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Trail: Internationalization
Lesson: Working with Text

About the BreakIterator Class

The BreakIterator class is locale-sensitive, because text boundaries vary with language. For example, the syntax rules for line breaks are not the same for all languages. To determine which locales the BreakIterator class supports, invoke the getAvailableLocales method, as follows:
Locale[] locales = BreakIterator.getAvailableLocales();

You can analyze four kinds of boundaries with the BreakIterator class: character, word, sentence, and potential line break. When instantiating a BreakIterator, you invoke the appropriate factory method:

Each instance of BreakIterator can detect just one type of boundary. If you want to locate both character and word boundaries, for example, you create two separate instances.

A BreakIterator has an imaginary cursor that points to the current boundary in a string of text. You can move this cursor within the text with the previous and the next methods. For example, if you've created a BreakIterator with getWordInstance, the cursor moves to the next word boundary in the text every time you invoke the next method. The cursor-movement methods return an integer indicating the position of the boundary. This position is the index of the character in the text string that would follow the boundary. Like string indexes, the boundaries are zero-based. The first boundary is at 0, and the last boundary is the length of the string. The following figure shows the word boundaries detected by the next and previous methods in a line of text:


This figure has been reduced to fit on the page.
Click the image to view it at its natural size.

You should use the BreakIterator class only with natural-language text. To tokenize a programming language, use the StreamTokenizer class.

The sections that follow give examples for each type of boundary analysis. The coding examples are from the source code file named BreakIteratorDemo.java (in a .java source file).


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