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DecimalFormatSymbols

public class DecimalFormatSymbols
extends Object implements Cloneable, Serializable

java.lang.Object
   ↳ android.icu.text.DecimalFormatSymbols


[icu enhancement] ICU's replacement for DecimalFormatSymbols. Methods, fields, and other functionality specific to ICU are labeled '[icu]'. This class represents the set of symbols (such as the decimal separator, the grouping separator, and so on) needed by DecimalFormat to format numbers. DecimalFormat creates for itself an instance of DecimalFormatSymbols from its locale data. If you need to change any of these symbols, you can get the DecimalFormatSymbols object from your DecimalFormat and modify it.

See also:

Summary

Constants

int CURRENCY_SPC_CURRENCY_MATCH

[icu] Indicates the currency match pattern used in getPatternForCurrencySpacing(int, boolean).

int CURRENCY_SPC_INSERT

[icu] Indicates the insertion value used in getPatternForCurrencySpacing(int, boolean).

int CURRENCY_SPC_SURROUNDING_MATCH

[icu] Indicates the surrounding match pattern used in getPatternForCurrencySpacing(int, boolean).

Public constructors

DecimalFormatSymbols()

Creates a DecimalFormatSymbols object for the default FORMAT locale.

DecimalFormatSymbols(Locale locale)

Creates a DecimalFormatSymbols object for the given locale.

DecimalFormatSymbols(ULocale locale)

[icu] Creates a DecimalFormatSymbols object for the given locale.

Public methods

Object clone()

Creates and returns a copy of this object.

boolean equals(Object obj)

Indicates whether some other object is "equal to" this one.

static DecimalFormatSymbols forNumberingSystem(ULocale locale, NumberingSystem ns)

[icu] Returns a DecimalFormatSymbols instance for the given locale with digits and symbols corresponding to the given NumberingSystem.

static DecimalFormatSymbols forNumberingSystem(Locale locale, NumberingSystem ns)

[icu] Returns a DecimalFormatSymbols instance for the given locale with digits and symbols corresponding to the given NumberingSystem.

static Locale[] getAvailableLocales()

Returns an array of all locales for which the getInstance methods of this class can return localized instances.

Currency getCurrency()

Returns the currency symbol, for DecimalFormatSymbols#getCurrency() API compatibility only.

String getCurrencySymbol()

Returns the string denoting the local currency.

char getDecimalSeparator()

Returns the character used for decimal sign.

String getDecimalSeparatorString()

[icu] Returns the string used for decimal sign.

char getDigit()

Returns the character used for a digit in a pattern.

String[] getDigitStrings()

[icu] Returns the array of strings used as digits, in order from 0 through 9

char[] getDigits()

Returns the array of characters used as digits, in order from 0 through 9

String getExponentMultiplicationSign()

Returns the multiplication sign

String getExponentSeparator()

[icu] Returns the string used to separate the mantissa from the exponent.

char getGroupingSeparator()

Returns the character used for grouping separator.

String getGroupingSeparatorString()

[icu] Returns the string used for grouping separator.

String getInfinity()

Returns the String used to represent infinity.

static DecimalFormatSymbols getInstance()

Returns a DecimalFormatSymbols instance for the default locale.

static DecimalFormatSymbols getInstance(Locale locale)

Returns a DecimalFormatSymbols instance for the given locale.

static DecimalFormatSymbols getInstance(ULocale locale)

Returns a DecimalFormatSymbols instance for the given locale.

String getInternationalCurrencySymbol()

Returns the international string denoting the local currency.

Locale getLocale()

Returns the locale for which this object was constructed.

char getMinusSign()

Returns the character used to represent minus sign.

String getMinusSignString()

[icu] Returns the string used to represent minus sign.

char getMonetaryDecimalSeparator()

Returns the monetary decimal separator.

String getMonetaryDecimalSeparatorString()

[icu] Returns the monetary decimal separator string.

char getMonetaryGroupingSeparator()

[icu] Returns the monetary grouping separator.

String getMonetaryGroupingSeparatorString()

[icu] Returns the monetary grouping separator.

String getNaN()

Returns the String used to represent NaN.

char getPadEscape()

[icu] Returns the character used to pad numbers out to a specified width.

String getPatternForCurrencySpacing(int itemType, boolean beforeCurrency)

[icu] Returns the desired currency spacing value.

char getPatternSeparator()

Returns the character used to separate positive and negative subpatterns in a pattern.

char getPerMill()

Returns the character used for mille percent sign.

String getPerMillString()

[icu] Returns the string used for permille sign.

char getPercent()

Returns the character used for percent sign.

String getPercentString()

[icu] Returns the string used for percent sign.

char getPlusSign()

[icu] Returns the localized plus sign.

String getPlusSignString()

[icu] Returns the string used to represent plus sign.

char getSignificantDigit()

Returns the character used to represent a significant digit in a pattern.

ULocale getULocale()

Returns the locale for which this object was constructed.

char getZeroDigit()

Returns the character used for zero.

int hashCode()

Returns a hash code value for the object.

void setCurrency(Currency currency)

Sets the currency.

void setCurrencySymbol(String currency)

Sets the string denoting the local currency.

void setDecimalSeparator(char decimalSeparator)

Sets the character used for decimal sign.

void setDecimalSeparatorString(String decimalSeparatorString)

[icu] Sets the string used for decimal sign.

void setDigit(char digit)

Sets the character used for a digit in a pattern.

void setDigitStrings(String[] digitStrings)

[icu] Sets the array of strings used as digits, in order from 0 through 9

Note:

When the input array of digit strings contains any strings represented by multiple Java chars, then getDigits() will return the default digits ('0' - '9') and getZeroDigit() will return the default zero digit ('0').

void setExponentMultiplicationSign(String exponentMultiplicationSign)

Sets the multiplication sign

void setExponentSeparator(String exp)

[icu] Sets the string used to separate the mantissa from the exponent.

void setGroupingSeparator(char groupingSeparator)

Sets the character used for grouping separator.

void setGroupingSeparatorString(String groupingSeparatorString)

[icu] Sets the string used for grouping separator.

void setInfinity(String infinity)

Sets the String used to represent infinity.

void setInternationalCurrencySymbol(String currency)

Sets the international string denoting the local currency.

void setMinusSign(char minusSign)

Sets the character used to represent minus sign.

void setMinusSignString(String minusSignString)

[icu] Sets the string used to represent minus sign.

void setMonetaryDecimalSeparator(char sep)

Sets the monetary decimal separator.

void setMonetaryDecimalSeparatorString(String sep)

[icu] Sets the monetary decimal separator string.

void setMonetaryGroupingSeparator(char sep)

[icu] Sets the monetary grouping separator.

void setMonetaryGroupingSeparatorString(String sep)

[icu] Sets the monetary grouping separator string.

void setNaN(String NaN)

Sets the String used to represent NaN.

void setPadEscape(char c)

[icu] Sets the character used to pad numbers out to a specified width.

void setPatternForCurrencySpacing(int itemType, boolean beforeCurrency, String pattern)

[icu] Sets the indicated currency spacing pattern or value.

void setPatternSeparator(char patternSeparator)

Sets the character used to separate positive and negative subpatterns in a pattern.

void setPerMill(char perMill)

Sets the character used for mille percent sign.

void setPerMillString(String perMillString)

[icu] Sets the string used for permille sign.

void setPercent(char percent)

Sets the character used for percent sign.

void setPercentString(String percentString)

[icu] Sets the string used for percent sign.

void setPlusSign(char plus)

[icu] Sets the localized plus sign.

void setPlusSignString(String plusSignString)

[icu] Sets the localized plus sign string.

void setSignificantDigit(char sigDigit)

Sets the character used to represent a significant digit in a pattern.

void setZeroDigit(char zeroDigit)

Sets the character used for zero.

Inherited methods

Constants

CURRENCY_SPC_CURRENCY_MATCH

public static final int CURRENCY_SPC_CURRENCY_MATCH

[icu] Indicates the currency match pattern used in getPatternForCurrencySpacing(int, boolean).

Constant Value: 0 (0x00000000)

CURRENCY_SPC_INSERT

public static final int CURRENCY_SPC_INSERT

[icu] Indicates the insertion value used in getPatternForCurrencySpacing(int, boolean).

Constant Value: 2 (0x00000002)

CURRENCY_SPC_SURROUNDING_MATCH

public static final int CURRENCY_SPC_SURROUNDING_MATCH

[icu] Indicates the surrounding match pattern used in getPatternForCurrencySpacing(int, boolean).

Constant Value: 1 (0x00000001)

Public constructors

DecimalFormatSymbols

public DecimalFormatSymbols ()

Creates a DecimalFormatSymbols object for the default FORMAT locale.

See also:

DecimalFormatSymbols

public DecimalFormatSymbols (Locale locale)

Creates a DecimalFormatSymbols object for the given locale.

Parameters
locale Locale: the locale

DecimalFormatSymbols

public DecimalFormatSymbols (ULocale locale)

[icu] Creates a DecimalFormatSymbols object for the given locale.

Parameters
locale ULocale: the locale

Public methods

clone

public Object clone ()

Creates and returns a copy of this object. The precise meaning of "copy" may depend on the class of the object. The general intent is that, for any object x, the expression:

 x.clone() != x
will be true, and that the expression:
 x.clone().getClass() == x.getClass()
will be true, but these are not absolute requirements. While it is typically the case that:
 x.clone().equals(x)
will be true, this is not an absolute requirement.

By convention, the returned object should be obtained by calling super.clone. If a class and all of its superclasses (except Object) obey this convention, it will be the case that x.clone().getClass() == x.getClass().

By convention, the object returned by this method should be independent of this object (which is being cloned). To achieve this independence, it may be necessary to modify one or more fields of the object returned by super.clone before returning it. Typically, this means copying any mutable objects that comprise the internal "deep structure" of the object being cloned and replacing the references to these objects with references to the copies. If a class contains only primitive fields or references to immutable objects, then it is usually the case that no fields in the object returned by super.clone need to be modified.

The method clone for class Object performs a specific cloning operation. First, if the class of this object does not implement the interface Cloneable, then a CloneNotSupportedException is thrown. Note that all arrays are considered to implement the interface Cloneable and that the return type of the clone method of an array type T[] is T[] where T is any reference or primitive type. Otherwise, this method creates a new instance of the class of this object and initializes all its fields with exactly the contents of the corresponding fields of this object, as if by assignment; the contents of the fields are not themselves cloned. Thus, this method performs a "shallow copy" of this object, not a "deep copy" operation.

The class Object does not itself implement the interface Cloneable, so calling the clone method on an object whose class is Object will result in throwing an exception at run time.

Returns
Object a clone of this instance.

equals

public boolean equals (Object obj)

Indicates whether some other object is "equal to" this one.

The equals method implements an equivalence relation on non-null object references:

  • It is reflexive: for any non-null reference value x, x.equals(x) should return true.
  • It is symmetric: for any non-null reference values x and y, x.equals(y) should return true if and only if y.equals(x) returns true.
  • It is transitive: for any non-null reference values x, y, and z, if x.equals(y) returns true and y.equals(z) returns true, then x.equals(z) should return true.
  • It is consistent: for any non-null reference values x and y, multiple invocations of x.equals(y) consistently return true or consistently return false, provided no information used in equals comparisons on the objects is modified.
  • For any non-null reference value x, x.equals(null) should return false.

The equals method for class Object implements the most discriminating possible equivalence relation on objects; that is, for any non-null reference values x and y, this method returns true if and only if x and y refer to the same object (x == y has the value true).

Note that it is generally necessary to override the hashCode method whenever this method is overridden, so as to maintain the general contract for the hashCode method, which states that equal objects must have equal hash codes.

Parameters
obj Object: the reference object with which to compare.

Returns
boolean true if this object is the same as the obj argument; false otherwise.

forNumberingSystem

public static DecimalFormatSymbols forNumberingSystem (ULocale locale, 
                NumberingSystem ns)

[icu] Returns a DecimalFormatSymbols instance for the given locale with digits and symbols corresponding to the given NumberingSystem.

This method behaves equivalently to getInstance() called with a locale having a "numbers=xxxx" keyword specifying the numbering system by name.

In this method, the NumberingSystem argument will be used even if the locale has its own "numbers=xxxx" keyword.

Parameters
locale ULocale: the locale.

ns NumberingSystem: the numbering system.

Returns
DecimalFormatSymbols A DecimalFormatSymbols instance.

forNumberingSystem

public static DecimalFormatSymbols forNumberingSystem (Locale locale, 
                NumberingSystem ns)

[icu] Returns a DecimalFormatSymbols instance for the given locale with digits and symbols corresponding to the given NumberingSystem.

This method behaves equivalently to getInstance() called with a locale having a "numbers=xxxx" keyword specifying the numbering system by name.

In this method, the NumberingSystem argument will be used even if the locale has its own "numbers=xxxx" keyword.

Parameters
locale Locale: the locale.

ns NumberingSystem: the numbering system.

Returns
DecimalFormatSymbols A DecimalFormatSymbols instance.

getAvailableLocales

public static Locale[] getAvailableLocales ()

Returns an array of all locales for which the getInstance methods of this class can return localized instances.

Note: Unlike java.text.DecimalFormatSymbols#getAvailableLocales, this method simply returns the array of Locales available for this class. ICU currently does not support DecimalFormatSymbolsProvider, which was introduced in Java 6.

Returns
Locale[] An array of Locales for which localized DecimalFormatSymbols instances are available.

getCurrency

public Currency getCurrency ()

Returns the currency symbol, for DecimalFormatSymbols#getCurrency() API compatibility only. ICU clients should use the Currency API directly.

Returns
Currency the currency used, or null

getCurrencySymbol

public String getCurrencySymbol ()

Returns the string denoting the local currency.

Returns
String the local currency String.

getDecimalSeparator

public char getDecimalSeparator ()

Returns the character used for decimal sign. Different for French, etc.

Returns
char the decimal character

getDecimalSeparatorString

public String getDecimalSeparatorString ()

[icu] Returns the string used for decimal sign.

Returns
String the decimal sign string

See also:

getDigit

public char getDigit ()

Returns the character used for a digit in a pattern.

Returns
char the digit pattern character

getDigitStrings

public String[] getDigitStrings ()

[icu] Returns the array of strings used as digits, in order from 0 through 9

Returns
String[] The array of ten digit strings

See also:

getDigits

public char[] getDigits ()

Returns the array of characters used as digits, in order from 0 through 9

Returns
char[] The array

getExponentMultiplicationSign

public String getExponentMultiplicationSign ()

Returns the multiplication sign

Returns
String

getExponentSeparator

public String getExponentSeparator ()

[icu] Returns the string used to separate the mantissa from the exponent. Examples: "x10^" for 1.23x10^4, "E" for 1.23E4.

Returns
String the localized exponent symbol, used in localized patterns and formatted strings

See also:

getGroupingSeparator

public char getGroupingSeparator ()

Returns the character used for grouping separator. Different for French, etc.

Returns
char the thousands character

getGroupingSeparatorString

public String getGroupingSeparatorString ()

[icu] Returns the string used for grouping separator. Different for French, etc.

Returns
String the grouping separator string

See also:

getInfinity

public String getInfinity ()

Returns the String used to represent infinity. Almost always left unchanged.

Returns
String the Infinity string

getInstance

public static DecimalFormatSymbols getInstance ()

Returns a DecimalFormatSymbols instance for the default locale.

Note: Unlike java.text.DecimalFormatSymbols#getInstance, this method simply returns new android.icu.text.DecimalFormatSymbols(). ICU currently does not support DecimalFormatSymbolsProvider, which was introduced in Java 6.

Returns
DecimalFormatSymbols A DecimalFormatSymbols instance.

getInstance

public static DecimalFormatSymbols getInstance (Locale locale)

Returns a DecimalFormatSymbols instance for the given locale.

Note: Unlike java.text.DecimalFormatSymbols#getInstance, this method simply returns new android.icu.text.DecimalFormatSymbols(locale). ICU currently does not support DecimalFormatSymbolsProvider, which was introduced in Java 6.

Parameters
locale Locale: the locale.

Returns
DecimalFormatSymbols A DecimalFormatSymbols instance.

getInstance

public static DecimalFormatSymbols getInstance (ULocale locale)

Returns a DecimalFormatSymbols instance for the given locale.

Note: Unlike java.text.DecimalFormatSymbols#getInstance, this method simply returns new android.icu.text.DecimalFormatSymbols(locale). ICU currently does not support DecimalFormatSymbolsProvider, which was introduced in Java 6.

Parameters
locale ULocale: the locale.

Returns
DecimalFormatSymbols A DecimalFormatSymbols instance.

getInternationalCurrencySymbol

public String getInternationalCurrencySymbol ()

Returns the international string denoting the local currency.

Returns
String the international string denoting the local currency

getLocale

public Locale getLocale ()

Returns the locale for which this object was constructed.

Returns
Locale the locale for which this object was constructed

getMinusSign

public char getMinusSign ()

Returns the character used to represent minus sign. If no explicit negative format is specified, one is formed by prefixing minusSign to the positive format.

Returns
char the minus sign character

getMinusSignString

public String getMinusSignString ()

[icu] Returns the string used to represent minus sign.

Returns
String the minus sign string

See also:

getMonetaryDecimalSeparator

public char getMonetaryDecimalSeparator ()

Returns the monetary decimal separator.

Returns
char the monetary decimal separator character

getMonetaryDecimalSeparatorString

public String getMonetaryDecimalSeparatorString ()

[icu] Returns the monetary decimal separator string.

Returns
String the monetary decimal separator string

See also:

getMonetaryGroupingSeparator

public char getMonetaryGroupingSeparator ()

[icu] Returns the monetary grouping separator.

Returns
char the monetary grouping separator character

getMonetaryGroupingSeparatorString

public String getMonetaryGroupingSeparatorString ()

[icu] Returns the monetary grouping separator.

Returns
String the monetary grouping separator string

See also:

getNaN

public String getNaN ()

Returns the String used to represent NaN. Almost always left unchanged.

Returns
String the NaN String

getPadEscape

public char getPadEscape ()

[icu] Returns the character used to pad numbers out to a specified width. This is not the pad character itself; rather, it is the special pattern character preceding the pad character. In the pattern "*_#,##0", '*' is the pad escape, and '_' is the pad character.

Returns
char the character

See also:

getPatternForCurrencySpacing

public String getPatternForCurrencySpacing (int itemType, 
                boolean beforeCurrency)

[icu] Returns the desired currency spacing value. Original values come from ICU's CLDR data based on the locale provided during construction, and can be null. These values govern what and when text is inserted between a currency code/name/symbol and the currency amount when formatting money.

For more information, see UTS#35 section 5.10.2.

Parameters
itemType int: one of CURRENCY_SPC_CURRENCY_MATCH, CURRENCY_SPC_SURROUNDING_MATCH or CURRENCY_SPC_INSERT

beforeCurrency boolean: true to get the beforeCurrency values, false to get the afterCurrency values.

Returns
String the value, or null.

See also:

getPatternSeparator

public char getPatternSeparator ()

Returns the character used to separate positive and negative subpatterns in a pattern.

Returns
char the pattern separator character

getPerMill

public char getPerMill ()

Returns the character used for mille percent sign. Different for Arabic, etc.

Returns
char the mille percent character

getPerMillString

public String getPerMillString ()

[icu] Returns the string used for permille sign.

Returns
String the permille string

See also:

getPercent

public char getPercent ()

Returns the character used for percent sign. Different for Arabic, etc.

Returns
char the percent character

getPercentString

public String getPercentString ()

[icu] Returns the string used for percent sign.

Returns
String the percent string

See also:

getPlusSign

public char getPlusSign ()

[icu] Returns the localized plus sign.

Returns
char the plus sign, used in localized patterns and formatted strings

See also:

getPlusSignString

public String getPlusSignString ()

[icu] Returns the string used to represent plus sign.

Returns
String the plus sign string

getSignificantDigit

public char getSignificantDigit ()

Returns the character used to represent a significant digit in a pattern.

Returns
char the significant digit pattern character

getULocale

public ULocale getULocale ()

Returns the locale for which this object was constructed.

Returns
ULocale the locale for which this object was constructed

getZeroDigit

public char getZeroDigit ()

Returns the character used for zero. Different for Arabic, etc.

Returns
char the character

hashCode

public int hashCode ()

Returns a hash code value for the object. This method is supported for the benefit of hash tables such as those provided by HashMap.

The general contract of hashCode is:

  • Whenever it is invoked on the same object more than once during an execution of a Java application, the hashCode method must consistently return the same integer, provided no information used in equals comparisons on the object is modified. This integer need not remain consistent from one execution of an application to another execution of the same application.
  • If two objects are equal according to the equals(Object) method, then calling the hashCode method on each of the two objects must produce the same integer result.
  • It is not required that if two objects are unequal according to the equals(java.lang.Object) method, then calling the hashCode method on each of the two objects must produce distinct integer results. However, the programmer should be aware that producing distinct integer results for unequal objects may improve the performance of hash tables.

As much as is reasonably practical, the hashCode method defined by class Object does return distinct integers for distinct objects. (This is typically implemented by converting the internal address of the object into an integer, but this implementation technique is not required by the Java™ programming language.)

Returns
int a hash code value for this object.

setCurrency

public void setCurrency (Currency currency)

Sets the currency.

Note: ICU does not use the DecimalFormatSymbols for the currency any more. This API is present for API compatibility only.

This also sets the currency symbol attribute to the currency's symbol in the DecimalFormatSymbols' locale, and the international currency symbol attribute to the currency's ISO 4217 currency code.

Parameters
currency Currency: the new currency to be used

Throws
NullPointerException if currency is null

See also:

setCurrencySymbol

public void setCurrencySymbol (String currency)

Sets the string denoting the local currency.

Parameters
currency String: the local currency String.

setDecimalSeparator

public void setDecimalSeparator (char decimalSeparator)

Sets the character used for decimal sign. Different for French, etc.

Parameters
decimalSeparator char: the decimal character

setDecimalSeparatorString

public void setDecimalSeparatorString (String decimalSeparatorString)

[icu] Sets the string used for decimal sign.

Note: When the input decimal separator String is represented by multiple Java chars, then getDecimalSeparator() will return the default decimal separator character ('.').

Parameters
decimalSeparatorString String: the decimal sign string

Throws
NullPointerException if decimalSeparatorString is null.

See also:

setDigit

public void setDigit (char digit)

Sets the character used for a digit in a pattern.

Parameters
digit char: the digit pattern character

setDigitStrings

public void setDigitStrings (String[] digitStrings)

[icu] Sets the array of strings used as digits, in order from 0 through 9

Note:

When the input array of digit strings contains any strings represented by multiple Java chars, then getDigits() will return the default digits ('0' - '9') and getZeroDigit() will return the default zero digit ('0').

Parameters
digitStrings String: The array of digit strings. The length of the array must be exactly 10.

Throws
NullPointerException if the digitStrings is null.
IllegalArgumentException if the length of the array is not 10.

See also:

setExponentMultiplicationSign

public void setExponentMultiplicationSign (String exponentMultiplicationSign)

Sets the multiplication sign

Parameters
exponentMultiplicationSign String

setExponentSeparator

public void setExponentSeparator (String exp)

[icu] Sets the string used to separate the mantissa from the exponent. Examples: "x10^" for 1.23x10^4, "E" for 1.23E4.

Parameters
exp String: the localized exponent symbol, used in localized patterns and formatted strings

See also:

setGroupingSeparator

public void setGroupingSeparator (char groupingSeparator)

Sets the character used for grouping separator. Different for French, etc.

Parameters
groupingSeparator char: the thousands character

setGroupingSeparatorString

public void setGroupingSeparatorString (String groupingSeparatorString)

[icu] Sets the string used for grouping separator.

Note: When the input grouping separator String is represented by multiple Java chars, then getGroupingSeparator() will return the default grouping separator character (',').

Parameters
groupingSeparatorString String: the grouping separator string

Throws
NullPointerException if groupingSeparatorString is null.

See also:

setInfinity

public void setInfinity (String infinity)

Sets the String used to represent infinity. Almost always left unchanged.

Parameters
infinity String: the Infinity String

setInternationalCurrencySymbol

public void setInternationalCurrencySymbol (String currency)

Sets the international string denoting the local currency.

Parameters
currency String: the international string denoting the local currency.

setMinusSign

public void setMinusSign (char minusSign)

Sets the character used to represent minus sign. If no explicit negative format is specified, one is formed by prefixing minusSign to the positive format.

Parameters
minusSign char: the minus sign character

setMinusSignString

public void setMinusSignString (String minusSignString)

[icu] Sets the string used to represent minus sign.

Note: When the input minus sign String is represented by multiple Java chars, then getMinusSign() will return the default minus sign character ('-').

Parameters
minusSignString String: the minus sign string

Throws
NullPointerException if minusSignString is null.

See also:

setMonetaryDecimalSeparator

public void setMonetaryDecimalSeparator (char sep)

Sets the monetary decimal separator.

Parameters
sep char: the monetary decimal separator character

setMonetaryDecimalSeparatorString

public void setMonetaryDecimalSeparatorString (String sep)

[icu] Sets the monetary decimal separator string.

Note: When the input monetary decimal separator String is represented by multiple Java chars, then getMonetaryDecimalSeparatorString() will return the default monetary decimal separator character ('.').

Parameters
sep String: the monetary decimal separator string

Throws
NullPointerException if sep is null.

See also:

setMonetaryGroupingSeparator

public void setMonetaryGroupingSeparator (char sep)

[icu] Sets the monetary grouping separator.

Parameters
sep char: the monetary grouping separator character

setMonetaryGroupingSeparatorString

public void setMonetaryGroupingSeparatorString (String sep)

[icu] Sets the monetary grouping separator string.

Note: When the input grouping separator String is represented by multiple Java chars, then getMonetaryGroupingSeparator() will return the default monetary grouping separator character (',').

Parameters
sep String: the monetary grouping separator string

Throws
NullPointerException if sep is null.

See also:

setNaN

public void setNaN (String NaN)

Sets the String used to represent NaN. Almost always left unchanged.

Parameters
NaN String: the NaN String

setPadEscape

public void setPadEscape (char c)

[icu] Sets the character used to pad numbers out to a specified width. This is not the pad character itself; rather, it is the special pattern character preceding the pad character. In the pattern "*_#,##0", '*' is the pad escape, and '_' is the pad character.

Parameters
c char

See also:

setPatternForCurrencySpacing

public void setPatternForCurrencySpacing (int itemType, 
                boolean beforeCurrency, 
                String pattern)

[icu] Sets the indicated currency spacing pattern or value. See getPatternForCurrencySpacing(int, boolean) for more information.

Values for currency match and surrounding match must be UnicodeSet patterns. Values for insert can be any string.

Note: ICU4J does not currently use this information.

Parameters
itemType int: one of CURRENCY_SPC_CURRENCY_MATCH, CURRENCY_SPC_SURROUNDING_MATCH or CURRENCY_SPC_INSERT

beforeCurrency boolean: true if the pattern is for before the currency symbol. false if the pattern is for after it.

pattern String: string to override current setting; can be null.

See also:

setPatternSeparator

public void setPatternSeparator (char patternSeparator)

Sets the character used to separate positive and negative subpatterns in a pattern.

Parameters
patternSeparator char: the pattern separator character

setPerMill

public void setPerMill (char perMill)

Sets the character used for mille percent sign. Different for Arabic, etc.

Parameters
perMill char: the mille percent character

setPerMillString

public void setPerMillString (String perMillString)

[icu] Sets the string used for permille sign.

Note: When the input permille String is represented by multiple Java chars, then getPerMill() will return the default permille character ('‰').

Parameters
perMillString String: the permille string

Throws
NullPointerException if perMillString is null.

See also:

setPercent

public void setPercent (char percent)

Sets the character used for percent sign. Different for Arabic, etc.

Parameters
percent char: the percent character

setPercentString

public void setPercentString (String percentString)

[icu] Sets the string used for percent sign.

Note: When the input grouping separator String is represented by multiple Java chars, then getPercent() will return the default percent sign character ('%').

Parameters
percentString String: the percent string

Throws
NullPointerException if percentString is null.

See also:

setPlusSign

public void setPlusSign (char plus)

[icu] Sets the localized plus sign.

Parameters
plus char: the plus sign, used in localized patterns and formatted strings

See also:

setPlusSignString

public void setPlusSignString (String plusSignString)

[icu] Sets the localized plus sign string.

Note: When the input plus sign String is represented by multiple Java chars, then getPlusSign() will return the default plus sign character ('+').

Parameters
plusSignString String: the plus sign string, used in localized patterns and formatted strings

Throws
NullPointerException if plusSignString is null.

See also:

setSignificantDigit

public void setSignificantDigit (char sigDigit)

Sets the character used to represent a significant digit in a pattern.

Parameters
sigDigit char: the significant digit pattern character

setZeroDigit

public void setZeroDigit (char zeroDigit)

Sets the character used for zero.

Note: This method propagates digit 1 to digit 9 by incrementing code point one by one.

Parameters
zeroDigit char: the zero character.