java.lang.Objectjava.util.Dictionary<K, V>
java.util.Hashtable<Object, Object>
java.util.Properties
All Implemented Interfaces:
Cloneable, Map, java$io$Serializable
Direct Known Subclasses:
NoneProvider, Provider, AuthProvider
Properties
class represents a persistent set of
properties. The Properties
can be saved to a stream
or loaded from a stream. Each key and its corresponding value in
the property list is a string.
A property list can contain another property list as its "defaults"; this second property list is searched if the property key is not found in the original property list.
Because Properties
inherits from Hashtable
, the
put
and putAll
methods can be applied to a
Properties
object. Their use is strongly discouraged as they
allow the caller to insert entries whose keys or values are not
Strings
. The setProperty
method should be used
instead. If the store
or save
method is called
on a "compromised" Properties
object that contains a
non-String
key or value, the call will fail. Similarly,
the call to the propertyNames
or list
method
will fail if it is called on a "compromised" Properties
object that contains a non-String
key.
The load(Reader) / store(Writer, String) methods load and store properties from and to a character based stream in a simple line-oriented format specified below. The load(InputStream) / store(OutputStream, String) methods work the same way as the load(Reader)/store(Writer, String) pair, except the input/output stream is encoded in ISO 8859-1 character encoding. Characters that cannot be directly represented in this encoding can be written using Unicode escapes as defined in section 3.3 of The Java™ Language Specification; only a single 'u' character is allowed in an escape sequence. The native2ascii tool can be used to convert property files to and from other character encodings.
The #loadFromXML(InputStream) and #storeToXML(OutputStream, String, String) methods load and store properties in a simple XML format. By default the UTF-8 character encoding is used, however a specific encoding may be specified if required. An XML properties document has the following DOCTYPE declaration:
<!DOCTYPE properties SYSTEM "http://java.sun.com/dtd/properties.dtd">Note that the system URI (http://java.sun.com/dtd/properties.dtd) is not accessed when exporting or importing properties; it merely serves as a string to uniquely identify the DTD, which is:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!-- DTD for properties --> <!ELEMENT properties ( comment?, entry* ) > <!ATTLIST properties version CDATA #FIXED "1.0"> <!ELEMENT comment (#PCDATA) > <!ELEMENT entry (#PCDATA) > <!ATTLIST entry key CDATA #REQUIRED>
This class is thread-safe: multiple threads can share a single Properties object without the need for external synchronization.
Arthur
- van HoffMichael
- McCloskeyXueming
- ShenJDK1.0
- Nested Class Summary: | ||
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class | Properties.LineReader |
Field Summary | ||
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protected Properties | defaults | A property list that contains default values for any keys not
found in this property list.
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Constructor: |
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Method from java.util.Properties Summary: |
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getProperty, getProperty, list, list, load, load, loadFromXML, propertyNames, save, setProperty, store, store, storeToXML, storeToXML, stringPropertyNames |
Methods from java.util.Hashtable: |
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clear, clone, contains, containsKey, containsValue, elements, entrySet, equals, get, hashCode, isEmpty, keySet, keys, put, putAll, rehash, remove, size, toString, values |
Methods from java.util.Dictionary: |
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elements, get, isEmpty, keys, put, remove, size |
Methods from java.lang.Object: |
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clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait |
Method from java.util.Properties Detail: |
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null if the property is not found. |
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Properties are processed in terms of lines. There are two
kinds of line, natural lines and logical lines.
A natural line is defined as a line of
characters that is terminated either by a set of line terminator
characters (
A natural line that contains only white space characters is
considered blank and is ignored. A comment line has an ASCII
If a logical line is spread across several natural lines, the backslash escaping the line terminator sequence, the line terminator sequence, and any white space at the start of the following line have no affect on the key or element values. The remainder of the discussion of key and element parsing (when loading) will assume all the characters constituting the key and element appear on a single natural line after line continuation characters have been removed. Note that it is not sufficient to only examine the character preceding a line terminator sequence to decide if the line terminator is escaped; there must be an odd number of contiguous backslashes for the line terminator to be escaped. Since the input is processed from left to right, a non-zero even number of 2n contiguous backslashes before a line terminator (or elsewhere) encodes n backslashes after escape processing.
The key contains all of the characters in the line starting
with the first non-white space character and up to, but not
including, the first unescaped
would be the two-character key
As an example, each of the following three lines specifies the key
Truth = Beauty Truth:Beauty Truth :BeautyAs another example, the following three lines specify a single property:
fruits apple, banana, pear, \ cantaloupe, watermelon, \ kiwi, mangoThe key is "fruits" and the associated element is:
"apple, banana, pear, cantaloupe, watermelon, kiwi, mango"Note that a space appears before each \ so that a space
will appear after each comma in the final result; the \ ,
line terminator, and leading white space on the continuation line are
merely discarded and are not replaced by one or more other
characters.
As a third example, the line:
cheesesspecifies that the key is "cheeses" and the associated
element is the empty string "" .
Characters in keys and elements can be represented in escape sequences similar to those used for character and string literals (see sections 3.3 and 3.10.6 of The Java™ Language Specification). The differences from the character escape sequences and Unicode escapes used for characters and strings are:
The specified stream remains open after this method returns. |
The specified stream remains open after this method returns. |
The XML document must have the following DOCTYPE declaration: <!DOCTYPE properties SYSTEM "http://java.sun.com/dtd/properties.dtd">Furthermore, the document must satisfy the properties DTD described above. The specified stream is closed after this method returns. |
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Deprecated! This - method does not throw an IOException if an I/O error
occurs while saving the property list. The preferred way to save a
properties list is via the store(OutputStream out,
String comments) method or the
storeToXML(OutputStream os, String comment) method.
store(OutputStream out, String comments) method
and suppresses IOExceptions that were thrown. |
put . Provided for
parallelism with the getProperty method. Enforces use of
strings for property keys and values. The value returned is the
result of the Hashtable call to put . |
Properties table to the output character stream in a
format suitable for using the load(Reader)
method.
Properties from the defaults table of this
If the comments argument is not null, then an ASCII
Next, a comment line is always written, consisting of an ASCII
Then every entry in this After the entries have been written, the output stream is flushed. The output stream remains open after this method returns. |
Properties table to the output stream in a format suitable
for loading into a Properties table using the
load(InputStream) method.
Properties from the defaults table of this This method outputs the comments, properties keys and values in the same format as specified in store(Writer) , with the following differences: After the entries have been written, the output stream is flushed. The output stream remains open after this method returns. |
An invocation of this method of the form props.storeToXML(os, comment) behaves in exactly the same way as the invocation props.storeToXML(os, comment, "UTF-8");. |
The XML document will have the following DOCTYPE declaration: <!DOCTYPE properties SYSTEM "http://java.sun.com/dtd/properties.dtd"> If the specified comment is The specified stream remains open after this method returns. |
The returned set is not backed by the Properties object. Changes to this Properties are not reflected in the set, or vice versa. |