public final class MessageFormatter
extends java.lang.Object
format(String,Object)
and
format(String,Object,Object)
for more details.Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
static java.lang.String |
format(java.lang.String messagePattern,
java.lang.Object argument)
Performs single argument substitution for the 'messagePattern' passed as
parameter.
|
static java.lang.String |
format(java.lang.String messagePattern,
java.lang.Object arg1,
java.lang.Object arg2)
/**
Performs a two argument substitution for the 'messagePattern' passed as
parameter.
|
public static java.lang.String format(java.lang.String messagePattern, java.lang.Object argument)
MessageFormatter.format("Hi {}.", "there");
will return the string "Hi there.".
The {} pair is called the formatting element. It serves to designate the
location where the argument needs to be inserted within the pattern.messagePattern
- The message pattern which will be parsed and formattedargument
- The argument to be inserted instead of the formatting elementpublic static java.lang.String format(java.lang.String messagePattern, java.lang.Object arg1, java.lang.Object arg2)
MessageFormatter.format("Hi {}. My name is {}.",
"there", "David");
will return the string
"Hi there. My name is David.".
The '{}' pair is called a formatting element. It serves to designate the
location where the arguments need to be inserted within
the message pattern.messagePattern
- The message pattern which will be parsed and formattedarg1
- The first argument to replace the first formatting elementarg2
- The second argument to replace the second formatting elementCopyright © 2006-2019 OPS4J - Open Participation Software for Java. All Rights Reserved.