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* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
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* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
* accompanied this code).
*
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/*
* (C) Copyright Taligent, Inc. 1996 - All Rights Reserved
* (C) Copyright IBM Corp. 1996 - All Rights Reserved
*
* The original version of this source code and documentation is copyrighted
* and owned by Taligent, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of IBM. These
* materials are provided under terms of a License Agreement between Taligent
* and Sun. This technology is protected by multiple US and International
* patents. This notice and attribution to Taligent may not be removed.
* Taligent is a registered trademark of Taligent, Inc.
*
*/
package java.text;
/**
* A CollationKey
represents a String
under the
* rules of a specific Collator
object. Comparing two
* CollationKey
s returns the relative order of the
* String
s they represent. Using CollationKey
s
* to compare String
s is generally faster than using
* Collator.compare
. Thus, when the String
s
* must be compared multiple times, for example when sorting a list
* of String
s. It's more efficient to use CollationKey
s.
*
*
* You can not create CollationKey
s directly. Rather,
* generate them by calling Collator.getCollationKey
.
* You can only compare CollationKey
s generated from
* the same Collator
object.
*
*
* Generating a CollationKey
for a String
* involves examining the entire String
* and converting it to series of bits that can be compared bitwise. This
* allows fast comparisons once the keys are generated. The cost of generating
* keys is recouped in faster comparisons when String
s need
* to be compared many times. On the other hand, the result of a comparison
* is often determined by the first couple of characters of each String
.
* Collator.compare
examines only as many characters as it needs which
* allows it to be faster when doing single comparisons.
*
* The following example shows how CollationKey
s might be used
* to sort a list of String
s.
*
** * @see Collator * @see RuleBasedCollator * @author Helena Shih */ public abstract class CollationKey implements Comparable{@code * // Create an array of CollationKeys for the Strings to be sorted. * Collator myCollator = Collator.getInstance(); * CollationKey[] keys = new CollationKey[3]; * keys[0] = myCollator.getCollationKey("Tom"); * keys[1] = myCollator.getCollationKey("Dick"); * keys[2] = myCollator.getCollationKey("Harry"); * sort(keys); * * //... * * // Inside body of sort routine, compare keys this way * if (keys[i].compareTo(keys[j]) > 0) * // swap keys[i] and keys[j] * * //... * * // Finally, when we've returned from sort. * System.out.println(keys[0].getSourceString()); * System.out.println(keys[1].getSourceString()); * System.out.println(keys[2].getSourceString()); * }*