public interface InputMethodRequests
The text editing component also has to provide an input method event listener.
The interface is designed to support one of two input user interfaces:
Component.getInputMethodRequests()
,
InputMethodListener
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
AttributedCharacterIterator |
cancelLatestCommittedText(AttributedCharacterIterator.Attribute[] attributes)
Gets the latest committed text from the text editing component and
removes it from the component's text body.
|
AttributedCharacterIterator |
getCommittedText(int beginIndex,
int endIndex,
AttributedCharacterIterator.Attribute[] attributes)
Gets an iterator providing access to the entire text and attributes
contained in the text editing component except for uncommitted
text.
|
int |
getCommittedTextLength()
Gets the length of the entire text contained in the text
editing component except for uncommitted (composed) text.
|
int |
getInsertPositionOffset()
Gets the offset of the insert position in the committed text contained
in the text editing component.
|
TextHitInfo |
getLocationOffset(int x,
int y)
Gets the offset within the composed text for the specified absolute x
and y coordinates on the screen.
|
AttributedCharacterIterator |
getSelectedText(AttributedCharacterIterator.Attribute[] attributes)
Gets the currently selected text from the text editing component.
|
Rectangle |
getTextLocation(TextHitInfo offset)
Gets the location of a specified offset in the current composed text,
or of the selection in committed text.
|
Rectangle getTextLocation(TextHitInfo offset)
If the component has composed text (because the most recent InputMethodEvent sent to it contained composed text), then the offset is relative to the composed text - offset 0 indicates the first character in the composed text. The location returned should be for this character.
If the component doesn't have composed text, the offset should be ignored, and the location returned should reflect the beginning (in line direction) of the highlight in the last line containing selected text. For example, for horizontal left-to-right text (such as English), the location to the left of the left-most character on the last line containing selected text is returned. For vertical top-to-bottom text, with lines proceeding from right to left, the location to the top of the left-most line containing selected text is returned.
The location is represented as a 0-thickness caret, that is, it has 0 width if the text is drawn horizontally, and 0 height if the text is drawn vertically. Other text orientations need to be mapped to horizontal or vertical orientation. The rectangle uses absolute screen coordinates.
offset
- the offset within the composed text, if there is composed
text; null otherwiseTextHitInfo getLocationOffset(int x, int y)
Return null if the location is outside the area occupied by the composed text.
x
- the absolute x coordinate on screeny
- the absolute y coordinate on screenint getInsertPositionOffset()
AttributedCharacterIterator getCommittedText(int beginIndex, int endIndex, AttributedCharacterIterator.Attribute[] attributes)
The input method may provide a list of attributes that it is interested in. In that case, information about other attributes that the implementor may have need not be made accessible through the iterator. If the list is null, all available attribute information should be made accessible.
beginIndex
- the index of the first characterendIndex
- the index of the character following the last characterattributes
- a list of attributes that the input method is
interested inint getCommittedTextLength()
AttributedCharacterIterator cancelLatestCommittedText(AttributedCharacterIterator.Attribute[] attributes)
Generally, this feature should only be supported immediately after the text was committed, not after the user performed other operations on the text. When the feature is not supported, return null.
The input method may provide a list of attributes that it is interested in. In that case, information about other attributes that the implementor may have need not be made accessible through the iterator. If the list is null, all available attribute information should be made accessible.
attributes
- a list of attributes that the input method is
interested inAttributedCharacterIterator getSelectedText(AttributedCharacterIterator.Attribute[] attributes)
The input method may provide a list of attributes that it is interested in. In that case, information about other attributes that the implementor may have need not be made accessible through the iterator. If the list is null, all available attribute information should be made accessible.
attributes
- a list of attributes that the input method is
interested in Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
Copyright © 1993, 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.