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Checklist (The Java™ Tutorials >
Internationalization > Introduction)
Home Page
>
Internationalization
>
Introduction
Checklist
Many programs are not internationalized when first written. These
programs may have started as prototypes, or perhaps they were not
intended for international distribution. If you must internationalize
an existing program, take the following steps:
Identify Culturally Dependent Data
Text messages are the most obvious form of data that varies with
culture. However, other types of data may vary with region or language.
The following list contains examples of culturally dependent data:
- Messages
- Labels on GUI components
- Online help
- Sounds
- Colors
- Graphics
- Icons
- Dates
- Times
- Numbers
- Currencies
- Measurements
- Phone numbers
- Honorifics and personal titles
- Postal addresses
- Page layouts
Isolate Translatable Text in Resource Bundles
Translation is costly. You can help reduce costs by isolating the text
that must be translated in ResourceBundle objects.
Translatable text includes status messages, error messages, log file
entries, and GUI component labels. This text is hardcoded into programs
that haven't been internationalized. You need to locate all occurrences
of hardcoded text that is displayed to end users. For example, you
should clean up code like this:
String buttonLabel = "OK";
...
JButton okButton = new JButton(buttonLabel);
See the section
Isolating Locale-Specific Data
for details.
Deal with Compound Messages
Compound messages contain variable data. In the message "The disk
contains 1100 files." the integer 1100 may vary. This message is
difficult to translate because the position of the integer in the
sentence is not the same in all languages. The following message is not
translatable, because the order of the sentence elements is hardcoded
by concatenation:
Integer fileCount;
...
String diskStatus = "The disk contains " + fileCount.toString()
+ " files.";
Whenever possible, you should avoid constructing compound messages,
because they are difficult to translate. However, if your application
requires compound messages, you can handle them with the techniques
described in the section
Messages.
Format Numbers and Currencies
If your application displays numbers and currencies, you must format
them in a locale-independent manner. The following code is not yet
internationalized, because it will not display the number correctly in
all countries:
Double amount;
TextField amountField;
...
String displayAmount = amount.toString();
amountField.setText(displayAmount);
You should replace the preceding code with a routine that formats the
number correctly. The Java programming language provides several
classes that format numbers and currencies. These classes are discussed
in the section
Numbers and Currencies.
Format Dates and Times
Date and time formats differ with region and language. If your code
contains statements like the following, you need to change it:
Date currentDate = new Date();
TextField dateField;
...
String dateString = currentDate.toString();
dateField.setText(dateString);
If you use the date-formatting classes, your application can display
dates and times correctly around the world. For examples and
instructions, see the section
Dates and Times.
Use Unicode Character Properties
The following code tries to verify that a character is a letter:
char ch;
...
if ((ch >= 'a' && ch <= 'z') ||
(ch >= 'A' && ch <= 'Z')) // WRONG!
Watch out for code like this, because it won't work with languages
other than English. For example, the if statement misses
the character ü in the German word Grün.
The Character comparison methods use the Unicode standard
to identify character properties. Thus you should replace the previous
code with the following:
char ch;
...
if (Character.isLetter(ch))
For more information on the Character comparison methods,
see the section
Checking Character Properties.
Compare Strings Properly
When sorting text you often compare strings. If the text is displayed,
you shouldn't use the comparison methods of the String
class. A program that hasn't been internationalized might compare
strings as follows:
String target;
String candidate;
...
if (target.equals(candidate)) {
...
if (target.compareTo(candidate) < 0) {
...
The String.equals and String.compareTo
methods perform binary comparisons, which are ineffective when sorting
in most languages. Instead you should use the Collator
class, which is described in the section
Comparing Strings.
Convert Non-Unicode Text
Characters in the Java programming language are encoded in Unicode. If
your application handles non-Unicode text, you might need to translate
it into Unicode. For more information, see the section
Converting Non-Unicode Text.
JAVA, JSP, SERVLETS, TOMCAT, SERVLETS MANAGER,
Private JVM (Java Virtual Machine),
Private Tomcat Server
Alden Hosting offers private JVM (Java Virtual Machine), Java Server Pages (JSP), Servlets, and Servlets Manager with our Web Hosting Plans
WEB 4 PLAN and
WEB 5 PLAN ,
WEB 6 PLAN .
At Alden Hosting we eat and breathe Java! We are the industry leader in providing
affordable, quality and efficient Java web hosting in the shared hosting marketplace.
All our sites run on our Java hosing platform configured for
optimum performance using Java 1.6, Tomcat 6.0.X, MySQL 5.0.x, Apache 2.2.xx and web
application frameworks such as Struts, Hibernate, Cocoon, Ant, etc.
We offer only one type of Java hosting - Private Tomcat. Hosting accounts on the Private
Tomcat environment get their very own Tomcat server. You can start and re-start
your entire Tomcat server yourself.
|