Locale.java revision fa483de885b9048b2c165d9e87bc10dc2fb7e205
1/*
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26
27/*
28 * (C) Copyright Taligent, Inc. 1996, 1997 - All Rights Reserved
29 * (C) Copyright IBM Corp. 1996 - 1998 - All Rights Reserved
30 *
31 * The original version of this source code and documentation
32 * is copyrighted and owned by Taligent, Inc., a wholly-owned
33 * subsidiary of IBM. These materials are provided under terms
34 * of a License Agreement between Taligent and Sun. This technology
35 * is protected by multiple US and International patents.
36 *
37 * This notice and attribution to Taligent may not be removed.
38 * Taligent is a registered trademark of Taligent, Inc.
39 *
40 */
41
42package java.util;
43
44import java.io.IOException;
45import java.io.ObjectInputStream;
46import java.io.ObjectOutputStream;
47import java.io.ObjectStreamField;
48import java.io.Serializable;
49import java.text.MessageFormat;
50import libcore.icu.ICU;
51
52import sun.util.locale.BaseLocale;
53import sun.util.locale.InternalLocaleBuilder;
54import sun.util.locale.LanguageTag;
55import sun.util.locale.LocaleExtensions;
56import sun.util.locale.LocaleMatcher;
57import sun.util.locale.LocaleObjectCache;
58import sun.util.locale.LocaleSyntaxException;
59import sun.util.locale.LocaleUtils;
60import sun.util.locale.ParseStatus;
61
62// Android-added: documentation about ICU data & warning of default locale.
63/**
64 * A <code>Locale</code> object represents a specific geographical, political,
65 * or cultural region. An operation that requires a <code>Locale</code> to perform
66 * its task is called <em>locale-sensitive</em> and uses the <code>Locale</code>
67 * to tailor information for the user. For example, displaying a number
68 * is a locale-sensitive operation&mdash; the number should be formatted
69 * according to the customs and conventions of the user's native country,
70 * region, or culture.
71 *
72 * <p> The {@code Locale} class implements IETF BCP 47 which is composed of
73 * <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647">RFC 4647 "Matching of Language
74 * Tags"</a> and <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5646">RFC 5646 "Tags
75 * for Identifying Languages"</a> with support for the LDML (UTS#35, "Unicode
76 * Locale Data Markup Language") BCP 47-compatible extensions for locale data
77 * exchange.
78 *
79 * <p> A <code>Locale</code> object logically consists of the fields
80 * described below.
81 *
82 * <dl>
83 *   <dt><a name="def_language"><b>language</b></a></dt>
84 *
85 *   <dd>ISO 639 alpha-2 or alpha-3 language code, or registered
86 *   language subtags up to 8 alpha letters (for future enhancements).
87 *   When a language has both an alpha-2 code and an alpha-3 code, the
88 *   alpha-2 code must be used.  You can find a full list of valid
89 *   language codes in the IANA Language Subtag Registry (search for
90 *   "Type: language").  The language field is case insensitive, but
91 *   <code>Locale</code> always canonicalizes to lower case.</dd>
92 *
93 *   <dd>Well-formed language values have the form
94 *   <code>[a-zA-Z]{2,8}</code>.  Note that this is not the the full
95 *   BCP47 language production, since it excludes extlang.  They are
96 *   not needed since modern three-letter language codes replace
97 *   them.</dd>
98 *
99 *   <dd>Example: "en" (English), "ja" (Japanese), "kok" (Konkani)</dd>
100 *
101 *   <dt><a name="def_script"><b>script</b></a></dt>
102 *
103 *   <dd>ISO 15924 alpha-4 script code.  You can find a full list of
104 *   valid script codes in the IANA Language Subtag Registry (search
105 *   for "Type: script").  The script field is case insensitive, but
106 *   <code>Locale</code> always canonicalizes to title case (the first
107 *   letter is upper case and the rest of the letters are lower
108 *   case).</dd>
109 *
110 *   <dd>Well-formed script values have the form
111 *   <code>[a-zA-Z]{4}</code></dd>
112 *
113 *   <dd>Example: "Latn" (Latin), "Cyrl" (Cyrillic)</dd>
114 *
115 *   <dt><a name="def_region"><b>country (region)</b></a></dt>
116 *
117 *   <dd>ISO 3166 alpha-2 country code or UN M.49 numeric-3 area code.
118 *   You can find a full list of valid country and region codes in the
119 *   IANA Language Subtag Registry (search for "Type: region").  The
120 *   country (region) field is case insensitive, but
121 *   <code>Locale</code> always canonicalizes to upper case.</dd>
122 *
123 *   <dd>Well-formed country/region values have
124 *   the form <code>[a-zA-Z]{2} | [0-9]{3}</code></dd>
125 *
126 *   <dd>Example: "US" (United States), "FR" (France), "029"
127 *   (Caribbean)</dd>
128 *
129 *   <dt><a name="def_variant"><b>variant</b></a></dt>
130 *
131 *   <dd>Any arbitrary value used to indicate a variation of a
132 *   <code>Locale</code>.  Where there are two or more variant values
133 *   each indicating its own semantics, these values should be ordered
134 *   by importance, with most important first, separated by
135 *   underscore('_').  The variant field is case sensitive.</dd>
136 *
137 *   <dd>Note: IETF BCP 47 places syntactic restrictions on variant
138 *   subtags.  Also BCP 47 subtags are strictly used to indicate
139 *   additional variations that define a language or its dialects that
140 *   are not covered by any combinations of language, script and
141 *   region subtags.  You can find a full list of valid variant codes
142 *   in the IANA Language Subtag Registry (search for "Type: variant").
143 *
144 *   <p>However, the variant field in <code>Locale</code> has
145 *   historically been used for any kind of variation, not just
146 *   language variations.  For example, some supported variants
147 *   available in Java SE Runtime Environments indicate alternative
148 *   cultural behaviors such as calendar type or number script.  In
149 *   BCP 47 this kind of information, which does not identify the
150 *   language, is supported by extension subtags or private use
151 *   subtags.</dd>
152 *
153 *   <dd>Well-formed variant values have the form <code>SUBTAG
154 *   (('_'|'-') SUBTAG)*</code> where <code>SUBTAG =
155 *   [0-9][0-9a-zA-Z]{3} | [0-9a-zA-Z]{5,8}</code>. (Note: BCP 47 only
156 *   uses hyphen ('-') as a delimiter, this is more lenient).</dd>
157 *
158 *   <dd>Example: "polyton" (Polytonic Greek), "POSIX"</dd>
159 *
160 *   <dt><a name="def_extensions"><b>extensions</b></a></dt>
161 *
162 *   <dd>A map from single character keys to string values, indicating
163 *   extensions apart from language identification.  The extensions in
164 *   <code>Locale</code> implement the semantics and syntax of BCP 47
165 *   extension subtags and private use subtags. The extensions are
166 *   case insensitive, but <code>Locale</code> canonicalizes all
167 *   extension keys and values to lower case. Note that extensions
168 *   cannot have empty values.</dd>
169 *
170 *   <dd>Well-formed keys are single characters from the set
171 *   <code>[0-9a-zA-Z]</code>.  Well-formed values have the form
172 *   <code>SUBTAG ('-' SUBTAG)*</code> where for the key 'x'
173 *   <code>SUBTAG = [0-9a-zA-Z]{1,8}</code> and for other keys
174 *   <code>SUBTAG = [0-9a-zA-Z]{2,8}</code> (that is, 'x' allows
175 *   single-character subtags).</dd>
176 *
177 *   <dd>Example: key="u"/value="ca-japanese" (Japanese Calendar),
178 *   key="x"/value="java-1-7"</dd>
179 * </dl>
180 *
181 * <b>Note:</b> Although BCP 47 requires field values to be registered
182 * in the IANA Language Subtag Registry, the <code>Locale</code> class
183 * does not provide any validation features.  The <code>Builder</code>
184 * only checks if an individual field satisfies the syntactic
185 * requirement (is well-formed), but does not validate the value
186 * itself.  See {@link Builder} for details.
187 *
188 * <h3><a name="def_locale_extension">Unicode locale/language extension</a></h3>
189 *
190 * <p>UTS#35, "Unicode Locale Data Markup Language" defines optional
191 * attributes and keywords to override or refine the default behavior
192 * associated with a locale.  A keyword is represented by a pair of
193 * key and type.  For example, "nu-thai" indicates that Thai local
194 * digits (value:"thai") should be used for formatting numbers
195 * (key:"nu").
196 *
197 * <p>The keywords are mapped to a BCP 47 extension value using the
198 * extension key 'u' ({@link #UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION}).  The above
199 * example, "nu-thai", becomes the extension "u-nu-thai".code
200 *
201 * <p>Thus, when a <code>Locale</code> object contains Unicode locale
202 * attributes and keywords,
203 * <code>getExtension(UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION)</code> will return a
204 * String representing this information, for example, "nu-thai".  The
205 * <code>Locale</code> class also provides {@link
206 * #getUnicodeLocaleAttributes}, {@link #getUnicodeLocaleKeys}, and
207 * {@link #getUnicodeLocaleType} which allow you to access Unicode
208 * locale attributes and key/type pairs directly.  When represented as
209 * a string, the Unicode Locale Extension lists attributes
210 * alphabetically, followed by key/type sequences with keys listed
211 * alphabetically (the order of subtags comprising a key's type is
212 * fixed when the type is defined)
213 *
214 * <p>A well-formed locale key has the form
215 * <code>[0-9a-zA-Z]{2}</code>.  A well-formed locale type has the
216 * form <code>"" | [0-9a-zA-Z]{3,8} ('-' [0-9a-zA-Z]{3,8})*</code> (it
217 * can be empty, or a series of subtags 3-8 alphanums in length).  A
218 * well-formed locale attribute has the form
219 * <code>[0-9a-zA-Z]{3,8}</code> (it is a single subtag with the same
220 * form as a locale type subtag).
221 *
222 * <p>The Unicode locale extension specifies optional behavior in
223 * locale-sensitive services.  Although the LDML specification defines
224 * various keys and values, actual locale-sensitive service
225 * implementations in a Java Runtime Environment might not support any
226 * particular Unicode locale attributes or key/type pairs.
227 *
228 * <h4>Creating a Locale</h4>
229 *
230 * <p>There are several different ways to create a <code>Locale</code>
231 * object.
232 *
233 * <h5>Builder</h5>
234 *
235 * <p>Using {@link Builder} you can construct a <code>Locale</code> object
236 * that conforms to BCP 47 syntax.
237 *
238 * <h5>Constructors</h5>
239 *
240 * <p>The <code>Locale</code> class provides three constructors:
241 * <blockquote>
242 * <pre>
243 *     {@link #Locale(String language)}
244 *     {@link #Locale(String language, String country)}
245 *     {@link #Locale(String language, String country, String variant)}
246 * </pre>
247 * </blockquote>
248 * These constructors allow you to create a <code>Locale</code> object
249 * with language, country and variant, but you cannot specify
250 * script or extensions.
251 *
252 * <h5>Factory Methods</h5>
253 *
254 * <p>The method {@link #forLanguageTag} creates a <code>Locale</code>
255 * object for a well-formed BCP 47 language tag.
256 *
257 * <h5>Locale Constants</h5>
258 *
259 * <p>The <code>Locale</code> class provides a number of convenient constants
260 * that you can use to create <code>Locale</code> objects for commonly used
261 * locales. For example, the following creates a <code>Locale</code> object
262 * for the United States:
263 * <blockquote>
264 * <pre>
265 *     Locale.US
266 * </pre>
267 * </blockquote>
268 *
269 * <h4><a name="LocaleMatching">Locale Matching</a></h4>
270 *
271 * <p>If an application or a system is internationalized and provides localized
272 * resources for multiple locales, it sometimes needs to find one or more
273 * locales (or language tags) which meet each user's specific preferences. Note
274 * that a term "language tag" is used interchangeably with "locale" in this
275 * locale matching documentation.
276 *
277 * <p>In order to do matching a user's preferred locales to a set of language
278 * tags, <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647">RFC 4647 Matching of
279 * Language Tags</a> defines two mechanisms: filtering and lookup.
280 * <em>Filtering</em> is used to get all matching locales, whereas
281 * <em>lookup</em> is to choose the best matching locale.
282 * Matching is done case-insensitively. These matching mechanisms are described
283 * in the following sections.
284 *
285 * <p>A user's preference is called a <em>Language Priority List</em> and is
286 * expressed as a list of language ranges. There are syntactically two types of
287 * language ranges: basic and extended. See
288 * {@link Locale.LanguageRange Locale.LanguageRange} for details.
289 *
290 * <h5>Filtering</h5>
291 *
292 * <p>The filtering operation returns all matching language tags. It is defined
293 * in RFC 4647 as follows:
294 * "In filtering, each language range represents the least specific language
295 * tag (that is, the language tag with fewest number of subtags) that is an
296 * acceptable match. All of the language tags in the matching set of tags will
297 * have an equal or greater number of subtags than the language range. Every
298 * non-wildcard subtag in the language range will appear in every one of the
299 * matching language tags."
300 *
301 * <p>There are two types of filtering: filtering for basic language ranges
302 * (called "basic filtering") and filtering for extended language ranges
303 * (called "extended filtering"). They may return different results by what
304 * kind of language ranges are included in the given Language Priority List.
305 * {@link Locale.FilteringMode} is a parameter to specify how filtering should
306 * be done.
307 *
308 * <h5>Lookup</h5>
309 *
310 * <p>The lookup operation returns the best matching language tags. It is
311 * defined in RFC 4647 as follows:
312 * "By contrast with filtering, each language range represents the most
313 * specific tag that is an acceptable match.  The first matching tag found,
314 * according to the user's priority, is considered the closest match and is the
315 * item returned."
316 *
317 * <p>For example, if a Language Priority List consists of two language ranges,
318 * {@code "zh-Hant-TW"} and {@code "en-US"}, in prioritized order, lookup
319 * method progressively searches the language tags below in order to find the
320 * best matching language tag.
321 * <blockquote>
322 * <pre>
323 *    1. zh-Hant-TW
324 *    2. zh-Hant
325 *    3. zh
326 *    4. en-US
327 *    5. en
328 * </pre>
329 * </blockquote>
330 * If there is a language tag which matches completely to a language range
331 * above, the language tag is returned.
332 *
333 * <p>{@code "*"} is the special language range, and it is ignored in lookup.
334 *
335 * <p>If multiple language tags match as a result of the subtag {@code '*'}
336 * included in a language range, the first matching language tag returned by
337 * an {@link Iterator} over a {@link Collection} of language tags is treated as
338 * the best matching one.
339 *
340 * <h4>Use of Locale</h4>
341 *
342 * <p>Once you've created a <code>Locale</code> you can query it for information
343 * about itself. Use <code>getCountry</code> to get the country (or region)
344 * code and <code>getLanguage</code> to get the language code.
345 * You can use <code>getDisplayCountry</code> to get the
346 * name of the country suitable for displaying to the user. Similarly,
347 * you can use <code>getDisplayLanguage</code> to get the name of
348 * the language suitable for displaying to the user. Interestingly,
349 * the <code>getDisplayXXX</code> methods are themselves locale-sensitive
350 * and have two versions: one that uses the default
351 * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale and one
352 * that uses the locale specified as an argument.
353 *
354 * <p>The Java Platform provides a number of classes that perform locale-sensitive
355 * operations. For example, the <code>NumberFormat</code> class formats
356 * numbers, currency, and percentages in a locale-sensitive manner. Classes
357 * such as <code>NumberFormat</code> have several convenience methods
358 * for creating a default object of that type. For example, the
359 * <code>NumberFormat</code> class provides these three convenience methods
360 * for creating a default <code>NumberFormat</code> object:
361 * <blockquote>
362 * <pre>
363 *     NumberFormat.getInstance()
364 *     NumberFormat.getCurrencyInstance()
365 *     NumberFormat.getPercentInstance()
366 * </pre>
367 * </blockquote>
368 * Each of these methods has two variants; one with an explicit locale
369 * and one without; the latter uses the default
370 * {@link Locale.Category#FORMAT FORMAT} locale:
371 * <blockquote>
372 * <pre>
373 *     NumberFormat.getInstance(myLocale)
374 *     NumberFormat.getCurrencyInstance(myLocale)
375 *     NumberFormat.getPercentInstance(myLocale)
376 * </pre>
377 * </blockquote>
378 * A <code>Locale</code> is the mechanism for identifying the kind of object
379 * (<code>NumberFormat</code>) that you would like to get. The locale is
380 * <STRONG>just</STRONG> a mechanism for identifying objects,
381 * <STRONG>not</STRONG> a container for the objects themselves.
382 *
383 * <h4>Compatibility</h4>
384 *
385 * <p>In order to maintain compatibility with existing usage, Locale's
386 * constructors retain their behavior prior to the Java Runtime
387 * Environment version 1.7.  The same is largely true for the
388 * <code>toString</code> method. Thus Locale objects can continue to
389 * be used as they were. In particular, clients who parse the output
390 * of toString into language, country, and variant fields can continue
391 * to do so (although this is strongly discouraged), although the
392 * variant field will have additional information in it if script or
393 * extensions are present.
394 *
395 * <p>In addition, BCP 47 imposes syntax restrictions that are not
396 * imposed by Locale's constructors. This means that conversions
397 * between some Locales and BCP 47 language tags cannot be made without
398 * losing information. Thus <code>toLanguageTag</code> cannot
399 * represent the state of locales whose language, country, or variant
400 * do not conform to BCP 47.
401 *
402 * <p>Because of these issues, it is recommended that clients migrate
403 * away from constructing non-conforming locales and use the
404 * <code>forLanguageTag</code> and <code>Locale.Builder</code> APIs instead.
405 * Clients desiring a string representation of the complete locale can
406 * then always rely on <code>toLanguageTag</code> for this purpose.
407 *
408 * <h5><a name="special_cases_constructor">Special cases</a></h5>
409 *
410 * <p>For compatibility reasons, two
411 * non-conforming locales are treated as special cases.  These are
412 * <b><tt>ja_JP_JP</tt></b> and <b><tt>th_TH_TH</tt></b>. These are ill-formed
413 * in BCP 47 since the variants are too short. To ease migration to BCP 47,
414 * these are treated specially during construction.  These two cases (and only
415 * these) cause a constructor to generate an extension, all other values behave
416 * exactly as they did prior to Java 7.
417 *
418 * <p>Java has used <tt>ja_JP_JP</tt> to represent Japanese as used in
419 * Japan together with the Japanese Imperial calendar. This is now
420 * representable using a Unicode locale extension, by specifying the
421 * Unicode locale key <tt>ca</tt> (for "calendar") and type
422 * <tt>japanese</tt>. When the Locale constructor is called with the
423 * arguments "ja", "JP", "JP", the extension "u-ca-japanese" is
424 * automatically added.
425 *
426 * <p>Java has used <tt>th_TH_TH</tt> to represent Thai as used in
427 * Thailand together with Thai digits. This is also now representable using
428 * a Unicode locale extension, by specifying the Unicode locale key
429 * <tt>nu</tt> (for "number") and value <tt>thai</tt>. When the Locale
430 * constructor is called with the arguments "th", "TH", "TH", the
431 * extension "u-nu-thai" is automatically added.
432 *
433 * <h5>Serialization</h5>
434 *
435 * <p>During serialization, writeObject writes all fields to the output
436 * stream, including extensions.
437 *
438 * <p>During deserialization, readResolve adds extensions as described
439 * in <a href="#special_cases_constructor">Special Cases</a>, only
440 * for the two cases th_TH_TH and ja_JP_JP.
441 *
442 * <h5>Legacy language codes</h5>
443 *
444 * <p>Locale's constructor has always converted three language codes to
445 * their earlier, obsoleted forms: <tt>he</tt> maps to <tt>iw</tt>,
446 * <tt>yi</tt> maps to <tt>ji</tt>, and <tt>id</tt> maps to
447 * <tt>in</tt>.  This continues to be the case, in order to not break
448 * backwards compatibility.
449 *
450 * <p>The APIs added in 1.7 map between the old and new language codes,
451 * maintaining the old codes internal to Locale (so that
452 * <code>getLanguage</code> and <code>toString</code> reflect the old
453 * code), but using the new codes in the BCP 47 language tag APIs (so
454 * that <code>toLanguageTag</code> reflects the new one). This
455 * preserves the equivalence between Locales no matter which code or
456 * API is used to construct them. Java's default resource bundle
457 * lookup mechanism also implements this mapping, so that resources
458 * can be named using either convention, see {@link ResourceBundle.Control}.
459 *
460 * <h5>Three-letter language/country(region) codes</h5>
461 *
462 * <p>The Locale constructors have always specified that the language
463 * and the country param be two characters in length, although in
464 * practice they have accepted any length.  The specification has now
465 * been relaxed to allow language codes of two to eight characters and
466 * country (region) codes of two to three characters, and in
467 * particular, three-letter language codes and three-digit region
468 * codes as specified in the IANA Language Subtag Registry.  For
469 * compatibility, the implementation still does not impose a length
470 * constraint.
471 *
472 * <a name="locale_data"></a><h4>Locale data</h4>
473 * <p>Note that locale data comes solely from ICU. User-supplied locale service providers (using
474 * the {@code java.text.spi} or {@code java.util.spi} mechanisms) are not supported.
475 *
476 * <p>Here are the versions of ICU (and the corresponding CLDR and Unicode versions) used in
477 * various Android releases:
478 * <table BORDER="1" WIDTH="100%" CELLPADDING="3" CELLSPACING="0" SUMMARY="">
479 * <tr><td>Android 1.5 (Cupcake)/Android 1.6 (Donut)/Android 2.0 (Eclair)</td>
480 *     <td>ICU 3.8</td>
481 *     <td><a href="http://cldr.unicode.org/index/downloads/cldr-1-5">CLDR 1.5</a></td>
482 *     <td><a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode5.0.0/">Unicode 5.0</a></td></tr>
483 * <tr><td>Android 2.2 (Froyo)</td>
484 *     <td>ICU 4.2</td>
485 *     <td><a href="http://cldr.unicode.org/index/downloads/cldr-1-7">CLDR 1.7</a></td>
486 *     <td><a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode5.1.0/">Unicode 5.1</a></td></tr>
487 * <tr><td>Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)/Android 3.0 (Honeycomb)</td>
488 *     <td>ICU 4.4</td>
489 *     <td><a href="http://cldr.unicode.org/index/downloads/cldr-1-8">CLDR 1.8</a></td>
490 *     <td><a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode5.2.0/">Unicode 5.2</a></td></tr>
491 * <tr><td>Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich)</td>
492 *     <td><a href="http://site.icu-project.org/download/46">ICU 4.6</a></td>
493 *     <td><a href="http://cldr.unicode.org/index/downloads/cldr-1-9">CLDR 1.9</a></td>
494 *     <td><a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.0.0/">Unicode 6.0</a></td></tr>
495 * <tr><td>Android 4.1 (Jelly Bean)</td>
496 *     <td><a href="http://site.icu-project.org/download/48">ICU 4.8</a></td>
497 *     <td><a href="http://cldr.unicode.org/index/downloads/cldr-2-0">CLDR 2.0</a></td>
498 *     <td><a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.0.0/">Unicode 6.0</a></td></tr>
499 * <tr><td>Android 4.3 (Jelly Bean MR2)</td>
500 *     <td><a href="http://site.icu-project.org/download/50">ICU 50</a></td>
501 *     <td><a href="http://cldr.unicode.org/index/downloads/cldr-22-1">CLDR 22.1</a></td>
502 *     <td><a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.2.0/">Unicode 6.2</a></td></tr>
503 * <tr><td>Android 4.4 (KitKat)</td>
504 *     <td><a href="http://site.icu-project.org/download/51">ICU 51</a></td>
505 *     <td><a href="http://cldr.unicode.org/index/downloads/cldr-23">CLDR 23</a></td>
506 *     <td><a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.2.0/">Unicode 6.2</a></td></tr>
507 * <tr><td>Android 5.0 (Lollipop)</td>
508 *     <td><a href="http://site.icu-project.org/download/53">ICU 53</a></td>
509 *     <td><a href="http://cldr.unicode.org/index/downloads/cldr-25">CLDR 25</a></td>
510 *     <td><a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.3.0/">Unicode 6.3</a></td></tr>
511 * <tr><td>Android 6.0 (Marshmallow)</td>
512 *     <td><a href="http://site.icu-project.org/download/55">ICU 55.1</a></td>
513 *     <td><a href="http://cldr.unicode.org/index/downloads/cldr-27">CLDR 27.0.1</a></td>
514 *     <td><a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode7.0.0/">Unicode 7.0</a></td></tr>
515 * <tr><td>Android 7.0 (Nougat)</td>
516 *     <td><a href="http://site.icu-project.org/download/56">ICU 56.1</a></td>
517 *     <td><a href="http://cldr.unicode.org/index/downloads/cldr-28">CLDR 28</a></td>
518 *     <td><a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode8.0.0/">Unicode 8.0</a></td></tr>
519 * <tr><td>Android 8.0 (TBD)</td>
520 *     <td><a href="http://site.icu-project.org/download/58">ICU 58.2</a></td>
521 *     <td><a href="http://cldr.unicode.org/index/downloads/cldr-30">CLDR 30.0.3</a></td>
522 *     <td><a href="http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode9.0.0/">Unicode 9.0</a></td></tr>
523 * </table>
524 *
525 * <a name="default_locale"></a><h4>Be wary of the default locale</h3>
526 * <p>Note that there are many convenience methods that automatically use the default locale, but
527 * using them may lead to subtle bugs.
528 *
529 * <p>The default locale is appropriate for tasks that involve presenting data to the user. In
530 * this case, you want to use the user's date/time formats, number
531 * formats, rules for conversion to lowercase, and so on. In this case, it's safe to use the
532 * convenience methods.
533 *
534 * <p>The default locale is <i>not</i> appropriate for machine-readable output. The best choice
535 * there is usually {@code Locale.US}&nbsp;&ndash; this locale is guaranteed to be available on all
536 * devices, and the fact that it has no surprising special cases and is frequently used (especially
537 * for computer-computer communication) means that it tends to be the most efficient choice too.
538 *
539 * <p>A common mistake is to implicitly use the default locale when producing output meant to be
540 * machine-readable. This tends to work on the developer's test devices (especially because so many
541 * developers use en_US), but fails when run on a device whose user is in a more complex locale.
542 *
543 * <p>For example, if you're formatting integers some locales will use non-ASCII decimal
544 * digits. As another example, if you're formatting floating-point numbers some locales will use
545 * {@code ','} as the decimal point and {@code '.'} for digit grouping. That's correct for
546 * human-readable output, but likely to cause problems if presented to another
547 * computer ({@link Double#parseDouble} can't parse such a number, for example).
548 * You should also be wary of the {@link String#toLowerCase} and
549 * {@link String#toUpperCase} overloads that don't take a {@code Locale}: in Turkey, for example,
550 * the characters {@code 'i'} and {@code 'I'} won't be converted to {@code 'I'} and {@code 'i'}.
551 * This is the correct behavior for Turkish text (such as user input), but inappropriate for, say,
552 * HTTP headers.
553 *
554 * @see Builder
555 * @see ResourceBundle
556 * @see java.text.Format
557 * @see java.text.NumberFormat
558 * @see java.text.Collator
559 * @author Mark Davis
560 * @since 1.1
561 */
562public final class Locale implements Cloneable, Serializable {
563
564    static private final  Cache LOCALECACHE = new Cache();
565
566    /** Useful constant for language.
567     */
568    static public final Locale ENGLISH = createConstant("en", "");
569
570    /** Useful constant for language.
571     */
572    static public final Locale FRENCH = createConstant("fr", "");
573
574    /** Useful constant for language.
575     */
576    static public final Locale GERMAN = createConstant("de", "");
577
578    /** Useful constant for language.
579     */
580    static public final Locale ITALIAN = createConstant("it", "");
581
582    /** Useful constant for language.
583     */
584    static public final Locale JAPANESE = createConstant("ja", "");
585
586    /** Useful constant for language.
587     */
588    static public final Locale KOREAN = createConstant("ko", "");
589
590    /** Useful constant for language.
591     */
592    static public final Locale CHINESE = createConstant("zh", "");
593
594    /** Useful constant for language.
595     */
596    static public final Locale SIMPLIFIED_CHINESE = createConstant("zh", "CN");
597
598    /** Useful constant for language.
599     */
600    static public final Locale TRADITIONAL_CHINESE = createConstant("zh", "TW");
601
602    /** Useful constant for country.
603     */
604    static public final Locale FRANCE = createConstant("fr", "FR");
605
606    /** Useful constant for country.
607     */
608    static public final Locale GERMANY = createConstant("de", "DE");
609
610    /** Useful constant for country.
611     */
612    static public final Locale ITALY = createConstant("it", "IT");
613
614    /** Useful constant for country.
615     */
616    static public final Locale JAPAN = createConstant("ja", "JP");
617
618    /** Useful constant for country.
619     */
620    static public final Locale KOREA = createConstant("ko", "KR");
621
622    /** Useful constant for country.
623     */
624    static public final Locale CHINA = SIMPLIFIED_CHINESE;
625
626    /** Useful constant for country.
627     */
628    static public final Locale PRC = SIMPLIFIED_CHINESE;
629
630    /** Useful constant for country.
631     */
632    static public final Locale TAIWAN = TRADITIONAL_CHINESE;
633
634    /** Useful constant for country.
635     */
636    static public final Locale UK = createConstant("en", "GB");
637
638    /** Useful constant for country.
639     */
640    static public final Locale US = createConstant("en", "US");
641
642    /** Useful constant for country.
643     */
644    static public final Locale CANADA = createConstant("en", "CA");
645
646    /** Useful constant for country.
647     */
648    static public final Locale CANADA_FRENCH = createConstant("fr", "CA");
649
650    // Android-added: (internal only): ISO 639-3 generic code for undetermined languages.
651    private static final String UNDETERMINED_LANGUAGE = "und";
652
653    /**
654     * Useful constant for the root locale.  The root locale is the locale whose
655     * language, country, and variant are empty ("") strings.  This is regarded
656     * as the base locale of all locales, and is used as the language/country
657     * neutral locale for the locale sensitive operations.
658     *
659     * @since 1.6
660     */
661    static public final Locale ROOT = createConstant("", "");
662
663    /**
664     * The key for the private use extension ('x').
665     *
666     * @see #getExtension(char)
667     * @see Builder#setExtension(char, String)
668     * @since 1.7
669     */
670    static public final char PRIVATE_USE_EXTENSION = 'x';
671
672    /**
673     * The key for Unicode locale extension ('u').
674     *
675     * @see #getExtension(char)
676     * @see Builder#setExtension(char, String)
677     * @since 1.7
678     */
679    static public final char UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION = 'u';
680
681    /** serialization ID
682     */
683    static final long serialVersionUID = 9149081749638150636L;
684
685    /**
686     * Display types for retrieving localized names from the name providers.
687     */
688    private static final int DISPLAY_LANGUAGE = 0;
689    private static final int DISPLAY_COUNTRY  = 1;
690    private static final int DISPLAY_VARIANT  = 2;
691    private static final int DISPLAY_SCRIPT   = 3;
692
693    /**
694     * Private constructor used by getInstance method
695     */
696    private Locale(BaseLocale baseLocale, LocaleExtensions extensions) {
697        this.baseLocale = baseLocale;
698        this.localeExtensions = extensions;
699    }
700
701    /**
702     * Construct a locale from language, country and variant.
703     * This constructor normalizes the language value to lowercase and
704     * the country value to uppercase.
705     * <p>
706     * <b>Note:</b>
707     * <ul>
708     * <li>ISO 639 is not a stable standard; some of the language codes it defines
709     * (specifically "iw", "ji", and "in") have changed.  This constructor accepts both the
710     * old codes ("iw", "ji", and "in") and the new codes ("he", "yi", and "id"), but all other
711     * API on Locale will return only the OLD codes.
712     * <li>For backward compatibility reasons, this constructor does not make
713     * any syntactic checks on the input.
714     * <li>The two cases ("ja", "JP", "JP") and ("th", "TH", "TH") are handled specially,
715     * see <a href="#special_cases_constructor">Special Cases</a> for more information.
716     * </ul>
717     *
718     * @param language An ISO 639 alpha-2 or alpha-3 language code, or a language subtag
719     * up to 8 characters in length.  See the <code>Locale</code> class description about
720     * valid language values.
721     * @param country An ISO 3166 alpha-2 country code or a UN M.49 numeric-3 area code.
722     * See the <code>Locale</code> class description about valid country values.
723     * @param variant Any arbitrary value used to indicate a variation of a <code>Locale</code>.
724     * See the <code>Locale</code> class description for the details.
725     * @exception NullPointerException thrown if any argument is null.
726     */
727    public Locale(String language, String country, String variant) {
728        if (language== null || country == null || variant == null) {
729            throw new NullPointerException();
730        }
731        baseLocale = BaseLocale.getInstance(convertOldISOCodes(language), "", country, variant);
732        localeExtensions = getCompatibilityExtensions(language, "", country, variant);
733    }
734
735    /**
736     * Construct a locale from language and country.
737     * This constructor normalizes the language value to lowercase and
738     * the country value to uppercase.
739     * <p>
740     * <b>Note:</b>
741     * <ul>
742     * <li>ISO 639 is not a stable standard; some of the language codes it defines
743     * (specifically "iw", "ji", and "in") have changed.  This constructor accepts both the
744     * old codes ("iw", "ji", and "in") and the new codes ("he", "yi", and "id"), but all other
745     * API on Locale will return only the OLD codes.
746     * <li>For backward compatibility reasons, this constructor does not make
747     * any syntactic checks on the input.
748     * </ul>
749     *
750     * @param language An ISO 639 alpha-2 or alpha-3 language code, or a language subtag
751     * up to 8 characters in length.  See the <code>Locale</code> class description about
752     * valid language values.
753     * @param country An ISO 3166 alpha-2 country code or a UN M.49 numeric-3 area code.
754     * See the <code>Locale</code> class description about valid country values.
755     * @exception NullPointerException thrown if either argument is null.
756     */
757    public Locale(String language, String country) {
758        this(language, country, "");
759    }
760
761    /**
762     * Construct a locale from a language code.
763     * This constructor normalizes the language value to lowercase.
764     * <p>
765     * <b>Note:</b>
766     * <ul>
767     * <li>ISO 639 is not a stable standard; some of the language codes it defines
768     * (specifically "iw", "ji", and "in") have changed.  This constructor accepts both the
769     * old codes ("iw", "ji", and "in") and the new codes ("he", "yi", and "id"), but all other
770     * API on Locale will return only the OLD codes.
771     * <li>For backward compatibility reasons, this constructor does not make
772     * any syntactic checks on the input.
773     * </ul>
774     *
775     * @param language An ISO 639 alpha-2 or alpha-3 language code, or a language subtag
776     * up to 8 characters in length.  See the <code>Locale</code> class description about
777     * valid language values.
778     * @exception NullPointerException thrown if argument is null.
779     * @since 1.4
780     */
781    public Locale(String language) {
782        this(language, "", "");
783    }
784
785    /**
786     * This method must be called only for creating the Locale.*
787     * constants due to making shortcuts.
788     */
789    private static Locale createConstant(String lang, String country) {
790        BaseLocale base = BaseLocale.createInstance(lang, country);
791        return getInstance(base, null);
792    }
793
794    /**
795     * Returns a <code>Locale</code> constructed from the given
796     * <code>language</code>, <code>country</code> and
797     * <code>variant</code>. If the same <code>Locale</code> instance
798     * is available in the cache, then that instance is
799     * returned. Otherwise, a new <code>Locale</code> instance is
800     * created and cached.
801     *
802     * @param language lowercase 2 to 8 language code.
803     * @param country uppercase two-letter ISO-3166 code and numric-3 UN M.49 area code.
804     * @param variant vendor and browser specific code. See class description.
805     * @return the <code>Locale</code> instance requested
806     * @exception NullPointerException if any argument is null.
807     */
808    static Locale getInstance(String language, String country, String variant) {
809        return getInstance(language, "", country, variant, null);
810    }
811
812    static Locale getInstance(String language, String script, String country,
813                                      String variant, LocaleExtensions extensions) {
814        if (language== null || script == null || country == null || variant == null) {
815            throw new NullPointerException();
816        }
817
818        if (extensions == null) {
819            extensions = getCompatibilityExtensions(language, script, country, variant);
820        }
821
822        BaseLocale baseloc = BaseLocale.getInstance(language, script, country, variant);
823        return getInstance(baseloc, extensions);
824    }
825
826    static Locale getInstance(BaseLocale baseloc, LocaleExtensions extensions) {
827        LocaleKey key = new LocaleKey(baseloc, extensions);
828        return LOCALECACHE.get(key);
829    }
830
831    private static class Cache extends LocaleObjectCache<LocaleKey, Locale> {
832        private Cache() {
833        }
834
835        @Override
836        protected Locale createObject(LocaleKey key) {
837            return new Locale(key.base, key.exts);
838        }
839    }
840
841    private static final class LocaleKey {
842        private final BaseLocale base;
843        private final LocaleExtensions exts;
844        private final int hash;
845
846        private LocaleKey(BaseLocale baseLocale, LocaleExtensions extensions) {
847            base = baseLocale;
848            exts = extensions;
849
850            // Calculate the hash value here because it's always used.
851            int h = base.hashCode();
852            if (exts != null) {
853                h ^= exts.hashCode();
854            }
855            hash = h;
856        }
857
858        @Override
859        public boolean equals(Object obj) {
860            if (this == obj) {
861                return true;
862            }
863            if (!(obj instanceof LocaleKey)) {
864                return false;
865            }
866            LocaleKey other = (LocaleKey)obj;
867            if (hash != other.hash || !base.equals(other.base)) {
868                return false;
869            }
870            if (exts == null) {
871                return other.exts == null;
872            }
873            return exts.equals(other.exts);
874        }
875
876        @Override
877        public int hashCode() {
878            return hash;
879        }
880    }
881
882    /**
883     * Gets the current value of the default locale for this instance
884     * of the Java Virtual Machine.
885     * <p>
886     * The Java Virtual Machine sets the default locale during startup
887     * based on the host environment. It is used by many locale-sensitive
888     * methods if no locale is explicitly specified.
889     * It can be changed using the
890     * {@link #setDefault(java.util.Locale) setDefault} method.
891     *
892     * @return the default locale for this instance of the Java Virtual Machine
893     */
894    public static Locale getDefault() {
895        // do not synchronize this method - see 4071298
896        // Android-changed: Add NoImagePreloadHolder to allow compile-time initialization.
897        // return defaultLocale;
898        return NoImagePreloadHolder.defaultLocale;
899    }
900
901    /**
902     * Gets the current value of the default locale for the specified Category
903     * for this instance of the Java Virtual Machine.
904     * <p>
905     * The Java Virtual Machine sets the default locale during startup based
906     * on the host environment. It is used by many locale-sensitive methods
907     * if no locale is explicitly specified. It can be changed using the
908     * setDefault(Locale.Category, Locale) method.
909     *
910     * @param category - the specified category to get the default locale
911     * @throws NullPointerException - if category is null
912     * @return the default locale for the specified Category for this instance
913     *     of the Java Virtual Machine
914     * @see #setDefault(Locale.Category, Locale)
915     * @since 1.7
916     */
917    public static Locale getDefault(Locale.Category category) {
918        // do not synchronize this method - see 4071298
919        switch (category) {
920        case DISPLAY:
921            if (defaultDisplayLocale == null) {
922                synchronized(Locale.class) {
923                    if (defaultDisplayLocale == null) {
924                        defaultDisplayLocale = initDefault(category);
925                    }
926                }
927            }
928            return defaultDisplayLocale;
929        case FORMAT:
930            if (defaultFormatLocale == null) {
931                synchronized(Locale.class) {
932                    if (defaultFormatLocale == null) {
933                        defaultFormatLocale = initDefault(category);
934                    }
935                }
936            }
937            return defaultFormatLocale;
938        default:
939            assert false: "Unknown Category";
940        }
941        return getDefault();
942    }
943
944    // BEGIN Android-changed: initDefault changes
945    //  1.) In initDefault(), user.locale gets priority
946    //  2.) In both initDefault methods, use System.getProperty() instead
947    //      of legacy AccessController / GetPropertyAction security code.
948    /**
949     * @hide visible for testing.
950     */
951    public static Locale initDefault() {
952        // user.locale gets priority
953        final String languageTag = System.getProperty("user.locale", "");
954        if (!languageTag.isEmpty()) {
955            return Locale.forLanguageTag(languageTag);
956        }
957
958        // user.locale is empty
959        String language, region, script, country, variant;
960        language = System.getProperty("user.language", "en");
961        // for compatibility, check for old user.region property
962        region = System.getProperty("user.region");
963        if (region != null) {
964            // region can be of form country, country_variant, or _variant
965            int i = region.indexOf('_');
966            if (i >= 0) {
967                country = region.substring(0, i);
968                variant = region.substring(i + 1);
969            } else {
970                country = region;
971                variant = "";
972            }
973            script = "";
974        } else {
975            script = System.getProperty("user.script", "");
976            country = System.getProperty("user.country", "");
977            variant = System.getProperty("user.variant", "");
978        }
979
980        return getInstance(language, script, country, variant, null);
981    }
982
983    private static Locale initDefault(Locale.Category category) {
984        // Android-changed: Add NoImagePreloadHolder to allow compile-time initialization.
985        final Locale defaultLocale = NoImagePreloadHolder.defaultLocale;
986        return getInstance(
987            System.getProperty(category.languageKey, defaultLocale.getLanguage()),
988            System.getProperty(category.scriptKey, defaultLocale.getScript()),
989            System.getProperty(category.countryKey, defaultLocale.getCountry()),
990            System.getProperty(category.variantKey, defaultLocale.getVariant()),
991            null);
992    }
993    // END Android-changed: initDefault changes
994
995    /**
996     * Sets the default locale for this instance of the Java Virtual Machine.
997     * This does not affect the host locale.
998     * <p>
999     * If there is a security manager, its <code>checkPermission</code>
1000     * method is called with a <code>PropertyPermission("user.language", "write")</code>
1001     * permission before the default locale is changed.
1002     * <p>
1003     * The Java Virtual Machine sets the default locale during startup
1004     * based on the host environment. It is used by many locale-sensitive
1005     * methods if no locale is explicitly specified.
1006     * <p>
1007     * Since changing the default locale may affect many different areas
1008     * of functionality, this method should only be used if the caller
1009     * is prepared to reinitialize locale-sensitive code running
1010     * within the same Java Virtual Machine.
1011     * <p>
1012     * By setting the default locale with this method, all of the default
1013     * locales for each Category are also set to the specified default locale.
1014     *
1015     * @throws SecurityException
1016     *        if a security manager exists and its
1017     *        <code>checkPermission</code> method doesn't allow the operation.
1018     * @throws NullPointerException if <code>newLocale</code> is null
1019     * @param newLocale the new default locale
1020     * @see SecurityManager#checkPermission
1021     * @see java.util.PropertyPermission
1022     */
1023    public static synchronized void setDefault(Locale newLocale) {
1024        setDefault(Category.DISPLAY, newLocale);
1025        setDefault(Category.FORMAT, newLocale);
1026        // Android-changed: Add NoImagePreloadHolder to allow compile-time initialization.
1027        // defaultLocale = newLocale;
1028        NoImagePreloadHolder.defaultLocale = newLocale;
1029        // Android-added: Keep ICU state in sync with java.util.
1030        ICU.setDefaultLocale(newLocale.toLanguageTag());
1031    }
1032
1033    /**
1034     * Sets the default locale for the specified Category for this instance
1035     * of the Java Virtual Machine. This does not affect the host locale.
1036     * <p>
1037     * If there is a security manager, its checkPermission method is called
1038     * with a PropertyPermission("user.language", "write") permission before
1039     * the default locale is changed.
1040     * <p>
1041     * The Java Virtual Machine sets the default locale during startup based
1042     * on the host environment. It is used by many locale-sensitive methods
1043     * if no locale is explicitly specified.
1044     * <p>
1045     * Since changing the default locale may affect many different areas of
1046     * functionality, this method should only be used if the caller is
1047     * prepared to reinitialize locale-sensitive code running within the
1048     * same Java Virtual Machine.
1049     * <p>
1050     *
1051     * @param category - the specified category to set the default locale
1052     * @param newLocale - the new default locale
1053     * @throws SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its
1054     *     checkPermission method doesn't allow the operation.
1055     * @throws NullPointerException - if category and/or newLocale is null
1056     * @see SecurityManager#checkPermission(java.security.Permission)
1057     * @see PropertyPermission
1058     * @see #getDefault(Locale.Category)
1059     * @since 1.7
1060     */
1061    public static synchronized void setDefault(Locale.Category category,
1062        Locale newLocale) {
1063        if (category == null)
1064            throw new NullPointerException("Category cannot be NULL");
1065        if (newLocale == null)
1066            throw new NullPointerException("Can't set default locale to NULL");
1067
1068        SecurityManager sm = System.getSecurityManager();
1069        if (sm != null) sm.checkPermission(new PropertyPermission
1070                        ("user.language", "write"));
1071        switch (category) {
1072        case DISPLAY:
1073            defaultDisplayLocale = newLocale;
1074            break;
1075        case FORMAT:
1076            defaultFormatLocale = newLocale;
1077            break;
1078        default:
1079            assert false: "Unknown Category";
1080        }
1081    }
1082
1083    // Android-changed: Removed documentation references to LocaleServiceProvider.
1084    /**
1085     * Returns an array of all installed locales.
1086     *
1087     * @return An array of installed locales.
1088     */
1089    public static Locale[] getAvailableLocales() {
1090        // Android-changed: Switched to use ICU.
1091        // return LocaleServiceProviderPool.getAllAvailableLocales();
1092        return ICU.getAvailableLocales();
1093    }
1094
1095    /**
1096     * Returns a list of all 2-letter country codes defined in ISO 3166.
1097     * Can be used to create Locales.
1098     * <p>
1099     * <b>Note:</b> The <code>Locale</code> class also supports other codes for
1100     * country (region), such as 3-letter numeric UN M.49 area codes.
1101     * Therefore, the list returned by this method does not contain ALL valid
1102     * codes that can be used to create Locales.
1103     *
1104     * @return An array of ISO 3166 two-letter country codes.
1105     */
1106    public static String[] getISOCountries() {
1107        // Android-changed: Switched to use ICU.
1108        return ICU.getISOCountries();
1109    }
1110
1111    /**
1112     * Returns a list of all 2-letter language codes defined in ISO 639.
1113     * Can be used to create Locales.
1114     * <p>
1115     * <b>Note:</b>
1116     * <ul>
1117     * <li>ISO 639 is not a stable standard&mdash; some languages' codes have changed.
1118     * The list this function returns includes both the new and the old codes for the
1119     * languages whose codes have changed.
1120     * <li>The <code>Locale</code> class also supports language codes up to
1121     * 8 characters in length.  Therefore, the list returned by this method does
1122     * not contain ALL valid codes that can be used to create Locales.
1123     * </ul>
1124     *
1125     * @return Am array of ISO 639 two-letter language codes.
1126     */
1127    public static String[] getISOLanguages() {
1128        // Android-changed: Switched to use ICU.
1129        return ICU.getISOLanguages();
1130    }
1131
1132    /**
1133     * Returns the language code of this Locale.
1134     *
1135     * <p><b>Note:</b> ISO 639 is not a stable standard&mdash; some languages' codes have changed.
1136     * Locale's constructor recognizes both the new and the old codes for the languages
1137     * whose codes have changed, but this function always returns the old code.  If you
1138     * want to check for a specific language whose code has changed, don't do
1139     * <pre>
1140     * if (locale.getLanguage().equals("he")) // BAD!
1141     *    ...
1142     * </pre>
1143     * Instead, do
1144     * <pre>
1145     * if (locale.getLanguage().equals(new Locale("he").getLanguage()))
1146     *    ...
1147     * </pre>
1148     * @return The language code, or the empty string if none is defined.
1149     * @see #getDisplayLanguage
1150     */
1151    public String getLanguage() {
1152        return baseLocale.getLanguage();
1153    }
1154
1155    /**
1156     * Returns the script for this locale, which should
1157     * either be the empty string or an ISO 15924 4-letter script
1158     * code. The first letter is uppercase and the rest are
1159     * lowercase, for example, 'Latn', 'Cyrl'.
1160     *
1161     * @return The script code, or the empty string if none is defined.
1162     * @see #getDisplayScript
1163     * @since 1.7
1164     */
1165    public String getScript() {
1166        return baseLocale.getScript();
1167    }
1168
1169    /**
1170     * Returns the country/region code for this locale, which should
1171     * either be the empty string, an uppercase ISO 3166 2-letter code,
1172     * or a UN M.49 3-digit code.
1173     *
1174     * @return The country/region code, or the empty string if none is defined.
1175     * @see #getDisplayCountry
1176     */
1177    public String getCountry() {
1178        return baseLocale.getRegion();
1179    }
1180
1181    /**
1182     * Returns the variant code for this locale.
1183     *
1184     * @return The variant code, or the empty string if none is defined.
1185     * @see #getDisplayVariant
1186     */
1187    public String getVariant() {
1188        return baseLocale.getVariant();
1189    }
1190
1191    /**
1192     * Returns {@code true} if this {@code Locale} has any <a href="#def_extensions">
1193     * extensions</a>.
1194     *
1195     * @return {@code true} if this {@code Locale} has any extensions
1196     * @since 1.8
1197     */
1198    public boolean hasExtensions() {
1199        return localeExtensions != null;
1200    }
1201
1202    /**
1203     * Returns a copy of this {@code Locale} with no <a href="#def_extensions">
1204     * extensions</a>. If this {@code Locale} has no extensions, this {@code Locale}
1205     * is returned.
1206     *
1207     * @return a copy of this {@code Locale} with no extensions, or {@code this}
1208     *         if {@code this} has no extensions
1209     * @since 1.8
1210     */
1211    public Locale stripExtensions() {
1212        return hasExtensions() ? Locale.getInstance(baseLocale, null) : this;
1213    }
1214
1215    /**
1216     * Returns the extension (or private use) value associated with
1217     * the specified key, or null if there is no extension
1218     * associated with the key. To be well-formed, the key must be one
1219     * of <code>[0-9A-Za-z]</code>. Keys are case-insensitive, so
1220     * for example 'z' and 'Z' represent the same extension.
1221     *
1222     * @param key the extension key
1223     * @return The extension, or null if this locale defines no
1224     * extension for the specified key.
1225     * @throws IllegalArgumentException if key is not well-formed
1226     * @see #PRIVATE_USE_EXTENSION
1227     * @see #UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION
1228     * @since 1.7
1229     */
1230    public String getExtension(char key) {
1231        if (!LocaleExtensions.isValidKey(key)) {
1232            throw new IllegalArgumentException("Ill-formed extension key: " + key);
1233        }
1234        return hasExtensions() ? localeExtensions.getExtensionValue(key) : null;
1235    }
1236
1237    /**
1238     * Returns the set of extension keys associated with this locale, or the
1239     * empty set if it has no extensions. The returned set is unmodifiable.
1240     * The keys will all be lower-case.
1241     *
1242     * @return The set of extension keys, or the empty set if this locale has
1243     * no extensions.
1244     * @since 1.7
1245     */
1246    public Set<Character> getExtensionKeys() {
1247        if (!hasExtensions()) {
1248            return Collections.emptySet();
1249        }
1250        return localeExtensions.getKeys();
1251    }
1252
1253    /**
1254     * Returns the set of unicode locale attributes associated with
1255     * this locale, or the empty set if it has no attributes. The
1256     * returned set is unmodifiable.
1257     *
1258     * @return The set of attributes.
1259     * @since 1.7
1260     */
1261    public Set<String> getUnicodeLocaleAttributes() {
1262        if (!hasExtensions()) {
1263            return Collections.emptySet();
1264        }
1265        return localeExtensions.getUnicodeLocaleAttributes();
1266    }
1267
1268    /**
1269     * Returns the Unicode locale type associated with the specified Unicode locale key
1270     * for this locale. Returns the empty string for keys that are defined with no type.
1271     * Returns null if the key is not defined. Keys are case-insensitive. The key must
1272     * be two alphanumeric characters ([0-9a-zA-Z]), or an IllegalArgumentException is
1273     * thrown.
1274     *
1275     * @param key the Unicode locale key
1276     * @return The Unicode locale type associated with the key, or null if the
1277     * locale does not define the key.
1278     * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the key is not well-formed
1279     * @throws NullPointerException if <code>key</code> is null
1280     * @since 1.7
1281     */
1282    public String getUnicodeLocaleType(String key) {
1283        if (!isUnicodeExtensionKey(key)) {
1284            throw new IllegalArgumentException("Ill-formed Unicode locale key: " + key);
1285        }
1286        return hasExtensions() ? localeExtensions.getUnicodeLocaleType(key) : null;
1287    }
1288
1289    /**
1290     * Returns the set of Unicode locale keys defined by this locale, or the empty set if
1291     * this locale has none.  The returned set is immutable.  Keys are all lower case.
1292     *
1293     * @return The set of Unicode locale keys, or the empty set if this locale has
1294     * no Unicode locale keywords.
1295     * @since 1.7
1296     */
1297    public Set<String> getUnicodeLocaleKeys() {
1298        if (localeExtensions == null) {
1299            return Collections.emptySet();
1300        }
1301        return localeExtensions.getUnicodeLocaleKeys();
1302    }
1303
1304    /**
1305     * Package locale method returning the Locale's BaseLocale,
1306     * used by ResourceBundle
1307     * @return base locale of this Locale
1308     */
1309    BaseLocale getBaseLocale() {
1310        return baseLocale;
1311    }
1312
1313    /**
1314     * Package private method returning the Locale's LocaleExtensions,
1315     * used by ResourceBundle.
1316     * @return locale exnteions of this Locale,
1317     *         or {@code null} if no extensions are defined
1318     */
1319     LocaleExtensions getLocaleExtensions() {
1320         return localeExtensions;
1321     }
1322
1323    /**
1324     * Returns a string representation of this <code>Locale</code>
1325     * object, consisting of language, country, variant, script,
1326     * and extensions as below:
1327     * <blockquote>
1328     * language + "_" + country + "_" + (variant + "_#" | "#") + script + "-" + extensions
1329     * </blockquote>
1330     *
1331     * Language is always lower case, country is always upper case, script is always title
1332     * case, and extensions are always lower case.  Extensions and private use subtags
1333     * will be in canonical order as explained in {@link #toLanguageTag}.
1334     *
1335     * <p>When the locale has neither script nor extensions, the result is the same as in
1336     * Java 6 and prior.
1337     *
1338     * <p>If both the language and country fields are missing, this function will return
1339     * the empty string, even if the variant, script, or extensions field is present (you
1340     * can't have a locale with just a variant, the variant must accompany a well-formed
1341     * language or country code).
1342     *
1343     * <p>If script or extensions are present and variant is missing, no underscore is
1344     * added before the "#".
1345     *
1346     * <p>This behavior is designed to support debugging and to be compatible with
1347     * previous uses of <code>toString</code> that expected language, country, and variant
1348     * fields only.  To represent a Locale as a String for interchange purposes, use
1349     * {@link #toLanguageTag}.
1350     *
1351     * <p>Examples: <ul>
1352     * <li><tt>en</tt></li>
1353     * <li><tt>de_DE</tt></li>
1354     * <li><tt>_GB</tt></li>
1355     * <li><tt>en_US_WIN</tt></li>
1356     * <li><tt>de__POSIX</tt></li>
1357     * <li><tt>zh_CN_#Hans</tt></li>
1358     * <li><tt>zh_TW_#Hant-x-java</tt></li>
1359     * <li><tt>th_TH_TH_#u-nu-thai</tt></li></ul>
1360     *
1361     * @return A string representation of the Locale, for debugging.
1362     * @see #getDisplayName
1363     * @see #toLanguageTag
1364     */
1365    @Override
1366    public final String toString() {
1367        boolean l = (baseLocale.getLanguage().length() != 0);
1368        boolean s = (baseLocale.getScript().length() != 0);
1369        boolean r = (baseLocale.getRegion().length() != 0);
1370        boolean v = (baseLocale.getVariant().length() != 0);
1371        boolean e = (localeExtensions != null && localeExtensions.getID().length() != 0);
1372
1373        StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder(baseLocale.getLanguage());
1374        if (r || (l && (v || s || e))) {
1375            result.append('_')
1376                .append(baseLocale.getRegion()); // This may just append '_'
1377        }
1378        if (v && (l || r)) {
1379            result.append('_')
1380                .append(baseLocale.getVariant());
1381        }
1382
1383        if (s && (l || r)) {
1384            result.append("_#")
1385                .append(baseLocale.getScript());
1386        }
1387
1388        if (e && (l || r)) {
1389            result.append('_');
1390            if (!s) {
1391                result.append('#');
1392            }
1393            result.append(localeExtensions.getID());
1394        }
1395
1396        return result.toString();
1397    }
1398
1399    /**
1400     * Returns a well-formed IETF BCP 47 language tag representing
1401     * this locale.
1402     *
1403     * <p>If this <code>Locale</code> has a language, country, or
1404     * variant that does not satisfy the IETF BCP 47 language tag
1405     * syntax requirements, this method handles these fields as
1406     * described below:
1407     *
1408     * <p><b>Language:</b> If language is empty, or not <a
1409     * href="#def_language" >well-formed</a> (for example "a" or
1410     * "e2"), it will be emitted as "und" (Undetermined).
1411     *
1412     * <p><b>Country:</b> If country is not <a
1413     * href="#def_region">well-formed</a> (for example "12" or "USA"),
1414     * it will be omitted.
1415     *
1416     * <p><b>Variant:</b> If variant <b>is</b> <a
1417     * href="#def_variant">well-formed</a>, each sub-segment
1418     * (delimited by '-' or '_') is emitted as a subtag.  Otherwise:
1419     * <ul>
1420     *
1421     * <li>if all sub-segments match <code>[0-9a-zA-Z]{1,8}</code>
1422     * (for example "WIN" or "Oracle_JDK_Standard_Edition"), the first
1423     * ill-formed sub-segment and all following will be appended to
1424     * the private use subtag.  The first appended subtag will be
1425     * "lvariant", followed by the sub-segments in order, separated by
1426     * hyphen. For example, "x-lvariant-WIN",
1427     * "Oracle-x-lvariant-JDK-Standard-Edition".
1428     *
1429     * <li>if any sub-segment does not match
1430     * <code>[0-9a-zA-Z]{1,8}</code>, the variant will be truncated
1431     * and the problematic sub-segment and all following sub-segments
1432     * will be omitted.  If the remainder is non-empty, it will be
1433     * emitted as a private use subtag as above (even if the remainder
1434     * turns out to be well-formed).  For example,
1435     * "Solaris_isjustthecoolestthing" is emitted as
1436     * "x-lvariant-Solaris", not as "solaris".</li></ul>
1437     *
1438     * <p><b>Special Conversions:</b> Java supports some old locale
1439     * representations, including deprecated ISO language codes,
1440     * for compatibility. This method performs the following
1441     * conversions:
1442     * <ul>
1443     *
1444     * <li>Deprecated ISO language codes "iw", "ji", and "in" are
1445     * converted to "he", "yi", and "id", respectively.
1446     *
1447     * <li>A locale with language "no", country "NO", and variant
1448     * "NY", representing Norwegian Nynorsk (Norway), is converted
1449     * to a language tag "nn-NO".</li></ul>
1450     *
1451     * <p><b>Note:</b> Although the language tag created by this
1452     * method is well-formed (satisfies the syntax requirements
1453     * defined by the IETF BCP 47 specification), it is not
1454     * necessarily a valid BCP 47 language tag.  For example,
1455     * <pre>
1456     *   new Locale("xx", "YY").toLanguageTag();</pre>
1457     *
1458     * will return "xx-YY", but the language subtag "xx" and the
1459     * region subtag "YY" are invalid because they are not registered
1460     * in the IANA Language Subtag Registry.
1461     *
1462     * @return a BCP47 language tag representing the locale
1463     * @see #forLanguageTag(String)
1464     * @since 1.7
1465     */
1466    public String toLanguageTag() {
1467        if (languageTag != null) {
1468            return languageTag;
1469        }
1470
1471        LanguageTag tag = LanguageTag.parseLocale(baseLocale, localeExtensions);
1472        StringBuilder buf = new StringBuilder();
1473
1474        String subtag = tag.getLanguage();
1475        if (subtag.length() > 0) {
1476            buf.append(LanguageTag.canonicalizeLanguage(subtag));
1477        }
1478
1479        subtag = tag.getScript();
1480        if (subtag.length() > 0) {
1481            buf.append(LanguageTag.SEP);
1482            buf.append(LanguageTag.canonicalizeScript(subtag));
1483        }
1484
1485        subtag = tag.getRegion();
1486        if (subtag.length() > 0) {
1487            buf.append(LanguageTag.SEP);
1488            buf.append(LanguageTag.canonicalizeRegion(subtag));
1489        }
1490
1491        List<String>subtags = tag.getVariants();
1492        for (String s : subtags) {
1493            buf.append(LanguageTag.SEP);
1494            // preserve casing
1495            buf.append(s);
1496        }
1497
1498        subtags = tag.getExtensions();
1499        for (String s : subtags) {
1500            buf.append(LanguageTag.SEP);
1501            buf.append(LanguageTag.canonicalizeExtension(s));
1502        }
1503
1504        subtag = tag.getPrivateuse();
1505        if (subtag.length() > 0) {
1506            if (buf.length() > 0) {
1507                buf.append(LanguageTag.SEP);
1508            }
1509            buf.append(LanguageTag.PRIVATEUSE).append(LanguageTag.SEP);
1510            // preserve casing
1511            buf.append(subtag);
1512        }
1513
1514        String langTag = buf.toString();
1515        synchronized (this) {
1516            if (languageTag == null) {
1517                languageTag = langTag;
1518            }
1519        }
1520        return languageTag;
1521    }
1522
1523    /**
1524     * Returns a locale for the specified IETF BCP 47 language tag string.
1525     *
1526     * <p>If the specified language tag contains any ill-formed subtags,
1527     * the first such subtag and all following subtags are ignored.  Compare
1528     * to {@link Locale.Builder#setLanguageTag} which throws an exception
1529     * in this case.
1530     *
1531     * <p>The following <b>conversions</b> are performed:<ul>
1532     *
1533     * <li>The language code "und" is mapped to language "".
1534     *
1535     * <li>The language codes "he", "yi", and "id" are mapped to "iw",
1536     * "ji", and "in" respectively. (This is the same canonicalization
1537     * that's done in Locale's constructors.)
1538     *
1539     * <li>The portion of a private use subtag prefixed by "lvariant",
1540     * if any, is removed and appended to the variant field in the
1541     * result locale (without case normalization).  If it is then
1542     * empty, the private use subtag is discarded:
1543     *
1544     * <pre>
1545     *     Locale loc;
1546     *     loc = Locale.forLanguageTag("en-US-x-lvariant-POSIX");
1547     *     loc.getVariant(); // returns "POSIX"
1548     *     loc.getExtension('x'); // returns null
1549     *
1550     *     loc = Locale.forLanguageTag("de-POSIX-x-URP-lvariant-Abc-Def");
1551     *     loc.getVariant(); // returns "POSIX_Abc_Def"
1552     *     loc.getExtension('x'); // returns "urp"
1553     * </pre>
1554     *
1555     * <li>When the languageTag argument contains an extlang subtag,
1556     * the first such subtag is used as the language, and the primary
1557     * language subtag and other extlang subtags are ignored:
1558     *
1559     * <pre>
1560     *     Locale.forLanguageTag("ar-aao").getLanguage(); // returns "aao"
1561     *     Locale.forLanguageTag("en-abc-def-us").toString(); // returns "abc_US"
1562     * </pre>
1563     *
1564     * <li>Case is normalized except for variant tags, which are left
1565     * unchanged.  Language is normalized to lower case, script to
1566     * title case, country to upper case, and extensions to lower
1567     * case.
1568     *
1569     * <li>If, after processing, the locale would exactly match either
1570     * ja_JP_JP or th_TH_TH with no extensions, the appropriate
1571     * extensions are added as though the constructor had been called:
1572     *
1573     * <pre>
1574     *    Locale.forLanguageTag("ja-JP-x-lvariant-JP").toLanguageTag();
1575     *    // returns "ja-JP-u-ca-japanese-x-lvariant-JP"
1576     *    Locale.forLanguageTag("th-TH-x-lvariant-TH").toLanguageTag();
1577     *    // returns "th-TH-u-nu-thai-x-lvariant-TH"
1578     * </pre></ul>
1579     *
1580     * <p>This implements the 'Language-Tag' production of BCP47, and
1581     * so supports grandfathered (regular and irregular) as well as
1582     * private use language tags.  Stand alone private use tags are
1583     * represented as empty language and extension 'x-whatever',
1584     * and grandfathered tags are converted to their canonical replacements
1585     * where they exist.
1586     *
1587     * <p>Grandfathered tags with canonical replacements are as follows:
1588     *
1589     * <table summary="Grandfathered tags with canonical replacements">
1590     * <tbody align="center">
1591     * <tr><th>grandfathered tag</th><th>&nbsp;</th><th>modern replacement</th></tr>
1592     * <tr><td>art-lojban</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>jbo</td></tr>
1593     * <tr><td>i-ami</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>ami</td></tr>
1594     * <tr><td>i-bnn</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>bnn</td></tr>
1595     * <tr><td>i-hak</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>hak</td></tr>
1596     * <tr><td>i-klingon</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>tlh</td></tr>
1597     * <tr><td>i-lux</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>lb</td></tr>
1598     * <tr><td>i-navajo</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>nv</td></tr>
1599     * <tr><td>i-pwn</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>pwn</td></tr>
1600     * <tr><td>i-tao</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>tao</td></tr>
1601     * <tr><td>i-tay</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>tay</td></tr>
1602     * <tr><td>i-tsu</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>tsu</td></tr>
1603     * <tr><td>no-bok</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>nb</td></tr>
1604     * <tr><td>no-nyn</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>nn</td></tr>
1605     * <tr><td>sgn-BE-FR</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>sfb</td></tr>
1606     * <tr><td>sgn-BE-NL</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>vgt</td></tr>
1607     * <tr><td>sgn-CH-DE</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>sgg</td></tr>
1608     * <tr><td>zh-guoyu</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>cmn</td></tr>
1609     * <tr><td>zh-hakka</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>hak</td></tr>
1610     * <tr><td>zh-min-nan</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>nan</td></tr>
1611     * <tr><td>zh-xiang</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>hsn</td></tr>
1612     * </tbody>
1613     * </table>
1614     *
1615     * <p>Grandfathered tags with no modern replacement will be
1616     * converted as follows:
1617     *
1618     * <table summary="Grandfathered tags with no modern replacement">
1619     * <tbody align="center">
1620     * <tr><th>grandfathered tag</th><th>&nbsp;</th><th>converts to</th></tr>
1621     * <tr><td>cel-gaulish</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>xtg-x-cel-gaulish</td></tr>
1622     * <tr><td>en-GB-oed</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>en-GB-x-oed</td></tr>
1623     * <tr><td>i-default</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>en-x-i-default</td></tr>
1624     * <tr><td>i-enochian</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>und-x-i-enochian</td></tr>
1625     * <tr><td>i-mingo</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>see-x-i-mingo</td></tr>
1626     * <tr><td>zh-min</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>nan-x-zh-min</td></tr>
1627     * </tbody>
1628     * </table>
1629     *
1630     * <p>For a list of all grandfathered tags, see the
1631     * IANA Language Subtag Registry (search for "Type: grandfathered").
1632     *
1633     * <p><b>Note</b>: there is no guarantee that <code>toLanguageTag</code>
1634     * and <code>forLanguageTag</code> will round-trip.
1635     *
1636     * @param languageTag the language tag
1637     * @return The locale that best represents the language tag.
1638     * @throws NullPointerException if <code>languageTag</code> is <code>null</code>
1639     * @see #toLanguageTag()
1640     * @see java.util.Locale.Builder#setLanguageTag(String)
1641     * @since 1.7
1642     */
1643    public static Locale forLanguageTag(String languageTag) {
1644        LanguageTag tag = LanguageTag.parse(languageTag, null);
1645        InternalLocaleBuilder bldr = new InternalLocaleBuilder();
1646        bldr.setLanguageTag(tag);
1647        BaseLocale base = bldr.getBaseLocale();
1648        LocaleExtensions exts = bldr.getLocaleExtensions();
1649        if (exts == null && base.getVariant().length() > 0) {
1650            exts = getCompatibilityExtensions(base.getLanguage(), base.getScript(),
1651                                              base.getRegion(), base.getVariant());
1652        }
1653        return getInstance(base, exts);
1654    }
1655
1656    /**
1657     * Returns a three-letter abbreviation of this locale's language.
1658     * If the language matches an ISO 639-1 two-letter code, the
1659     * corresponding ISO 639-2/T three-letter lowercase code is
1660     * returned.  The ISO 639-2 language codes can be found on-line,
1661     * see "Codes for the Representation of Names of Languages Part 2:
1662     * Alpha-3 Code".  If the locale specifies a three-letter
1663     * language, the language is returned as is.  If the locale does
1664     * not specify a language the empty string is returned.
1665     *
1666     * @return A three-letter abbreviation of this locale's language.
1667     * @exception MissingResourceException Throws MissingResourceException if
1668     * three-letter language abbreviation is not available for this locale.
1669     */
1670    public String getISO3Language() throws MissingResourceException {
1671        String lang = baseLocale.getLanguage();
1672        if (lang.length() == 3) {
1673            return lang;
1674        }
1675        // BEGIN Android-added
1676        // return "" for empty languages for the sake of backwards compatibility.
1677        else if (lang.isEmpty()) {
1678            return "";
1679        }
1680        // END Android-added
1681
1682        // BEGIN Android-changed: Use ICU.
1683        // String language3 = getISO3Code(lang, LocaleISOData.isoLanguageTable);
1684        // if (language3 == null) {
1685        String language3 = ICU.getISO3Language(lang);
1686        if (!lang.isEmpty() && language3.isEmpty()) {
1687        // END Android-changed
1688            throw new MissingResourceException("Couldn't find 3-letter language code for "
1689                    + lang, "FormatData_" + toString(), "ShortLanguage");
1690        }
1691        return language3;
1692    }
1693
1694    /**
1695     * Returns a three-letter abbreviation for this locale's country.
1696     * If the country matches an ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code, the
1697     * corresponding ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 uppercase code is returned.
1698     * If the locale doesn't specify a country, this will be the empty
1699     * string.
1700     *
1701     * <p>The ISO 3166-1 codes can be found on-line.
1702     *
1703     * @return A three-letter abbreviation of this locale's country.
1704     * @exception MissingResourceException Throws MissingResourceException if the
1705     * three-letter country abbreviation is not available for this locale.
1706     */
1707    public String getISO3Country() throws MissingResourceException {
1708        // BEGIN Android-changed: Use ICU. Also return "" for missing regions.
1709        final String region = baseLocale.getRegion();
1710        // Note that this will return an UN.M49 region code
1711        if (region.length() == 3) {
1712            return baseLocale.getRegion();
1713        } else if (region.isEmpty()) {
1714            return "";
1715        }
1716
1717        // Prefix "en-" because ICU doesn't really care about what the language is.
1718        String country3 = ICU.getISO3Country("en-" + region);
1719        if (!region.isEmpty() && country3.isEmpty()) {
1720            throw new MissingResourceException("Couldn't find 3-letter country code for "
1721                    + baseLocale.getRegion(), "FormatData_" + toString(), "ShortCountry");
1722        }
1723        // END Android-changed
1724        return country3;
1725    }
1726
1727    /**
1728     * Returns a name for the locale's language that is appropriate for display to the
1729     * user.
1730     * If possible, the name returned will be localized for the default
1731     * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale.
1732     * For example, if the locale is fr_FR and the default
1733     * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale
1734     * is en_US, getDisplayLanguage() will return "French"; if the locale is en_US and
1735     * the default {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale is fr_FR,
1736     * getDisplayLanguage() will return "anglais".
1737     * If the name returned cannot be localized for the default
1738     * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale,
1739     * (say, we don't have a Japanese name for Croatian),
1740     * this function falls back on the English name, and uses the ISO code as a last-resort
1741     * value.  If the locale doesn't specify a language, this function returns the empty string.
1742     *
1743     * @return The name of the display language.
1744     */
1745    public final String getDisplayLanguage() {
1746        return getDisplayLanguage(getDefault(Category.DISPLAY));
1747    }
1748
1749    // BEGIN Android-changed: Use ICU; documentation; backwards compatibility hacks;
1750    // added private helper methods.
1751    /**
1752     * Returns the name of this locale's language, localized to {@code locale}.
1753     * If the language name is unknown, the language code is returned.
1754     */
1755    public String getDisplayLanguage(Locale locale) {
1756        String languageCode = baseLocale.getLanguage();
1757        if (languageCode.isEmpty()) {
1758            return "";
1759        }
1760
1761        // Hacks for backward compatibility.
1762        //
1763        // Our language tag will contain "und" if the languageCode is invalid
1764        // or missing. ICU will then return "langue indéterminée" or the equivalent
1765        // display language for the indeterminate language code.
1766        //
1767        // Sigh... ugh... and what not.
1768        final String normalizedLanguage = normalizeAndValidateLanguage(
1769                languageCode, false /* strict */);
1770        if (UNDETERMINED_LANGUAGE.equals(normalizedLanguage)) {
1771            return languageCode;
1772        }
1773
1774        // TODO: We need a new hack or a complete fix for http://b/8049507 --- We would
1775        // cover the frameworks' tracks when they were using "tl" instead of "fil".
1776        String result = ICU.getDisplayLanguage(this, locale);
1777        if (result == null) { // TODO: do we need to do this, or does ICU do it for us?
1778            result = ICU.getDisplayLanguage(this, Locale.getDefault());
1779        }
1780        return result;
1781    }
1782
1783    private static String normalizeAndValidateLanguage(String language, boolean strict) {
1784        if (language == null || language.isEmpty()) {
1785            return "";
1786        }
1787
1788        final String lowercaseLanguage = language.toLowerCase(Locale.ROOT);
1789        if (!isValidBcp47Alpha(lowercaseLanguage, 2, 3)) {
1790            if (strict) {
1791                throw new IllformedLocaleException("Invalid language: " + language);
1792            } else {
1793                return UNDETERMINED_LANGUAGE;
1794            }
1795        }
1796
1797        return lowercaseLanguage;
1798    }
1799
1800    /*
1801     * Checks whether a given string is an ASCII alphanumeric string.
1802     */
1803    private static boolean isAsciiAlphaNum(String string) {
1804        for (int i = 0; i < string.length(); i++) {
1805            final char character = string.charAt(i);
1806            if (!(character >= 'a' && character <= 'z' ||
1807                    character >= 'A' && character <= 'Z' ||
1808                    character >= '0' && character <= '9')) {
1809                return false;
1810            }
1811        }
1812
1813        return true;
1814    }
1815    // END Android-changed
1816
1817    /**
1818     * Returns a name for the the locale's script that is appropriate for display to
1819     * the user. If possible, the name will be localized for the default
1820     * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale.  Returns
1821     * the empty string if this locale doesn't specify a script code.
1822     *
1823     * @return the display name of the script code for the current default
1824     *     {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale
1825     * @since 1.7
1826     */
1827    public String getDisplayScript() {
1828        return getDisplayScript(getDefault(Category.DISPLAY));
1829    }
1830
1831    /**
1832     * Returns a name for the locale's script that is appropriate
1833     * for display to the user. If possible, the name will be
1834     * localized for the given locale. Returns the empty string if
1835     * this locale doesn't specify a script code.
1836     *
1837     * @param inLocale The locale for which to retrieve the display script.
1838     * @return the display name of the script code for the current default
1839     * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale
1840     * @throws NullPointerException if <code>inLocale</code> is <code>null</code>
1841     * @since 1.7
1842     */
1843    public String getDisplayScript(Locale inLocale) {
1844        // BEGIN Android-changed: Use ICU.
1845        String scriptCode = baseLocale.getScript();
1846        if (scriptCode.isEmpty()) {
1847            return "";
1848        }
1849
1850        String result = ICU.getDisplayScript(this, inLocale);
1851        if (result == null) { // TODO: do we need to do this, or does ICU do it for us?
1852            result = ICU.getDisplayScript(this, Locale.getDefault(Category.DISPLAY));
1853        }
1854
1855        return result;
1856        // END Android-changed
1857    }
1858
1859    /**
1860     * Returns a name for the locale's country that is appropriate for display to the
1861     * user.
1862     * If possible, the name returned will be localized for the default
1863     * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale.
1864     * For example, if the locale is fr_FR and the default
1865     * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale
1866     * is en_US, getDisplayCountry() will return "France"; if the locale is en_US and
1867     * the default {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale is fr_FR,
1868     * getDisplayCountry() will return "Etats-Unis".
1869     * If the name returned cannot be localized for the default
1870     * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale,
1871     * (say, we don't have a Japanese name for Croatia),
1872     * this function falls back on the English name, and uses the ISO code as a last-resort
1873     * value.  If the locale doesn't specify a country, this function returns the empty string.
1874     *
1875     * @return The name of the country appropriate to the locale.
1876     */
1877    public final String getDisplayCountry() {
1878        return getDisplayCountry(getDefault(Category.DISPLAY));
1879    }
1880
1881    // BEGIN Android-changed: Use ICU; documentation; added private helper methods.
1882    /**
1883     * Returns the name of this locale's country, localized to {@code locale}.
1884     * Returns the empty string if this locale does not correspond to a specific
1885     * country.
1886     */
1887    public String getDisplayCountry(Locale locale) {
1888        String countryCode = baseLocale.getRegion();
1889        if (countryCode.isEmpty()) {
1890            return "";
1891        }
1892
1893        final String normalizedRegion = normalizeAndValidateRegion(
1894                countryCode, false /* strict */);
1895        if (normalizedRegion.isEmpty()) {
1896            return countryCode;
1897        }
1898
1899        String result = ICU.getDisplayCountry(this, locale);
1900        if (result == null) { // TODO: do we need to do this, or does ICU do it for us?
1901            result = ICU.getDisplayCountry(this, Locale.getDefault());
1902        }
1903        return result;
1904    }
1905
1906    private static String normalizeAndValidateRegion(String region, boolean strict) {
1907        if (region == null || region.isEmpty()) {
1908            return "";
1909        }
1910
1911        final String uppercaseRegion = region.toUpperCase(Locale.ROOT);
1912        if (!isValidBcp47Alpha(uppercaseRegion, 2, 2) &&
1913                !isUnM49AreaCode(uppercaseRegion)) {
1914            if (strict) {
1915                throw new IllformedLocaleException("Invalid region: " + region);
1916            } else {
1917                return "";
1918            }
1919        }
1920
1921        return uppercaseRegion;
1922    }
1923
1924    private static boolean isValidBcp47Alpha(String string, int lowerBound, int upperBound) {
1925        final int length = string.length();
1926        if (length < lowerBound || length > upperBound) {
1927            return false;
1928        }
1929
1930        for (int i = 0; i < length; ++i) {
1931            final char character = string.charAt(i);
1932            if (!(character >= 'a' && character <= 'z' ||
1933                    character >= 'A' && character <= 'Z')) {
1934                return false;
1935            }
1936        }
1937
1938        return true;
1939    }
1940
1941    /**
1942     * A UN M.49 is a 3 digit numeric code.
1943     */
1944    private static boolean isUnM49AreaCode(String code) {
1945        if (code.length() != 3) {
1946            return false;
1947        }
1948
1949        for (int i = 0; i < 3; ++i) {
1950            final char character = code.charAt(i);
1951            if (!(character >= '0' && character <= '9')) {
1952                return false;
1953            }
1954        }
1955
1956        return true;
1957    }
1958    // END Android-changed: Use ICU; documentation; added private helper methods.
1959
1960    /**
1961     * Returns a name for the locale's variant code that is appropriate for display to the
1962     * user.  If possible, the name will be localized for the default
1963     * {@link Locale.Category#DISPLAY DISPLAY} locale.  If the locale
1964     * doesn't specify a variant code, this function returns the empty string.
1965     *
1966     * @return The name of the display variant code appropriate to the locale.
1967     */
1968    public final String getDisplayVariant() {
1969        return getDisplayVariant(getDefault(Category.DISPLAY));
1970    }
1971
1972    /**
1973     * Returns a name for the locale's variant code that is appropriate for display to the
1974     * user.  If possible, the name will be localized for inLocale.  If the locale
1975     * doesn't specify a variant code, this function returns the empty string.
1976     *
1977     * @param inLocale The locale for which to retrieve the display variant code.
1978     * @return The name of the display variant code appropriate to the given locale.
1979     * @exception NullPointerException if <code>inLocale</code> is <code>null</code>
1980     */
1981    // BEGIN Android-changed: Use ICU; added private helper methods.
1982    public String getDisplayVariant(Locale inLocale) {
1983        String variantCode = baseLocale.getVariant();
1984        if (variantCode.isEmpty()) {
1985            return "";
1986        }
1987
1988        try {
1989            normalizeAndValidateVariant(variantCode);
1990        } catch (IllformedLocaleException ilfe) {
1991            return variantCode;
1992        }
1993
1994        String result = ICU.getDisplayVariant(this, inLocale);
1995        if (result == null) { // TODO: do we need to do this, or does ICU do it for us?
1996            result = ICU.getDisplayVariant(this, Locale.getDefault());
1997        }
1998
1999        // The "old style" locale constructors allow us to pass in variants that aren't
2000        // valid BCP-47 variant subtags. When that happens, toLanguageTag will not emit
2001        // them. Note that we know variantCode.length() > 0 due to the isEmpty check at
2002        // the beginning of this function.
2003        if (result.isEmpty()) {
2004            return variantCode;
2005        }
2006        return result;
2007    }
2008
2009    private static String normalizeAndValidateVariant(String variant) {
2010        if (variant == null || variant.isEmpty()) {
2011            return "";
2012        }
2013
2014        // Note that unlike extensions, we canonicalize to lower case alphabets
2015        // and underscores instead of hyphens.
2016        final String normalizedVariant = variant.replace('-', '_');
2017        String[] subTags = normalizedVariant.split("_");
2018
2019        for (String subTag : subTags) {
2020            if (!isValidVariantSubtag(subTag)) {
2021                throw new IllformedLocaleException("Invalid variant: " + variant);
2022            }
2023        }
2024
2025        return normalizedVariant;
2026    }
2027
2028    private static boolean isValidVariantSubtag(String subTag) {
2029        // The BCP-47 spec states that :
2030        // - Subtags can be between [5, 8] alphanumeric chars in length.
2031        // - Subtags that start with a number are allowed to be 4 chars in length.
2032        if (subTag.length() >= 5 && subTag.length() <= 8) {
2033            if (isAsciiAlphaNum(subTag)) {
2034                return true;
2035            }
2036        } else if (subTag.length() == 4) {
2037            final char firstChar = subTag.charAt(0);
2038            if ((firstChar >= '0' && firstChar <= '9') && isAsciiAlphaNum(subTag)) {
2039                return true;
2040            }
2041        }
2042
2043        return false;
2044    }
2045    // END Android-changed
2046
2047    /**
2048     * Returns a name for the locale that is appropriate for display to the
2049     * user. This will be the values returned by getDisplayLanguage(),
2050     * getDisplayScript(), getDisplayCountry(), and getDisplayVariant() assembled
2051     * into a single string. The the non-empty values are used in order,
2052     * with the second and subsequent names in parentheses.  For example:
2053     * <blockquote>
2054     * language (script, country, variant)<br>
2055     * language (country)<br>
2056     * language (variant)<br>
2057     * script (country)<br>
2058     * country<br>
2059     * </blockquote>
2060     * depending on which fields are specified in the locale.  If the
2061     * language, script, country, and variant fields are all empty,
2062     * this function returns the empty string.
2063     *
2064     * @return The name of the locale appropriate to display.
2065     */
2066    public final String getDisplayName() {
2067        return getDisplayName(getDefault(Category.DISPLAY));
2068    }
2069
2070    // BEGIN Android-changed: Use ICU.
2071    /**
2072     * Returns this locale's language name, country name, and variant, localized
2073     * to {@code locale}. The exact output form depends on whether this locale
2074     * corresponds to a specific language, script, country and variant.
2075     *
2076     * <p>For example:
2077     * <ul>
2078     * <li>{@code new Locale("en").getDisplayName(Locale.US)} -> {@code English}
2079     * <li>{@code new Locale("en", "US").getDisplayName(Locale.US)} -> {@code English (United States)}
2080     * <li>{@code new Locale("en", "US", "POSIX").getDisplayName(Locale.US)} -> {@code English (United States,Computer)}
2081     * <li>{@code Locale.fromLanguageTag("zh-Hant-CN").getDisplayName(Locale.US)} -> {@code Chinese (Traditional Han,China)}
2082     * <li>{@code new Locale("en").getDisplayName(Locale.FRANCE)} -> {@code anglais}
2083     * <li>{@code new Locale("en", "US").getDisplayName(Locale.FRANCE)} -> {@code anglais (États-Unis)}
2084     * <li>{@code new Locale("en", "US", "POSIX").getDisplayName(Locale.FRANCE)} -> {@code anglais (États-Unis,informatique)}.
2085     * </ul>
2086     */
2087    public String getDisplayName(Locale locale) {
2088        int count = 0;
2089        StringBuilder buffer = new StringBuilder();
2090        String languageCode = baseLocale.getLanguage();
2091        if (!languageCode.isEmpty()) {
2092            String displayLanguage = getDisplayLanguage(locale);
2093            buffer.append(displayLanguage.isEmpty() ? languageCode : displayLanguage);
2094            ++count;
2095        }
2096        String scriptCode = baseLocale.getScript();
2097        if (!scriptCode.isEmpty()) {
2098            if (count == 1) {
2099                buffer.append(" (");
2100            }
2101            String displayScript = getDisplayScript(locale);
2102            buffer.append(displayScript.isEmpty() ? scriptCode : displayScript);
2103            ++count;
2104        }
2105        String countryCode = baseLocale.getRegion();
2106        if (!countryCode.isEmpty()) {
2107            if (count == 1) {
2108                buffer.append(" (");
2109            } else if (count == 2) {
2110                buffer.append(",");
2111            }
2112            String displayCountry = getDisplayCountry(locale);
2113            buffer.append(displayCountry.isEmpty() ? countryCode : displayCountry);
2114            ++count;
2115        }
2116        String variantCode = baseLocale.getVariant();
2117        if (!variantCode.isEmpty()) {
2118            if (count == 1) {
2119                buffer.append(" (");
2120            } else if (count == 2 || count == 3) {
2121                buffer.append(",");
2122            }
2123            String displayVariant = getDisplayVariant(locale);
2124            buffer.append(displayVariant.isEmpty() ? variantCode : displayVariant);
2125            ++count;
2126        }
2127        if (count > 1) {
2128            buffer.append(")");
2129        }
2130        return buffer.toString();
2131    }
2132    // END Android-changed: Use ICU.
2133
2134    /**
2135     * Overrides Cloneable.
2136     */
2137    @Override
2138    public Object clone()
2139    {
2140        try {
2141            Locale that = (Locale)super.clone();
2142            return that;
2143        } catch (CloneNotSupportedException e) {
2144            throw new InternalError(e);
2145        }
2146    }
2147
2148    /**
2149     * Override hashCode.
2150     * Since Locales are often used in hashtables, caches the value
2151     * for speed.
2152     */
2153    @Override
2154    public int hashCode() {
2155        int hc = hashCodeValue;
2156        if (hc == 0) {
2157            hc = baseLocale.hashCode();
2158            if (localeExtensions != null) {
2159                hc ^= localeExtensions.hashCode();
2160            }
2161            hashCodeValue = hc;
2162        }
2163        return hc;
2164    }
2165
2166    // Overrides
2167
2168    /**
2169     * Returns true if this Locale is equal to another object.  A Locale is
2170     * deemed equal to another Locale with identical language, script, country,
2171     * variant and extensions, and unequal to all other objects.
2172     *
2173     * @return true if this Locale is equal to the specified object.
2174     */
2175    @Override
2176    public boolean equals(Object obj) {
2177        if (this == obj)                      // quick check
2178            return true;
2179        if (!(obj instanceof Locale))
2180            return false;
2181        BaseLocale otherBase = ((Locale)obj).baseLocale;
2182        if (!baseLocale.equals(otherBase)) {
2183            return false;
2184        }
2185        if (localeExtensions == null) {
2186            return ((Locale)obj).localeExtensions == null;
2187        }
2188        return localeExtensions.equals(((Locale)obj).localeExtensions);
2189    }
2190
2191    // ================= privates =====================================
2192
2193    private transient BaseLocale baseLocale;
2194    private transient LocaleExtensions localeExtensions;
2195
2196    /**
2197     * Calculated hashcode
2198     */
2199    private transient volatile int hashCodeValue = 0;
2200
2201    // Android-changed: Add NoImagePreloadHolder to allow compile-time initialization.
2202    private static class NoImagePreloadHolder {
2203        public volatile static Locale defaultLocale = initDefault();
2204    }
2205    private volatile static Locale defaultDisplayLocale = null;
2206    private volatile static Locale defaultFormatLocale = null;
2207
2208    private transient volatile String languageTag;
2209
2210    /**
2211     * Format a list using given pattern strings.
2212     * If either of the patterns is null, then a the list is
2213     * formatted by concatenation with the delimiter ','.
2214     * @param stringList the list of strings to be formatted.
2215     * @param listPattern should create a MessageFormat taking 0-3 arguments
2216     * and formatting them into a list.
2217     * @param listCompositionPattern should take 2 arguments
2218     * and is used by composeList.
2219     * @return a string representing the list.
2220     */
2221    private static String formatList(String[] stringList, String listPattern, String listCompositionPattern) {
2222        // If we have no list patterns, compose the list in a simple,
2223        // non-localized way.
2224        if (listPattern == null || listCompositionPattern == null) {
2225            StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
2226            for (int i = 0; i < stringList.length; ++i) {
2227                if (i > 0) {
2228                    result.append(',');
2229                }
2230                result.append(stringList[i]);
2231            }
2232            return result.toString();
2233        }
2234
2235        // Compose the list down to three elements if necessary
2236        if (stringList.length > 3) {
2237            MessageFormat format = new MessageFormat(listCompositionPattern);
2238            stringList = composeList(format, stringList);
2239        }
2240
2241        // Rebuild the argument list with the list length as the first element
2242        Object[] args = new Object[stringList.length + 1];
2243        System.arraycopy(stringList, 0, args, 1, stringList.length);
2244        args[0] = new Integer(stringList.length);
2245
2246        // Format it using the pattern in the resource
2247        MessageFormat format = new MessageFormat(listPattern);
2248        return format.format(args);
2249    }
2250
2251    /**
2252     * Given a list of strings, return a list shortened to three elements.
2253     * Shorten it by applying the given format to the first two elements
2254     * recursively.
2255     * @param format a format which takes two arguments
2256     * @param list a list of strings
2257     * @return if the list is three elements or shorter, the same list;
2258     * otherwise, a new list of three elements.
2259     */
2260    private static String[] composeList(MessageFormat format, String[] list) {
2261        if (list.length <= 3) return list;
2262
2263        // Use the given format to compose the first two elements into one
2264        String[] listItems = { list[0], list[1] };
2265        String newItem = format.format(listItems);
2266
2267        // Form a new list one element shorter
2268        String[] newList = new String[list.length-1];
2269        System.arraycopy(list, 2, newList, 1, newList.length-1);
2270        newList[0] = newItem;
2271
2272        // Recurse
2273        return composeList(format, newList);
2274    }
2275
2276    // Duplicate of sun.util.locale.UnicodeLocaleExtension.isKey in order to
2277    // avoid its class loading.
2278    private static boolean isUnicodeExtensionKey(String s) {
2279        // 2alphanum
2280        return (s.length() == 2) && LocaleUtils.isAlphaNumericString(s);
2281    }
2282
2283    /**
2284     * @serialField language    String
2285     *      language subtag in lower case. (See <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getLanguage()">getLanguage()</a>)
2286     * @serialField country     String
2287     *      country subtag in upper case. (See <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getCountry()">getCountry()</a>)
2288     * @serialField variant     String
2289     *      variant subtags separated by LOWLINE characters. (See <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getVariant()">getVariant()</a>)
2290     * @serialField hashcode    int
2291     *      deprecated, for forward compatibility only
2292     * @serialField script      String
2293     *      script subtag in title case (See <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getScript()">getScript()</a>)
2294     * @serialField extensions  String
2295     *      canonical representation of extensions, that is,
2296     *      BCP47 extensions in alphabetical order followed by
2297     *      BCP47 private use subtags, all in lower case letters
2298     *      separated by HYPHEN-MINUS characters.
2299     *      (See <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getExtensionKeys()">getExtensionKeys()</a>,
2300     *      <a href="java/util/Locale.html#getExtension(char)">getExtension(char)</a>)
2301     */
2302    private static final ObjectStreamField[] serialPersistentFields = {
2303        new ObjectStreamField("language", String.class),
2304        new ObjectStreamField("country", String.class),
2305        new ObjectStreamField("variant", String.class),
2306        new ObjectStreamField("hashcode", int.class),
2307        new ObjectStreamField("script", String.class),
2308        new ObjectStreamField("extensions", String.class),
2309    };
2310
2311    /**
2312     * Serializes this <code>Locale</code> to the specified <code>ObjectOutputStream</code>.
2313     * @param out the <code>ObjectOutputStream</code> to write
2314     * @throws IOException
2315     * @since 1.7
2316     */
2317    private void writeObject(ObjectOutputStream out) throws IOException {
2318        ObjectOutputStream.PutField fields = out.putFields();
2319        fields.put("language", baseLocale.getLanguage());
2320        fields.put("script", baseLocale.getScript());
2321        fields.put("country", baseLocale.getRegion());
2322        fields.put("variant", baseLocale.getVariant());
2323        fields.put("extensions", localeExtensions == null ? "" : localeExtensions.getID());
2324        fields.put("hashcode", -1); // place holder just for backward support
2325        out.writeFields();
2326    }
2327
2328    /**
2329     * Deserializes this <code>Locale</code>.
2330     * @param in the <code>ObjectInputStream</code> to read
2331     * @throws IOException
2332     * @throws ClassNotFoundException
2333     * @throws IllformedLocaleException
2334     * @since 1.7
2335     */
2336    private void readObject(ObjectInputStream in) throws IOException, ClassNotFoundException {
2337        ObjectInputStream.GetField fields = in.readFields();
2338        String language = (String)fields.get("language", "");
2339        String script = (String)fields.get("script", "");
2340        String country = (String)fields.get("country", "");
2341        String variant = (String)fields.get("variant", "");
2342        String extStr = (String)fields.get("extensions", "");
2343        baseLocale = BaseLocale.getInstance(convertOldISOCodes(language), script, country, variant);
2344        // Android-changed: Handle null for backwards compatible deserialization. http://b/26387905
2345        // if (extStr.length() > 0) {
2346        if (extStr != null && extStr.length() > 0) {
2347            try {
2348                InternalLocaleBuilder bldr = new InternalLocaleBuilder();
2349                bldr.setExtensions(extStr);
2350                localeExtensions = bldr.getLocaleExtensions();
2351            } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
2352                throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage());
2353            }
2354        } else {
2355            localeExtensions = null;
2356        }
2357    }
2358
2359    /**
2360     * Returns a cached <code>Locale</code> instance equivalent to
2361     * the deserialized <code>Locale</code>. When serialized
2362     * language, country and variant fields read from the object data stream
2363     * are exactly "ja", "JP", "JP" or "th", "TH", "TH" and script/extensions
2364     * fields are empty, this method supplies <code>UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION</code>
2365     * "ca"/"japanese" (calendar type is "japanese") or "nu"/"thai" (number script
2366     * type is "thai"). See <a href="Locale.html#special_cases_constructor">Special Cases</a>
2367     * for more information.
2368     *
2369     * @return an instance of <code>Locale</code> equivalent to
2370     * the deserialized <code>Locale</code>.
2371     * @throws java.io.ObjectStreamException
2372     */
2373    private Object readResolve() throws java.io.ObjectStreamException {
2374        return getInstance(baseLocale.getLanguage(), baseLocale.getScript(),
2375                baseLocale.getRegion(), baseLocale.getVariant(), localeExtensions);
2376    }
2377
2378    private static volatile String[] isoLanguages = null;
2379
2380    private static volatile String[] isoCountries = null;
2381
2382    private static String convertOldISOCodes(String language) {
2383        // we accept both the old and the new ISO codes for the languages whose ISO
2384        // codes have changed, but we always store the OLD code, for backward compatibility
2385        language = LocaleUtils.toLowerString(language).intern();
2386        if (language == "he") {
2387            return "iw";
2388        } else if (language == "yi") {
2389            return "ji";
2390        } else if (language == "id") {
2391            return "in";
2392        } else {
2393            return language;
2394        }
2395    }
2396
2397    private static LocaleExtensions getCompatibilityExtensions(String language,
2398                                                               String script,
2399                                                               String country,
2400                                                               String variant) {
2401        LocaleExtensions extensions = null;
2402        // Special cases for backward compatibility support
2403        if (LocaleUtils.caseIgnoreMatch(language, "ja")
2404                && script.length() == 0
2405                && LocaleUtils.caseIgnoreMatch(country, "jp")
2406                && "JP".equals(variant)) {
2407            // ja_JP_JP -> u-ca-japanese (calendar = japanese)
2408            extensions = LocaleExtensions.CALENDAR_JAPANESE;
2409        } else if (LocaleUtils.caseIgnoreMatch(language, "th")
2410                && script.length() == 0
2411                && LocaleUtils.caseIgnoreMatch(country, "th")
2412                && "TH".equals(variant)) {
2413            // th_TH_TH -> u-nu-thai (numbersystem = thai)
2414            extensions = LocaleExtensions.NUMBER_THAI;
2415        }
2416        return extensions;
2417    }
2418
2419    // Android-removed: Drop nested private class LocaleNameGetter.
2420    // BEGIN Android-added: Add adjustLanguageCode(); for internal use only.
2421    /** @hide for internal use only. */
2422    public static String adjustLanguageCode(String languageCode) {
2423        String adjusted = languageCode.toLowerCase(Locale.US);
2424        // Map new language codes to the obsolete language
2425        // codes so the correct resource bundles will be used.
2426        if (languageCode.equals("he")) {
2427            adjusted = "iw";
2428        } else if (languageCode.equals("id")) {
2429            adjusted = "in";
2430        } else if (languageCode.equals("yi")) {
2431            adjusted = "ji";
2432        }
2433
2434        return adjusted;
2435    }
2436    // END Android-added
2437
2438    /**
2439     * Enum for locale categories.  These locale categories are used to get/set
2440     * the default locale for the specific functionality represented by the
2441     * category.
2442     *
2443     * @see #getDefault(Locale.Category)
2444     * @see #setDefault(Locale.Category, Locale)
2445     * @since 1.7
2446     */
2447    public enum Category {
2448
2449        /**
2450         * Category used to represent the default locale for
2451         * displaying user interfaces.
2452         */
2453        DISPLAY("user.language.display",
2454                "user.script.display",
2455                "user.country.display",
2456                "user.variant.display"),
2457
2458        /**
2459         * Category used to represent the default locale for
2460         * formatting dates, numbers, and/or currencies.
2461         */
2462        FORMAT("user.language.format",
2463               "user.script.format",
2464               "user.country.format",
2465               "user.variant.format");
2466
2467        Category(String languageKey, String scriptKey, String countryKey, String variantKey) {
2468            this.languageKey = languageKey;
2469            this.scriptKey = scriptKey;
2470            this.countryKey = countryKey;
2471            this.variantKey = variantKey;
2472        }
2473
2474        final String languageKey;
2475        final String scriptKey;
2476        final String countryKey;
2477        final String variantKey;
2478    }
2479
2480    /**
2481     * <code>Builder</code> is used to build instances of <code>Locale</code>
2482     * from values configured by the setters.  Unlike the <code>Locale</code>
2483     * constructors, the <code>Builder</code> checks if a value configured by a
2484     * setter satisfies the syntax requirements defined by the <code>Locale</code>
2485     * class.  A <code>Locale</code> object created by a <code>Builder</code> is
2486     * well-formed and can be transformed to a well-formed IETF BCP 47 language tag
2487     * without losing information.
2488     *
2489     * <p><b>Note:</b> The <code>Locale</code> class does not provide any
2490     * syntactic restrictions on variant, while BCP 47 requires each variant
2491     * subtag to be 5 to 8 alphanumerics or a single numeric followed by 3
2492     * alphanumerics.  The method <code>setVariant</code> throws
2493     * <code>IllformedLocaleException</code> for a variant that does not satisfy
2494     * this restriction. If it is necessary to support such a variant, use a
2495     * Locale constructor.  However, keep in mind that a <code>Locale</code>
2496     * object created this way might lose the variant information when
2497     * transformed to a BCP 47 language tag.
2498     *
2499     * <p>The following example shows how to create a <code>Locale</code> object
2500     * with the <code>Builder</code>.
2501     * <blockquote>
2502     * <pre>
2503     *     Locale aLocale = new Builder().setLanguage("sr").setScript("Latn").setRegion("RS").build();
2504     * </pre>
2505     * </blockquote>
2506     *
2507     * <p>Builders can be reused; <code>clear()</code> resets all
2508     * fields to their default values.
2509     *
2510     * @see Locale#forLanguageTag
2511     * @since 1.7
2512     */
2513    public static final class Builder {
2514        private final InternalLocaleBuilder localeBuilder;
2515
2516        /**
2517         * Constructs an empty Builder. The default value of all
2518         * fields, extensions, and private use information is the
2519         * empty string.
2520         */
2521        public Builder() {
2522            localeBuilder = new InternalLocaleBuilder();
2523        }
2524
2525        /**
2526         * Resets the <code>Builder</code> to match the provided
2527         * <code>locale</code>.  Existing state is discarded.
2528         *
2529         * <p>All fields of the locale must be well-formed, see {@link Locale}.
2530         *
2531         * <p>Locales with any ill-formed fields cause
2532         * <code>IllformedLocaleException</code> to be thrown, except for the
2533         * following three cases which are accepted for compatibility
2534         * reasons:<ul>
2535         * <li>Locale("ja", "JP", "JP") is treated as "ja-JP-u-ca-japanese"
2536         * <li>Locale("th", "TH", "TH") is treated as "th-TH-u-nu-thai"
2537         * <li>Locale("no", "NO", "NY") is treated as "nn-NO"</ul>
2538         *
2539         * @param locale the locale
2540         * @return This builder.
2541         * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>locale</code> has
2542         * any ill-formed fields.
2543         * @throws NullPointerException if <code>locale</code> is null.
2544         */
2545        public Builder setLocale(Locale locale) {
2546            try {
2547                localeBuilder.setLocale(locale.baseLocale, locale.localeExtensions);
2548            } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
2549                throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
2550            }
2551            return this;
2552        }
2553
2554        /**
2555         * Resets the Builder to match the provided IETF BCP 47
2556         * language tag.  Discards the existing state.  Null and the
2557         * empty string cause the builder to be reset, like {@link
2558         * #clear}.  Grandfathered tags (see {@link
2559         * Locale#forLanguageTag}) are converted to their canonical
2560         * form before being processed.  Otherwise, the language tag
2561         * must be well-formed (see {@link Locale}) or an exception is
2562         * thrown (unlike <code>Locale.forLanguageTag</code>, which
2563         * just discards ill-formed and following portions of the
2564         * tag).
2565         *
2566         * @param languageTag the language tag
2567         * @return This builder.
2568         * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>languageTag</code> is ill-formed
2569         * @see Locale#forLanguageTag(String)
2570         */
2571        public Builder setLanguageTag(String languageTag) {
2572            ParseStatus sts = new ParseStatus();
2573            LanguageTag tag = LanguageTag.parse(languageTag, sts);
2574            if (sts.isError()) {
2575                throw new IllformedLocaleException(sts.getErrorMessage(), sts.getErrorIndex());
2576            }
2577            localeBuilder.setLanguageTag(tag);
2578            return this;
2579        }
2580
2581        /**
2582         * Sets the language.  If <code>language</code> is the empty string or
2583         * null, the language in this <code>Builder</code> is removed.  Otherwise,
2584         * the language must be <a href="./Locale.html#def_language">well-formed</a>
2585         * or an exception is thrown.
2586         *
2587         * <p>The typical language value is a two or three-letter language
2588         * code as defined in ISO639.
2589         *
2590         * @param language the language
2591         * @return This builder.
2592         * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>language</code> is ill-formed
2593         */
2594        public Builder setLanguage(String language) {
2595            try {
2596                localeBuilder.setLanguage(language);
2597            } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
2598                throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
2599            }
2600            return this;
2601        }
2602
2603        /**
2604         * Sets the script. If <code>script</code> is null or the empty string,
2605         * the script in this <code>Builder</code> is removed.
2606         * Otherwise, the script must be <a href="./Locale.html#def_script">well-formed</a> or an
2607         * exception is thrown.
2608         *
2609         * <p>The typical script value is a four-letter script code as defined by ISO 15924.
2610         *
2611         * @param script the script
2612         * @return This builder.
2613         * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>script</code> is ill-formed
2614         */
2615        public Builder setScript(String script) {
2616            try {
2617                localeBuilder.setScript(script);
2618            } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
2619                throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
2620            }
2621            return this;
2622        }
2623
2624        /**
2625         * Sets the region.  If region is null or the empty string, the region
2626         * in this <code>Builder</code> is removed.  Otherwise,
2627         * the region must be <a href="./Locale.html#def_region">well-formed</a> or an
2628         * exception is thrown.
2629         *
2630         * <p>The typical region value is a two-letter ISO 3166 code or a
2631         * three-digit UN M.49 area code.
2632         *
2633         * <p>The country value in the <code>Locale</code> created by the
2634         * <code>Builder</code> is always normalized to upper case.
2635         *
2636         * @param region the region
2637         * @return This builder.
2638         * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>region</code> is ill-formed
2639         */
2640        public Builder setRegion(String region) {
2641            try {
2642                localeBuilder.setRegion(region);
2643            } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
2644                throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
2645            }
2646            return this;
2647        }
2648
2649        /**
2650         * Sets the variant.  If variant is null or the empty string, the
2651         * variant in this <code>Builder</code> is removed.  Otherwise, it
2652         * must consist of one or more <a href="./Locale.html#def_variant">well-formed</a>
2653         * subtags, or an exception is thrown.
2654         *
2655         * <p><b>Note:</b> This method checks if <code>variant</code>
2656         * satisfies the IETF BCP 47 variant subtag's syntax requirements,
2657         * and normalizes the value to lowercase letters.  However,
2658         * the <code>Locale</code> class does not impose any syntactic
2659         * restriction on variant, and the variant value in
2660         * <code>Locale</code> is case sensitive.  To set such a variant,
2661         * use a Locale constructor.
2662         *
2663         * @param variant the variant
2664         * @return This builder.
2665         * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>variant</code> is ill-formed
2666         */
2667        public Builder setVariant(String variant) {
2668            try {
2669                localeBuilder.setVariant(variant);
2670            } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
2671                throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
2672            }
2673            return this;
2674        }
2675
2676        /**
2677         * Sets the extension for the given key. If the value is null or the
2678         * empty string, the extension is removed.  Otherwise, the extension
2679         * must be <a href="./Locale.html#def_extensions">well-formed</a> or an exception
2680         * is thrown.
2681         *
2682         * <p><b>Note:</b> The key {@link Locale#UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION
2683         * UNICODE_LOCALE_EXTENSION} ('u') is used for the Unicode locale extension.
2684         * Setting a value for this key replaces any existing Unicode locale key/type
2685         * pairs with those defined in the extension.
2686         *
2687         * <p><b>Note:</b> The key {@link Locale#PRIVATE_USE_EXTENSION
2688         * PRIVATE_USE_EXTENSION} ('x') is used for the private use code. To be
2689         * well-formed, the value for this key needs only to have subtags of one to
2690         * eight alphanumeric characters, not two to eight as in the general case.
2691         *
2692         * @param key the extension key
2693         * @param value the extension value
2694         * @return This builder.
2695         * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>key</code> is illegal
2696         * or <code>value</code> is ill-formed
2697         * @see #setUnicodeLocaleKeyword(String, String)
2698         */
2699        public Builder setExtension(char key, String value) {
2700            try {
2701                localeBuilder.setExtension(key, value);
2702            } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
2703                throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
2704            }
2705            return this;
2706        }
2707
2708        /**
2709         * Sets the Unicode locale keyword type for the given key.  If the type
2710         * is null, the Unicode keyword is removed.  Otherwise, the key must be
2711         * non-null and both key and type must be <a
2712         * href="./Locale.html#def_locale_extension">well-formed</a> or an exception
2713         * is thrown.
2714         *
2715         * <p>Keys and types are converted to lower case.
2716         *
2717         * <p><b>Note</b>:Setting the 'u' extension via {@link #setExtension}
2718         * replaces all Unicode locale keywords with those defined in the
2719         * extension.
2720         *
2721         * @param key the Unicode locale key
2722         * @param type the Unicode locale type
2723         * @return This builder.
2724         * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>key</code> or <code>type</code>
2725         * is ill-formed
2726         * @throws NullPointerException if <code>key</code> is null
2727         * @see #setExtension(char, String)
2728         */
2729        public Builder setUnicodeLocaleKeyword(String key, String type) {
2730            try {
2731                localeBuilder.setUnicodeLocaleKeyword(key, type);
2732            } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
2733                throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
2734            }
2735            return this;
2736        }
2737
2738        /**
2739         * Adds a unicode locale attribute, if not already present, otherwise
2740         * has no effect.  The attribute must not be null and must be <a
2741         * href="./Locale.html#def_locale_extension">well-formed</a> or an exception
2742         * is thrown.
2743         *
2744         * @param attribute the attribute
2745         * @return This builder.
2746         * @throws NullPointerException if <code>attribute</code> is null
2747         * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>attribute</code> is ill-formed
2748         * @see #setExtension(char, String)
2749         */
2750        public Builder addUnicodeLocaleAttribute(String attribute) {
2751            try {
2752                localeBuilder.addUnicodeLocaleAttribute(attribute);
2753            } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
2754                throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
2755            }
2756            return this;
2757        }
2758
2759        /**
2760         * Removes a unicode locale attribute, if present, otherwise has no
2761         * effect.  The attribute must not be null and must be <a
2762         * href="./Locale.html#def_locale_extension">well-formed</a> or an exception
2763         * is thrown.
2764         *
2765         * <p>Attribute comparision for removal is case-insensitive.
2766         *
2767         * @param attribute the attribute
2768         * @return This builder.
2769         * @throws NullPointerException if <code>attribute</code> is null
2770         * @throws IllformedLocaleException if <code>attribute</code> is ill-formed
2771         * @see #setExtension(char, String)
2772         */
2773        public Builder removeUnicodeLocaleAttribute(String attribute) {
2774            // BEGIN Android-added: removeUnicodeLocaleAttribute(null) is documented to throw NPE
2775            if (attribute == null) {
2776                throw new NullPointerException("attribute == null");
2777            }
2778            // END Android-added: removeUnicodeLocaleAttribute(null) is documented to throw NPE
2779
2780            try {
2781                localeBuilder.removeUnicodeLocaleAttribute(attribute);
2782            } catch (LocaleSyntaxException e) {
2783                throw new IllformedLocaleException(e.getMessage(), e.getErrorIndex());
2784            }
2785            return this;
2786        }
2787
2788        /**
2789         * Resets the builder to its initial, empty state.
2790         *
2791         * @return This builder.
2792         */
2793        public Builder clear() {
2794            localeBuilder.clear();
2795            return this;
2796        }
2797
2798        /**
2799         * Resets the extensions to their initial, empty state.
2800         * Language, script, region and variant are unchanged.
2801         *
2802         * @return This builder.
2803         * @see #setExtension(char, String)
2804         */
2805        public Builder clearExtensions() {
2806            localeBuilder.clearExtensions();
2807            return this;
2808        }
2809
2810        /**
2811         * Returns an instance of <code>Locale</code> created from the fields set
2812         * on this builder.
2813         *
2814         * <p>This applies the conversions listed in {@link Locale#forLanguageTag}
2815         * when constructing a Locale. (Grandfathered tags are handled in
2816         * {@link #setLanguageTag}.)
2817         *
2818         * @return A Locale.
2819         */
2820        public Locale build() {
2821            BaseLocale baseloc = localeBuilder.getBaseLocale();
2822            LocaleExtensions extensions = localeBuilder.getLocaleExtensions();
2823            if (extensions == null && baseloc.getVariant().length() > 0) {
2824                extensions = getCompatibilityExtensions(baseloc.getLanguage(), baseloc.getScript(),
2825                        baseloc.getRegion(), baseloc.getVariant());
2826            }
2827            return Locale.getInstance(baseloc, extensions);
2828        }
2829    }
2830
2831    /**
2832     * This enum provides constants to select a filtering mode for locale
2833     * matching. Refer to <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647">RFC 4647
2834     * Matching of Language Tags</a> for details.
2835     *
2836     * <p>As an example, think of two Language Priority Lists each of which
2837     * includes only one language range and a set of following language tags:
2838     *
2839     * <pre>
2840     *    de (German)
2841     *    de-DE (German, Germany)
2842     *    de-Deva (German, in Devanagari script)
2843     *    de-Deva-DE (German, in Devanagari script, Germany)
2844     *    de-DE-1996 (German, Germany, orthography of 1996)
2845     *    de-Latn-DE (German, in Latin script, Germany)
2846     *    de-Latn-DE-1996 (German, in Latin script, Germany, orthography of 1996)
2847     * </pre>
2848     *
2849     * The filtering method will behave as follows:
2850     *
2851     * <table cellpadding=2 summary="Filtering method behavior">
2852     * <tr>
2853     * <th>Filtering Mode</th>
2854     * <th>Language Priority List: {@code "de-DE"}</th>
2855     * <th>Language Priority List: {@code "de-*-DE"}</th>
2856     * </tr>
2857     * <tr>
2858     * <td valign=top>
2859     * {@link FilteringMode#AUTOSELECT_FILTERING AUTOSELECT_FILTERING}
2860     * </td>
2861     * <td valign=top>
2862     * Performs <em>basic</em> filtering and returns {@code "de-DE"} and
2863     * {@code "de-DE-1996"}.
2864     * </td>
2865     * <td valign=top>
2866     * Performs <em>extended</em> filtering and returns {@code "de-DE"},
2867     * {@code "de-Deva-DE"}, {@code "de-DE-1996"}, {@code "de-Latn-DE"}, and
2868     * {@code "de-Latn-DE-1996"}.
2869     * </td>
2870     * </tr>
2871     * <tr>
2872     * <td valign=top>
2873     * {@link FilteringMode#EXTENDED_FILTERING EXTENDED_FILTERING}
2874     * </td>
2875     * <td valign=top>
2876     * Performs <em>extended</em> filtering and returns {@code "de-DE"},
2877     * {@code "de-Deva-DE"}, {@code "de-DE-1996"}, {@code "de-Latn-DE"}, and
2878     * {@code "de-Latn-DE-1996"}.
2879     * </td>
2880     * <td valign=top>Same as above.</td>
2881     * </tr>
2882     * <tr>
2883     * <td valign=top>
2884     * {@link FilteringMode#IGNORE_EXTENDED_RANGES IGNORE_EXTENDED_RANGES}
2885     * </td>
2886     * <td valign=top>
2887     * Performs <em>basic</em> filtering and returns {@code "de-DE"} and
2888     * {@code "de-DE-1996"}.
2889     * </td>
2890     * <td valign=top>
2891     * Performs <em>basic</em> filtering and returns {@code null} because
2892     * nothing matches.
2893     * </td>
2894     * </tr>
2895     * <tr>
2896     * <td valign=top>
2897     * {@link FilteringMode#MAP_EXTENDED_RANGES MAP_EXTENDED_RANGES}
2898     * </td>
2899     * <td valign=top>Same as above.</td>
2900     * <td valign=top>
2901     * Performs <em>basic</em> filtering and returns {@code "de-DE"} and
2902     * {@code "de-DE-1996"} because {@code "de-*-DE"} is mapped to
2903     * {@code "de-DE"}.
2904     * </td>
2905     * </tr>
2906     * <tr>
2907     * <td valign=top>
2908     * {@link FilteringMode#REJECT_EXTENDED_RANGES REJECT_EXTENDED_RANGES}
2909     * </td>
2910     * <td valign=top>Same as above.</td>
2911     * <td valign=top>
2912     * Throws {@link IllegalArgumentException} because {@code "de-*-DE"} is
2913     * not a valid basic language range.
2914     * </td>
2915     * </tr>
2916     * </table>
2917     *
2918     * @see #filter(List, Collection, FilteringMode)
2919     * @see #filterTags(List, Collection, FilteringMode)
2920     *
2921     * @since 1.8
2922     */
2923    public static enum FilteringMode {
2924        /**
2925         * Specifies automatic filtering mode based on the given Language
2926         * Priority List consisting of language ranges. If all of the ranges
2927         * are basic, basic filtering is selected. Otherwise, extended
2928         * filtering is selected.
2929         */
2930        AUTOSELECT_FILTERING,
2931
2932        /**
2933         * Specifies extended filtering.
2934         */
2935        EXTENDED_FILTERING,
2936
2937        /**
2938         * Specifies basic filtering: Note that any extended language ranges
2939         * included in the given Language Priority List are ignored.
2940         */
2941        IGNORE_EXTENDED_RANGES,
2942
2943        /**
2944         * Specifies basic filtering: If any extended language ranges are
2945         * included in the given Language Priority List, they are mapped to the
2946         * basic language range. Specifically, a language range starting with a
2947         * subtag {@code "*"} is treated as a language range {@code "*"}. For
2948         * example, {@code "*-US"} is treated as {@code "*"}. If {@code "*"} is
2949         * not the first subtag, {@code "*"} and extra {@code "-"} are removed.
2950         * For example, {@code "ja-*-JP"} is mapped to {@code "ja-JP"}.
2951         */
2952        MAP_EXTENDED_RANGES,
2953
2954        /**
2955         * Specifies basic filtering: If any extended language ranges are
2956         * included in the given Language Priority List, the list is rejected
2957         * and the filtering method throws {@link IllegalArgumentException}.
2958         */
2959        REJECT_EXTENDED_RANGES
2960    };
2961
2962    /**
2963     * This class expresses a <em>Language Range</em> defined in
2964     * <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647">RFC 4647 Matching of
2965     * Language Tags</a>. A language range is an identifier which is used to
2966     * select language tag(s) meeting specific requirements by using the
2967     * mechanisms described in <a href="Locale.html#LocaleMatching">Locale
2968     * Matching</a>. A list which represents a user's preferences and consists
2969     * of language ranges is called a <em>Language Priority List</em>.
2970     *
2971     * <p>There are two types of language ranges: basic and extended. In RFC
2972     * 4647, the syntax of language ranges is expressed in
2973     * <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4234">ABNF</a> as follows:
2974     * <blockquote>
2975     * <pre>
2976     *     basic-language-range    = (1*8ALPHA *("-" 1*8alphanum)) / "*"
2977     *     extended-language-range = (1*8ALPHA / "*")
2978     *                               *("-" (1*8alphanum / "*"))
2979     *     alphanum                = ALPHA / DIGIT
2980     * </pre>
2981     * </blockquote>
2982     * For example, {@code "en"} (English), {@code "ja-JP"} (Japanese, Japan),
2983     * {@code "*"} (special language range which matches any language tag) are
2984     * basic language ranges, whereas {@code "*-CH"} (any languages,
2985     * Switzerland), {@code "es-*"} (Spanish, any regions), and
2986     * {@code "zh-Hant-*"} (Traditional Chinese, any regions) are extended
2987     * language ranges.
2988     *
2989     * @see #filter
2990     * @see #filterTags
2991     * @see #lookup
2992     * @see #lookupTag
2993     *
2994     * @since 1.8
2995     */
2996    public static final class LanguageRange {
2997
2998       /**
2999        * A constant holding the maximum value of weight, 1.0, which indicates
3000        * that the language range is a good fit for the user.
3001        */
3002        public static final double MAX_WEIGHT = 1.0;
3003
3004       /**
3005        * A constant holding the minimum value of weight, 0.0, which indicates
3006        * that the language range is not a good fit for the user.
3007        */
3008        public static final double MIN_WEIGHT = 0.0;
3009
3010        private final String range;
3011        private final double weight;
3012
3013        private volatile int hash = 0;
3014
3015        /**
3016         * Constructs a {@code LanguageRange} using the given {@code range}.
3017         * Note that no validation is done against the IANA Language Subtag
3018         * Registry at time of construction.
3019         *
3020         * <p>This is equivalent to {@code LanguageRange(range, MAX_WEIGHT)}.
3021         *
3022         * @param range a language range
3023         * @throws NullPointerException if the given {@code range} is
3024         *     {@code null}
3025         */
3026        public LanguageRange(String range) {
3027            this(range, MAX_WEIGHT);
3028        }
3029
3030        /**
3031         * Constructs a {@code LanguageRange} using the given {@code range} and
3032         * {@code weight}. Note that no validation is done against the IANA
3033         * Language Subtag Registry at time of construction.
3034         *
3035         * @param range  a language range
3036         * @param weight a weight value between {@code MIN_WEIGHT} and
3037         *     {@code MAX_WEIGHT}
3038         * @throws NullPointerException if the given {@code range} is
3039         *     {@code null}
3040         * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the given {@code weight} is less
3041         *     than {@code MIN_WEIGHT} or greater than {@code MAX_WEIGHT}
3042         */
3043        public LanguageRange(String range, double weight) {
3044            if (range == null) {
3045                throw new NullPointerException();
3046            }
3047            if (weight < MIN_WEIGHT || weight > MAX_WEIGHT) {
3048                throw new IllegalArgumentException("weight=" + weight);
3049            }
3050
3051            range = range.toLowerCase();
3052
3053            // Do syntax check.
3054            boolean isIllFormed = false;
3055            String[] subtags = range.split("-");
3056            if (isSubtagIllFormed(subtags[0], true)
3057                || range.endsWith("-")) {
3058                isIllFormed = true;
3059            } else {
3060                for (int i = 1; i < subtags.length; i++) {
3061                    if (isSubtagIllFormed(subtags[i], false)) {
3062                        isIllFormed = true;
3063                        break;
3064                    }
3065                }
3066            }
3067            if (isIllFormed) {
3068                throw new IllegalArgumentException("range=" + range);
3069            }
3070
3071            this.range = range;
3072            this.weight = weight;
3073        }
3074
3075        private static boolean isSubtagIllFormed(String subtag,
3076                                                 boolean isFirstSubtag) {
3077            if (subtag.equals("") || subtag.length() > 8) {
3078                return true;
3079            } else if (subtag.equals("*")) {
3080                return false;
3081            }
3082            char[] charArray = subtag.toCharArray();
3083            if (isFirstSubtag) { // ALPHA
3084                for (char c : charArray) {
3085                    if (c < 'a' || c > 'z') {
3086                        return true;
3087                    }
3088                }
3089            } else { // ALPHA / DIGIT
3090                for (char c : charArray) {
3091                    if (c < '0' || (c > '9' && c < 'a') || c > 'z') {
3092                        return true;
3093                    }
3094                }
3095            }
3096            return false;
3097        }
3098
3099        /**
3100         * Returns the language range of this {@code LanguageRange}.
3101         *
3102         * @return the language range.
3103         */
3104        public String getRange() {
3105            return range;
3106        }
3107
3108        /**
3109         * Returns the weight of this {@code LanguageRange}.
3110         *
3111         * @return the weight value.
3112         */
3113        public double getWeight() {
3114            return weight;
3115        }
3116
3117        /**
3118         * Parses the given {@code ranges} to generate a Language Priority List.
3119         *
3120         * <p>This method performs a syntactic check for each language range in
3121         * the given {@code ranges} but doesn't do validation using the IANA
3122         * Language Subtag Registry.
3123         *
3124         * <p>The {@code ranges} to be given can take one of the following
3125         * forms:
3126         *
3127         * <pre>
3128         *   "Accept-Language: ja,en;q=0.4"  (weighted list with Accept-Language prefix)
3129         *   "ja,en;q=0.4"                   (weighted list)
3130         *   "ja,en"                         (prioritized list)
3131         * </pre>
3132         *
3133         * In a weighted list, each language range is given a weight value.
3134         * The weight value is identical to the "quality value" in
3135         * <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616">RFC 2616</a>, and it
3136         * expresses how much the user prefers  the language. A weight value is
3137         * specified after a corresponding language range followed by
3138         * {@code ";q="}, and the default weight value is {@code MAX_WEIGHT}
3139         * when it is omitted.
3140         *
3141         * <p>Unlike a weighted list, language ranges in a prioritized list
3142         * are sorted in the descending order based on its priority. The first
3143         * language range has the highest priority and meets the user's
3144         * preference most.
3145         *
3146         * <p>In either case, language ranges are sorted in descending order in
3147         * the Language Priority List based on priority or weight. If a
3148         * language range appears in the given {@code ranges} more than once,
3149         * only the first one is included on the Language Priority List.
3150         *
3151         * <p>The returned list consists of language ranges from the given
3152         * {@code ranges} and their equivalents found in the IANA Language
3153         * Subtag Registry. For example, if the given {@code ranges} is
3154         * {@code "Accept-Language: iw,en-us;q=0.7,en;q=0.3"}, the elements in
3155         * the list to be returned are:
3156         *
3157         * <pre>
3158         *  <b>Range</b>                                   <b>Weight</b>
3159         *    "iw" (older tag for Hebrew)             1.0
3160         *    "he" (new preferred code for Hebrew)    1.0
3161         *    "en-us" (English, United States)        0.7
3162         *    "en" (English)                          0.3
3163         * </pre>
3164         *
3165         * Two language ranges, {@code "iw"} and {@code "he"}, have the same
3166         * highest priority in the list. By adding {@code "he"} to the user's
3167         * Language Priority List, locale-matching method can find Hebrew as a
3168         * matching locale (or language tag) even if the application or system
3169         * offers only {@code "he"} as a supported locale (or language tag).
3170         *
3171         * @param ranges a list of comma-separated language ranges or a list of
3172         *     language ranges in the form of the "Accept-Language" header
3173         *     defined in <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616">RFC
3174         *     2616</a>
3175         * @return a Language Priority List consisting of language ranges
3176         *     included in the given {@code ranges} and their equivalent
3177         *     language ranges if available. The list is modifiable.
3178         * @throws NullPointerException if {@code ranges} is null
3179         * @throws IllegalArgumentException if a language range or a weight
3180         *     found in the given {@code ranges} is ill-formed
3181         */
3182        public static List<LanguageRange> parse(String ranges) {
3183            return LocaleMatcher.parse(ranges);
3184        }
3185
3186        /**
3187         * Parses the given {@code ranges} to generate a Language Priority
3188         * List, and then customizes the list using the given {@code map}.
3189         * This method is equivalent to
3190         * {@code mapEquivalents(parse(ranges), map)}.
3191         *
3192         * @param ranges a list of comma-separated language ranges or a list
3193         *     of language ranges in the form of the "Accept-Language" header
3194         *     defined in <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616">RFC
3195         *     2616</a>
3196         * @param map a map containing information to customize language ranges
3197         * @return a Language Priority List with customization. The list is
3198         *     modifiable.
3199         * @throws NullPointerException if {@code ranges} is null
3200         * @throws IllegalArgumentException if a language range or a weight
3201         *     found in the given {@code ranges} is ill-formed
3202         * @see #parse(String)
3203         * @see #mapEquivalents
3204         */
3205        public static List<LanguageRange> parse(String ranges,
3206                                                Map<String, List<String>> map) {
3207            return mapEquivalents(parse(ranges), map);
3208        }
3209
3210        /**
3211         * Generates a new customized Language Priority List using the given
3212         * {@code priorityList} and {@code map}. If the given {@code map} is
3213         * empty, this method returns a copy of the given {@code priorityList}.
3214         *
3215         * <p>In the map, a key represents a language range whereas a value is
3216         * a list of equivalents of it. {@code '*'} cannot be used in the map.
3217         * Each equivalent language range has the same weight value as its
3218         * original language range.
3219         *
3220         * <pre>
3221         *  An example of map:
3222         *    <b>Key</b>                            <b>Value</b>
3223         *      "zh" (Chinese)                 "zh",
3224         *                                     "zh-Hans"(Simplified Chinese)
3225         *      "zh-HK" (Chinese, Hong Kong)   "zh-HK"
3226         *      "zh-TW" (Chinese, Taiwan)      "zh-TW"
3227         * </pre>
3228         *
3229         * The customization is performed after modification using the IANA
3230         * Language Subtag Registry.
3231         *
3232         * <p>For example, if a user's Language Priority List consists of five
3233         * language ranges ({@code "zh"}, {@code "zh-CN"}, {@code "en"},
3234         * {@code "zh-TW"}, and {@code "zh-HK"}), the newly generated Language
3235         * Priority List which is customized using the above map example will
3236         * consists of {@code "zh"}, {@code "zh-Hans"}, {@code "zh-CN"},
3237         * {@code "zh-Hans-CN"}, {@code "en"}, {@code "zh-TW"}, and
3238         * {@code "zh-HK"}.
3239         *
3240         * <p>{@code "zh-HK"} and {@code "zh-TW"} aren't converted to
3241         * {@code "zh-Hans-HK"} nor {@code "zh-Hans-TW"} even if they are
3242         * included in the Language Priority List. In this example, mapping
3243         * is used to clearly distinguish Simplified Chinese and Traditional
3244         * Chinese.
3245         *
3246         * <p>If the {@code "zh"}-to-{@code "zh"} mapping isn't included in the
3247         * map, a simple replacement will be performed and the customized list
3248         * won't include {@code "zh"} and {@code "zh-CN"}.
3249         *
3250         * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List
3251         * @param map a map containing information to customize language ranges
3252         * @return a new Language Priority List with customization. The list is
3253         *     modifiable.
3254         * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} is {@code null}
3255         * @see #parse(String, Map)
3256         */
3257        public static List<LanguageRange> mapEquivalents(
3258                                              List<LanguageRange>priorityList,
3259                                              Map<String, List<String>> map) {
3260            return LocaleMatcher.mapEquivalents(priorityList, map);
3261        }
3262
3263        /**
3264         * Returns a hash code value for the object.
3265         *
3266         * @return  a hash code value for this object.
3267         */
3268        @Override
3269        public int hashCode() {
3270            if (hash == 0) {
3271                int result = 17;
3272                result = 37*result + range.hashCode();
3273                long bitsWeight = Double.doubleToLongBits(weight);
3274                result = 37*result + (int)(bitsWeight ^ (bitsWeight >>> 32));
3275                hash = result;
3276            }
3277            return hash;
3278        }
3279
3280        /**
3281         * Compares this object to the specified object. The result is true if
3282         * and only if the argument is not {@code null} and is a
3283         * {@code LanguageRange} object that contains the same {@code range}
3284         * and {@code weight} values as this object.
3285         *
3286         * @param obj the object to compare with
3287         * @return  {@code true} if this object's {@code range} and
3288         *     {@code weight} are the same as the {@code obj}'s; {@code false}
3289         *     otherwise.
3290         */
3291        @Override
3292        public boolean equals(Object obj) {
3293            if (this == obj) {
3294                return true;
3295            }
3296            if (!(obj instanceof LanguageRange)) {
3297                return false;
3298            }
3299            LanguageRange other = (LanguageRange)obj;
3300            return hash == other.hash
3301                   && range.equals(other.range)
3302                   && weight == other.weight;
3303        }
3304    }
3305
3306    /**
3307     * Returns a list of matching {@code Locale} instances using the filtering
3308     * mechanism defined in RFC 4647.
3309     *
3310     * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
3311     *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
3312     * @param locales {@code Locale} instances used for matching
3313     * @param mode filtering mode
3314     * @return a list of {@code Locale} instances for matching language tags
3315     *     sorted in descending order based on priority or weight, or an empty
3316     *     list if nothing matches. The list is modifiable.
3317     * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code locales}
3318     *     is {@code null}
3319     * @throws IllegalArgumentException if one or more extended language ranges
3320     *     are included in the given list when
3321     *     {@link FilteringMode#REJECT_EXTENDED_RANGES} is specified
3322     *
3323     * @since 1.8
3324     */
3325    public static List<Locale> filter(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
3326                                      Collection<Locale> locales,
3327                                      FilteringMode mode) {
3328        return LocaleMatcher.filter(priorityList, locales, mode);
3329    }
3330
3331    /**
3332     * Returns a list of matching {@code Locale} instances using the filtering
3333     * mechanism defined in RFC 4647. This is equivalent to
3334     * {@link #filter(List, Collection, FilteringMode)} when {@code mode} is
3335     * {@link FilteringMode#AUTOSELECT_FILTERING}.
3336     *
3337     * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
3338     *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
3339     * @param locales {@code Locale} instances used for matching
3340     * @return a list of {@code Locale} instances for matching language tags
3341     *     sorted in descending order based on priority or weight, or an empty
3342     *     list if nothing matches. The list is modifiable.
3343     * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code locales}
3344     *     is {@code null}
3345     *
3346     * @since 1.8
3347     */
3348    public static List<Locale> filter(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
3349                                      Collection<Locale> locales) {
3350        return filter(priorityList, locales, FilteringMode.AUTOSELECT_FILTERING);
3351    }
3352
3353    /**
3354     * Returns a list of matching languages tags using the basic filtering
3355     * mechanism defined in RFC 4647.
3356     *
3357     * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
3358     *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
3359     * @param tags language tags
3360     * @param mode filtering mode
3361     * @return a list of matching language tags sorted in descending order
3362     *     based on priority or weight, or an empty list if nothing matches.
3363     *     The list is modifiable.
3364     * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code tags} is
3365     *     {@code null}
3366     * @throws IllegalArgumentException if one or more extended language ranges
3367     *     are included in the given list when
3368     *     {@link FilteringMode#REJECT_EXTENDED_RANGES} is specified
3369     *
3370     * @since 1.8
3371     */
3372    public static List<String> filterTags(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
3373                                          Collection<String> tags,
3374                                          FilteringMode mode) {
3375        return LocaleMatcher.filterTags(priorityList, tags, mode);
3376    }
3377
3378    /**
3379     * Returns a list of matching languages tags using the basic filtering
3380     * mechanism defined in RFC 4647. This is equivalent to
3381     * {@link #filterTags(List, Collection, FilteringMode)} when {@code mode}
3382     * is {@link FilteringMode#AUTOSELECT_FILTERING}.
3383     *
3384     * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
3385     *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
3386     * @param tags language tags
3387     * @return a list of matching language tags sorted in descending order
3388     *     based on priority or weight, or an empty list if nothing matches.
3389     *     The list is modifiable.
3390     * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code tags} is
3391     *     {@code null}
3392     *
3393     * @since 1.8
3394     */
3395    public static List<String> filterTags(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
3396                                          Collection<String> tags) {
3397        return filterTags(priorityList, tags, FilteringMode.AUTOSELECT_FILTERING);
3398    }
3399
3400    /**
3401     * Returns a {@code Locale} instance for the best-matching language
3402     * tag using the lookup mechanism defined in RFC 4647.
3403     *
3404     * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
3405     *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
3406     * @param locales {@code Locale} instances used for matching
3407     * @return the best matching <code>Locale</code> instance chosen based on
3408     *     priority or weight, or {@code null} if nothing matches.
3409     * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code tags} is
3410     *     {@code null}
3411     *
3412     * @since 1.8
3413     */
3414    public static Locale lookup(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
3415                                Collection<Locale> locales) {
3416        return LocaleMatcher.lookup(priorityList, locales);
3417    }
3418
3419    /**
3420     * Returns the best-matching language tag using the lookup mechanism
3421     * defined in RFC 4647.
3422     *
3423     * @param priorityList user's Language Priority List in which each language
3424     *     tag is sorted in descending order based on priority or weight
3425     * @param tags language tangs used for matching
3426     * @return the best matching language tag chosen based on priority or
3427     *     weight, or {@code null} if nothing matches.
3428     * @throws NullPointerException if {@code priorityList} or {@code tags} is
3429     *     {@code null}
3430     *
3431     * @since 1.8
3432     */
3433    public static String lookupTag(List<LanguageRange> priorityList,
3434                                   Collection<String> tags) {
3435        return LocaleMatcher.lookupTag(priorityList, tags);
3436    }
3437
3438}
3439