public class TimeFormat extends Format
The format is expressed in a string as follows:
May not handle all cases, and formats... ;-) Safest is: Always delimiters between the minutes (m) and seconds (s) part.
Known bugs:
The last character in the formatString is not escaped, while it should be. The first character after an escaped character is escaped while is shouldn't be.
This is not a 100% compatible implementation of a java.text.Format.
Time,
Serialized FormFormat.Field| Modifier and Type | Field and Description |
|---|---|
protected String |
formatString |
protected com.twelvemonkeys.util.TimeFormatter[] |
formatter
The formatter array.
|
| Constructor and Description |
|---|
TimeFormat(String pStr)
Creates a new TimeFormat with the given formatString,
|
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
StringBuffer |
format(Object pObj,
StringBuffer pToAppendTo,
FieldPosition pPos)
DUMMY IMPLEMENTATION!!
|
String |
format(Time pTime)
Formats the the given time, using this format.
|
String |
getFormatString()
Gets the format string.
|
static TimeFormat |
getInstance()
DUMMY IMPLEMENTATION!!
|
Time |
parse(String pStr)
Parses a Time, according to this format.
|
Object |
parseObject(String pStr,
ParsePosition pStatus)
DUMMY IMPLEMENTATION!!
|
clone, format, formatToCharacterIterator, parseObjectprotected String formatString
protected com.twelvemonkeys.util.TimeFormatter[] formatter
public TimeFormat(String pStr)
public static TimeFormat getInstance()
public String getFormatString()
public StringBuffer format(Object pObj, StringBuffer pToAppendTo, FieldPosition pPos)
public Object parseObject(String pStr, ParsePosition pStatus)
parseObject in class FormatCopyright © 2024. All rights reserved.