a
  2792.          * subtag {@code "*"} is treated as a language range {@code "*"}. For
  2793.          * example, {@code "*-US"} is treated as {@code "*"}. If {@code "*"} is
  2794.          * not the first subtag, {@code "*"} and extra {@code "-"} are removed.
  2795.          * For example, {@code "ja-*-JP"} is mapped to {@code "ja-JP"}.
  2796.          */
  2797.         MAP_EXTENDED_RANGES,
  2798.  
  2799.         /**
  2800.          * Specifies basic filtering: If any extended language ranges are
  2801.          * included in the given Language Priority List, the list is rejected
  2802.          * and the filtering method throws {@link IllegalArgumentException}.
  2803.          */
  2804.         REJECT_EXTENDED_RANGES
  2805.     };
  2806.  
  2807.     /**
  2808.      * This class expresses a <em>Language Range</em> defined in
  2809.      * <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647">RFC 4647 Matching of
  2810.      * Language Tags</a>. A language range is an identifier which is used to
  2811.      * select language tag(s) meeting specific requirements by using the
  2812.      * mechanisms described in <a href="Locale.html#LocaleMatching">Locale
  2813.      * Matching</a>. A list which represents a user's preferences and consists
  2814.      * of language ranges is called a <em>Language Priority List</em>.
  2815.      *
  2816.      * <p>There are two types of language ranges: basic and extended. In RFC
  2817.      * 4647, the syntax of language ranges is expressed in
  2818.      * <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4234">ABNF</a> as follows:
  2819.      * <blockquote>
  2820.      * <pre>
  2821.      *     basic-language-range    = (1*8ALPHA *("-" 1*8alphanum)) / "*"
  2822.      *     extended-language-range = (1*8ALPHA / "*")
  2823.      *                               *("-" (1*8alphanum / "*"))
  2824.      *     alphanum                = ALPHA / DIGIT
  2825.      * </pre>
  2826.      * </blockquote>
  2827.      * For example, {@code "en"} (English), {@code "ja-JP"} (Japanese, Japan),
  2828.      * {@code "*"} (special language range which matches any language tag) are
  2829.      * basic language ranges, whereas {@code "*-CH"} (any languages,
  2830.      * Switzerland), {@code "es-*"} (Spanish, any regions), and
  2831.      * {@code "zh-Hant-*"} (Traditional Chinese, any regions) are extended
  2832.      * language ranges.
  2833.      *
  2834.      * @see #filter
  2835.      * @see #filterTags
  2836.      * @see #lookup
  2837.      * @see #lookupTag
  2838.      *
  2839.      * @since 1.8
  2840.      */
  2841.     public static final class LanguageRange {
  2842.  
  2843.        /**
  2844.         * A constant holding the maximum value of weight, 1.0, which indicates
  2845.         * that the language range is a good fit for the user.
  2846.         */
  2847.         public static final double MAX_WEIGHT = 1.0;
  2848.  
  2849.        /**
  2850.         * A constant holding the minimum value of weight, 0.0, which indicates
  2851.         * that the language range is not a good fit for the user.
  2852.         */
  2853.         public static final double MIN_WEIGHT = 0.0;
  2854.  
  2855.         private final String range;
  2856.         private final double weight;
  2857.  
  2858.         private volatile int hash = 0;
  2859.  
  2860.         /**
  2861.          * Constructs a {@code LanguageRange} using the given {@code range}.
  2862.          * Note that no validation is done against the IANA Language Subtag
  2863.          * Registry at time of construction.
  2864.          *
  2865.          * <p>This is equivalent to {@code LanguageRange(range, MAX_WEIGHT)}.
  2866.          *
  2867.          * @param range a language range
  2868.          * @throws NullPointerException if the given {@code range} is
  2869.          *     {@code null}
  2870.          */
  2871.         public LanguageRange(String range) {
  2872.             this(range, MAX_WEIGHT);
  2873.         }
  2874.  
  2875.         /**
  2876.          * Constructs a {@code LanguageRange} using the given {@code range} and
  2877.          * {@code weight}. Note that no validation is done against the IANA
  2878.          * Language Subtag Registry at time of construction.
  2879.          *
  2880.          * @param range  a language range
  2881.          * @param weight a weight value between {@code MIN_WEIGHT} and
  2882.          *     {@code MAX_WEIGHT}
  2883.          * @throws NullPointerException if the given {@code range} is
  2884.          *     {@code null}
  2885.          * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the given {@code weight} is less
  2886.          *     than {@code MIN_WEIGHT} or greater than {@code MAX_WEIGHT}
  2887.          */
  2888.         public LanguageRange(String range, double weight) {
  2889.             if (range == null) {
  2890.                 throw new NullPointerException();
  2891.             }
  2892.             if (weight < MIN_WEIGHT || weight > MAX_WEIGHT) {
  2893.                 throw new IllegalArgumentException("weight=" + weight);
  2894.             }
  2895.  
  2896.             range = range.toLowerCase();
  2897.  
  2898.             // Do syntax check.
  2899.             boolean isIllFormed = false;
  2900.             String[] subtags = range.split("-");
  2901.             if (isSubtagIllFormed(subtags[0], true)
  2902.                 || range.endsWith("-")) {
  2903.                 isIllFormed = true;
  2904.             } else {
  2905.                 for (int i = 1; i < subtags.length; i++) {
  2906.                     if (isSubtagIllFormed(subtags[i], false)) {
  2907.                         isIllFormed = true;
  2908.                         break;
  2909.                     }
  2910.                 }
  2911.             }
  2912.             if (isIllFormed) {
  2913.                 throw new IllegalArgumentException("range=" + range);
  2914.             }
  2915.  
  2916.             this.range = range;
  2917.             this.weight = weight;
  2918.         }
  2919.  
  2920.         private static boolean isSubtagIllFormed(String subtag,
  2921.                                                  boolean isFirstSubtag) {
  2922.             if (subtag.equals("") || subtag.length() > 8) {
  2923.                 return true;
  2924.             } else if (subtag.equals("*")) {
  2925.                 return false;
  2926.             }
  2927.             char[] charArray = subtag.toCharArray();
  2928.             if (isFirstSubtag) { // ALPHA
  2929.                 for (char c : charArray) {
  2930.                     if (c < 'a' || c > 'z') {
  2931.                         return true;
  2932.                     }
  2933.                 }
  2934.             } else { // ALPHA / DIGIT
  2935.                 for (char c : charArray) {
  2936.                     if (c < '0' || (c > '9' && c < 'a') || c > 'z') {
  2937.                         return true;
  2938.                     }
  2939.                 }
  2940.             }
  2941.             return false;
  2942.         }
  2943.  
  2944.         /**
  2945.          * Returns the language range of this {@code LanguageRange}.
  2946.          *
  2947.          * @return the language range.
  2948.          */
  2949.         public String getRange() {
  2950.             return range;
  2951.         }
  2952.  
  2953.         /**
  2954.          * Returns the weight of this {@code LanguageRange}.
  2955.          *
  2956.          * @return the weight value.
  2957.          */
  2958.         public double getWeight() {
  2959.             return weight;
  2960.         }
  2961.  
  2962.         /**
  2963.          * Parses the given {@code ranges} to generate a Language Priority List.
  2964.          *
  2965.          * <p>This method performs a syntactic check for each language range in
  2966.          * the given {@code ranges} but doesn't do validation using the IANA
  2967.          * Language Subtag Registry.
  2968.          *
  2969.          * <p>The {@code ranges} to be given can take one of the following
  2970.          * forms:
  2971.          *
  2972.          * <pre>
  2973.          *   "Accept-Language: ja,en;q=0.4"  (weighted list with Accept-Language prefix)
  2974.          *   "ja,en;q=0.4"                   (weighted list)
  2975.          *   "ja,en"                         (prioritized list)
  2976.          * </pre>
  2977.          *
  2978.          * In a weighted list, each language range is given a weight value.
  2979.          * The weight value is identical to the "quality value" in
  2980.          * <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616">RFC 2616</a>, and it
  2981.          * expresses how much the user prefers  the language. A weight value is
  2982.          * specified after a corresponding language range followed by
  2983.          * {@code ";q="}, and the default weight value is {@code MAX_WEIGHT}
  2984.          * when it is omitted.
  2985.          *
  2986.          * <p>Unlike a weighted list, language ranges in a prioritized list
  2987.          * are sorted in the descending order based on its priority. The first
  2988.          * language range has the highest priority and meets the user's
  2989.          * preference most.
  2990.          *
  2991.          * <p>In either case, language ranges are sorted in descending order in
  2992.          * the Language Priority List based on priority or weight. If a
  2993.          * language range appears in the given {@code ranges} more than once,
  2994.          * only the first one is included on the Language Priority List.
  2995.          *
  2996.          * <p>The returned list consists of language ranges from the given
  2997.          * {@code ranges} and their equivalents found in the IANA Language
  2998.          * Subtag Registry. For example, if the given {@code ranges} is
  2999.          * {@code "Accept-Language: iw,en-us;q=0.7,en;q=0.3"}, the elements in
  3000.          * the list to be returned are:
  3001.          *
  3002.          * <pre>
  3003.          *  <b>Range</b>                                   <b>Weight</b>
  3004.          *    "iw" (older tag for Hebrew)             1.0
  3005.          *    "he" (new preferred code for Hebrew)    1.0
  3006.          *    "en-us" (English, United States)        0.7
  3007.          *    "en" (English)                          0.3
  3008.          * </pre>
  3009.          *
  3010.          * Two language ranges, {@code "iw"} and {@code "he"}, have the same
  3011.          * highest priority in the list. By adding {@code "he"} to the user's
  3012.          * Language Priority List, locale-matching method can find Hebrew as a
  3013.          * matching locale (or language tag) even if the application or system
  3014.          * offers only {@code "he"} as a supported locale (or language tag).
  3015.          *
  3016.          * @param ranges a list of comma-separated language ranges or a list of
  3017.          *     language ranges in the form of the "Accept-Language" header
  3018.          *     defined in <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616">RFC
  3019.          *     2616</a>
  3020.          * @return a Language Priority List consisting of language ranges
  3021.          *     included in the given {@code ranges} and their equivalent
  3022.          *     language ranges if available. The list is modifiable.
  3023.          * @throws NullPointerException if {@code ranges} is null
  3024.          * @throws IllegalArgumentException if a language range or a weight
  3025.          *     found in the given {@code ranges} is ill-formed
  3026.          */
  3027.         public static List<LanguageRange> parse(String ranges) {
  3028.             return LocaleMatcher.parse(ranges);
  3029.         }
  3030.  
  3031.         /**
  3032.          * Parses the given {@code ranges} to generate a Language Priority
  3033.          * List, and then customizes the list using the given {@code map}.
  3034.          * This method is equivalent to
  3035.          * {@code mapEquivalents(parse(ranges), map)}.
  3036.          *
  3037.          * @param ranges a list of comma-separated language ranges or a list
  3038.          *     of language ranges in the form of the "Accept-Language" header
  3039.          *     defined in <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616">RFC
  3040.          *     2616</a>
  3041.          * @param map a map containing information to customize language ranges
  3042.          * @return a Language Priority List with customization. The list is
  3043.          *     modifiable.
  3044.          * @throws NullPointerException if {@code ranges} is null
  3045.          * @throws IllegalArgumentException if a language range or a weight
  3046.          *     found in the given {@code ranges} is ill-formed
  3047.          * @see #parse(String)
  3048.          * @see #mapEquivalents
  3049.          */
  3050.         public static List<LanguageRange> parse(String ranges,
  3051.                                                 Map<String, List<String>> map) {
  3052.             return mapEquivalents(parse(ranges), map);
  3053.         }
  3054.  
  3055.         /**
  3056.          * Generates a new customized Language Priority List using the given
  3057.          * {@code priorityList} and {@code map}. If the given {@code map} is
  3058.          * empty, this method returns a copy of the given {@code priorityList}.
  3059.          *
  3060.          * <p>In the map, a key represents a language range whereas a value is
  3061.          * a list of equivalents of it. {@code '*'} cannot be used in the map.
  3062.          * Each equivalent language range has the same weight value as its
  3063.          * original language range.
  3064.          *
  3065.          * <pre>
  3066.          *  An example of map:
  3067.          *    <b>Key</b>                            <b>Value</b>
  3068.          *      "zh" (Chinese)                 "zh",
  3069.          *                                     "zh-Hans"(Simplified Chinese)
  3070.          *      "zh-HK" (Chinese, Hong Kong)   "zh-HK"
  3071.          *      "zh-TW" (Chinese, Taiwan)      "zh-TW"
  3072.          * </pre>
  3073.          *
  3074.          * The customization is performed after modification using the IANA
  3075.          * Language Subtag Registry.
  3076.          *
  3077.          * <p>For example, if a user's Language Priority List consists of five
  3078.          * language ranges ({@code "zh"}, {@code "zh-CN"}, {@code "en"},
  3079.          * {@code "zh-TW"}, and {@code "zh-HK"}), the newly generated Language
  3080.          * Priority List which is customized using the above map example will
  3081.          * consists of {@code "zh"}, {@code "zh-Hans"}, {@code "zh-CN"},
  3082.          * {@code "zh-Hans-CN"}, {@code "en"}, {@code "zh-TW"}, and
  3083.          * {@code "zh-HK"}.
  3084.          *
  3085.          * <p>{@code "zh-HK"} and {@code "zh-TW"} aren't converted to
  3086.          * {@code "zh-Hans-HK"} nor {@code "zh-Hans-TW"} even if they are
  3087.          * included in the Language Priority List. In this example, mapping
  3088.          * is used to clearly distinguish Simplified Chinese and Traditional
  3089.          * Chinese.
  3090.          *
  3091.          * <p>If the {@code "zh"}-to-{@code "zh"} mapping isn't included in the
  3092.          * map, a simple replacement will be performed and the customized list
  3093.          * won't include {@code "zh"} and {@code "zh-CN"}.
  3094.          *
  3095.          * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List
  3096.          * @param map a map containing information to customize language ranges
  3097.          * @return a new Language Priority List with customization. The list is
  3098.          *     modifiable.
  3099.          * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} is {@code null}
  3100.          * @see #parse(String, Map)
  3101.          */
  3102.         public static List<LanguageRange> mapEquivalents(
  3103.                                               List<LanguageRange>priorityList,
  3104.                                               Map<String, List<String>> map) {
  3105.             return LocaleMatcher.mapEquivalents(priorityList, map);
  3106.         }
  3107.  
  3108.         /**
  3109.          * Returns a hash code value for the object.
  3110.          *
  3111.          * @return  a hash code value for this object.
  3112.          */
  3113.         @Override
  3114.         public int hashCode() {
  3115.             if (hash == 0) {
  3116.                 int result = 17;
  3117.                 result = 37*result + range.hashCode();
  3118.                 long bitsWeight = Double.doubleToLongBits(weight);
  3119.                 result = 37*result + (int)(bitsWeight ^ (bitsWeight >>> 32));
  3120.                 hash = result;
  3121.             }
  3122.             return hash;
  3123.         }
  3124.  
  3125.         /**
  3126.          * Compares this object to the specified object. The result is true if
  3127.          * and only if the argument is not {@code null} and is a
  3128.          * {@code LanguageRange} object that contains the same {@code range}
  3129.          * and {@code weight} values as this object.
  3130.          *
  3131.          * @param obj the object to compare with
  3132.          * @return  {@code true} if this object's {@code range} and
  3133.          *     {@code weight} are the same as the {@code obj}'s; {@code false}
  3134.          *     otherwise.
  3135.          */
  3136.         @Override
  3137.         public boolean equals(Object obj) {
  3138.             if (this == obj) {
  3139.                 return true;
  3140.             }
  3141.             if (!(obj instanceof LanguageRange)) {
  3142.                 return false;
  3143.             }
  3144.             LanguageRange other = (LanguageRange)obj;
  3145.             return hash == other.hash
  3146.                    && range.equals(other.range)
  3147.                    && weight == other.weight;
  3148.         }
  3149.     }
  3150.  
  3151.     /**
  3152.      * Returns a list of matching {@code Locale} instances using the filtering
  3153.      * mechanism defined in RFC 4647.
  3154.      *
  3155.      * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
  3156.      *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
  3157.      * @param locales {@code Locale} instances used for matching
  3158.      * @param mode filtering mode
  3159.      * @return a list of {@code Locale} instances for matching language tags
  3160.      *     sorted in descending order based on priority or weight, or an empty
  3161.      *     list if nothing matches. The list is modifiable.
  3162.      * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code locales}
  3163.      *     is {@code null}
  3164.      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if one or more extended language ranges
  3165.      *     are included in the given list when
  3166.      *     {@link FilteringMode#REJECT_EXTENDED_RANGES} is specified
  3167.      *
  3168.      * @since 1.8
  3169.      */
  3170.     public static List<Locale> filter(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
  3171.                                       Collection<Locale> locales,
  3172.                                       FilteringMode mode) {
  3173.         return LocaleMatcher.filter(priorityList, locales, mode);
  3174.     }
  3175.  
  3176.     /**
  3177.      * Returns a list of matching {@code Locale} instances using the filtering
  3178.      * mechanism defined in RFC 4647. This is equivalent to
  3179.      * {@link #filter(List, Collection, FilteringMode)} when {@code mode} is
  3180.      * {@link FilteringMode#AUTOSELECT_FILTERING}.
  3181.      *
  3182.      * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
  3183.      *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
  3184.      * @param locales {@code Locale} instances used for matching
  3185.      * @return a list of {@code Locale} instances for matching language tags
  3186.      *     sorted in descending order based on priority or weight, or an empty
  3187.      *     list if nothing matches. The list is modifiable.
  3188.      * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code locales}
  3189.      *     is {@code null}
  3190.      *
  3191.      * @since 1.8
  3192.      */
  3193.     public static List<Locale> filter(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
  3194.                                       Collection<Locale> locales) {
  3195.         return filter(priorityList, locales, FilteringMode.AUTOSELECT_FILTERING);
  3196.     }
  3197.  
  3198.     /**
  3199.      * Returns a list of matching languages tags using the basic filtering
  3200.      * mechanism defined in RFC 4647.
  3201.      *
  3202.      * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
  3203.      *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
  3204.      * @param tags language tags
  3205.      * @param mode filtering mode
  3206.      * @return a list of matching language tags sorted in descending order
  3207.      *     based on priority or weight, or an empty list if nothing matches.
  3208.      *     The list is modifiable.
  3209.      * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code tags} is
  3210.      *     {@code null}
  3211.      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if one or more extended language ranges
  3212.      *     are included in the given list when
  3213.      *     {@link FilteringMode#REJECT_EXTENDED_RANGES} is specified
  3214.      *
  3215.      * @since 1.8
  3216.      */
  3217.     public static List<String> filterTags(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
  3218.                                           Collection<String> tags,
  3219.                                           FilteringMode mode) {
  3220.         return LocaleMatcher.filterTags(priorityList, tags, mode);
  3221.     }
  3222.  
  3223.     /**
  3224.      * Returns a list of matching languages tags using the basic filtering
  3225.      * mechanism defined in RFC 4647. This is equivalent to
  3226.      * {@link #filterTags(List, Collection, FilteringMode)} when {@code mode}
  3227.      * is {@link FilteringMode#AUTOSELECT_FILTERING}.
  3228.      *
  3229.      * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
  3230.      *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
  3231.      * @param tags language tags
  3232.      * @return a list of matching language tags sorted in descending order
  3233.      *     based on priority or weight, or an empty list if nothing matches.
  3234.      *     The list is modifiable.
  3235.      * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code tags} is
  3236.      *     {@code null}
  3237.      *
  3238.      * @since 1.8
  3239.      */
  3240.     public static List<String> filterTags(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
  3241.                                           Collection<String> tags) {
  3242.         return filterTags(priorityList, tags, FilteringMode.AUTOSELECT_FILTERING);
  3243.     }
  3244.  
  3245.     /**
  3246.      * Returns a {@code Locale} instance for the best-matching language
  3247.      * tag using the lookup mechanism defined in RFC 4647.
  3248.      *
  3249.      * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
  3250.      *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
  3251.      * @param locales {@code Locale} instances used for matching
  3252.      * @return the best matching <code>Locale</code> instance chosen based on
  3253.      *     priority or weight, or {@code null} if nothing matches.
  3254.      * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code tags} is
  3255.      *     {@code null}
  3256.      *
  3257.      * @since 1.8
  3258.      */
  3259.     public static Locale lookup(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
  3260.                                 Collection<Locale> locales) {
  3261.         return LocaleMatcher.lookup(priorityList, locales);
  3262.     }
  3263.  
  3264.     /**
  3265.      * Returns the best-matching language tag using the lookup mechanism
  3266.      * defined in RFC 4647.
  3267.      *
  3268.      * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
  3269.      *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
  3270.      * @param tags language tangs used for matching
  3271.      * @return the best matching language tag chosen based on priority or
  3272.      *     weight, or {@code null} if nothing matches.
  3273.      * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code tags} is
  3274.      *     {@code null}
  3275.      *
  3276.      * @since 1.8
  3277.      */
  3278.     public static String lookupTag(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
  3279.                                    Collection<String> tags) {
  3280.         return LocaleMatcher.lookupTag(priorityList, tags);
  3281.     }
  3282.  
  3283. }
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