public final class Formatter extends Object implements Closeable, Flushable
byte, BigDecimal, and Calendar
 are supported.  Limited formatting customization for arbitrary user types is
 provided through the Formattable interface.
 Formatters are not necessarily safe for multithreaded access. Thread safety is optional and is the responsibility of users of methods in this class.
 Formatted printing for the Java language is heavily inspired by C's
 printf.  Although the format strings are similar to C, some
 customizations have been made to accommodate the Java language and exploit
 some of its features.  Also, Java formatting is more strict than C's; for
 example, if a conversion is incompatible with a flag, an exception will be
 thrown.  In C inapplicable flags are silently ignored.  The format strings
 are thus intended to be recognizable to C programmers but not necessarily
 completely compatible with those in C.
 
Examples of expected usage:
   StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
   // Send all output to the Appendable object sb
   Formatter formatter = new Formatter(sb, Locale.US);
   // Explicit argument indices may be used to re-order output.
   formatter.format("%4$2s %3$2s %2$2s %1$2s", "a", "b", "c", "d")
   // -> " d  c  b  a"
   // Optional locale as the first argument can be used to get
   // locale-specific formatting of numbers.  The precision and width can be
   // given to round and align the value.
   formatter.format(Locale.FRANCE, "e = %+10.4f", Math.E);
   // -> "e =    +2,7183"
   // The '(' numeric flag may be used to format negative numbers with
   // parentheses rather than a minus sign.  Group separators are
   // automatically inserted.
   formatter.format("Amount gained or lost since last statement: $ %(,.2f",
                    balanceDelta);
   // -> "Amount gained or lost since last statement: $ (6,217.58)"
 Convenience methods for common formatting requests exist as illustrated by the following invocations:
   // Writes a formatted string to System.out.
   System.out.format("Local time: %tT", Calendar.getInstance());
   // -> "Local time: 13:34:18"
   // Writes formatted output to System.err.
   System.err.printf("Unable to open file '%1$s': %2$s",
                     fileName, exception.getMessage());
   // -> "Unable to open file 'food': No such file or directory"
  Like C's sprintf(3), Strings may be formatted using the static
 method String.format:
 
   // Format a string containing a date.
   import java.util.Calendar;
   import java.util.GregorianCalendar;
   import static java.util.Calendar.*;
   Calendar c = new GregorianCalendar(1995, MAY, 23);
   String s = String.format("Duke's Birthday: %1$tb %1$te, %1$tY", c);
   // -> s == "Duke's Birthday: May 23, 1995"
 This specification is divided into two sections. The first section, Summary, covers the basic formatting concepts. This section is intended for users who want to get started quickly and are familiar with formatted printing in other programming languages. The second section, Details, covers the specific implementation details. It is intended for users who want more precise specification of formatting behavior.
This section is intended to provide a brief overview of formatting concepts. For precise behavioral details, refer to the Details section.
 Every method which produces formatted output requires a format
 string and an argument list.  The format string is a String which may contain fixed text and one or more embedded format
 specifiers.  Consider the following example:
 
   Calendar c = ...;
   String s = String.format("Duke's Birthday: %1$tm %1$te,%1$tY", c);
 format method.  It
 contains three format specifiers "%1$tm", "%1$te", and
 "%1$tY" which indicate how the arguments should be processed and
 where they should be inserted in the text.  The remaining portions of the
 format string are fixed text including "Dukes Birthday: " and any
 other spaces or punctuation.
 The argument list consists of all arguments passed to the method after the
 format string.  In the above example, the argument list is of size one and
 consists of the Calendar object c.
 %[argument_index$][flags][width][.precision]conversion
 The optional argument_index is a decimal integer indicating the
 position of the argument in the argument list.  The first argument is
 referenced by "1$", the second by "2$", etc.
 
The optional flags is a set of characters that modify the output format. The set of valid flags depends on the conversion.
The optional width is a positive decimal integer indicating the minimum number of characters to be written to the output.
The optional precision is a non-negative decimal integer usually used to restrict the number of characters. The specific behavior depends on the conversion.
The required conversion is a character indicating how the argument should be formatted. The set of valid conversions for a given argument depends on the argument's data type.
%[argument_index$][flags][width]conversion
The optional argument_index, flags and width are defined as above.
 The required conversion is a two character sequence.  The first
 character is 't' or 'T'.  The second character indicates
 the format to be used.  These characters are similar to but not completely
 identical to those defined by GNU date and POSIX
 strftime(3c).
 
%[flags][width]conversion
The optional flags and width is defined as above.
The required conversion is a character indicating content to be inserted in the output.
Conversions are divided into the following categories:
char, Character, byte, Byte, short, and Short. This conversion may also be
 applied to the types int and Integer when Character.isValidCodePoint(int) returns true
 byte,
 Byte, short, Short, int and Integer, long, Long, and BigInteger (but not char or Character)
 float, Float, double, Double, and BigDecimal
 long, Long, Calendar,
 Date and TemporalAccessor
 '%'
 ('\u0025')
  The following table summarizes the supported conversions.  Conversions
 denoted by an upper-case character (i.e. 'B', 'H',
 'S', 'C', 'X', 'E', 'G',
 'A', and 'T') are the same as those for the corresponding
 lower-case conversion characters except that the result is converted to
 upper case according to the rules of the prevailing Locale.  The result is equivalent to the following invocation of String.toUpperCase()
 
    out.toUpperCase() 
 | Conversion | Argument Category | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| 'b','B' | general | If the argument arg is null, then the result is
     "false".  If arg is abooleanorBoolean, then the result is the string returned byString.valueOf(arg).  Otherwise, the result is
     "true". | 
| 'h','H' | general | If the argument arg is null, then the result is
     "null".  Otherwise, the result is obtained by invokingInteger.toHexString(arg.hashCode()). | 
| 's','S' | general | If the argument arg is null, then the result is
     "null".  If arg implementsFormattable, thenarg.formatTois invoked. Otherwise, the
     result is obtained by invokingarg.toString(). | 
| 'c','C' | character | The result is a Unicode character | 
| 'd' | integral | The result is formatted as a decimal integer | 
| 'o' | integral | The result is formatted as an octal integer | 
| 'x','X' | integral | The result is formatted as a hexadecimal integer | 
| 'e','E' | floating point | The result is formatted as a decimal number in computerized scientific notation | 
| 'f' | floating point | The result is formatted as a decimal number | 
| 'g','G' | floating point | The result is formatted using computerized scientific notation or decimal format, depending on the precision and the value after rounding. | 
| 'a','A' | floating point | The result is formatted as a hexadecimal floating-point number with
     a significand and an exponent. This conversion is not supported
     for the BigDecimaltype despite the latter's being in the
     floating point argument category. | 
| 't','T' | date/time | Prefix for date and time conversion characters. See Date/Time Conversions. | 
| '%' | percent | The result is a literal '%'('\u0025') | 
| 'n' | line separator | The result is the platform-specific line separator | 
Any characters not explicitly defined as conversions are illegal and are reserved for future extensions.
 The following date and time conversion suffix characters are defined for
 the 't' and 'T' conversions.  The types are similar to but
 not completely identical to those defined by GNU date and POSIX
 strftime(3c).  Additional conversion types are provided to access
 Java-specific functionality (e.g. 'L' for milliseconds within the
 second).
 
The following conversion characters are used for formatting times:
| 'H' | Hour of the day for the 24-hour clock, formatted as two digits with
     a leading zero as necessary i.e. 00 - 23. | 
| 'I' | Hour for the 12-hour clock, formatted as two digits with a leading
     zero as necessary, i.e. 01 - 12. | 
| 'k' | Hour of the day for the 24-hour clock, i.e. 0 - 23. | 
| 'l' | Hour for the 12-hour clock, i.e. 1 - 12. | 
| 'M' | Minute within the hour formatted as two digits with a leading zero
     as necessary, i.e. 00 - 59. | 
| 'S' | Seconds within the minute, formatted as two digits with a leading
     zero as necessary, i.e. 00 - 60("60" is a special
     value required to support leap seconds). | 
| 'L' | Millisecond within the second formatted as three digits with
     leading zeros as necessary, i.e. 000 - 999. | 
| 'N' | Nanosecond within the second, formatted as nine digits with leading
     zeros as necessary, i.e. 000000000 - 999999999. | 
| 'p' | Locale-specific morning or afternoon marker
     in lower case, e.g." am" or "pm". Use of the conversion
     prefix'T'forces this output to upper case. | 
| 'z' | RFC 822
     style numeric time zone offset from GMT, e.g. -0800.  This
     value will be adjusted as necessary for Daylight Saving Time.  Forlong,Long, andDatethe time zone used is
     the default time zone for this
     instance of the Java virtual machine. | 
| 'Z' | A string representing the abbreviation for the time zone.  This
     value will be adjusted as necessary for Daylight Saving Time.  For long,Long, andDatethe  time zone used is
     the default time zone for this
     instance of the Java virtual machine.  The Formatter's locale will
     supersede the locale of the argument (if any). | 
| 's' | Seconds since the beginning of the epoch starting at 1 January 1970 00:00:00UTC, i.e.Long.MIN_VALUE/1000toLong.MAX_VALUE/1000. | 
| 'Q' | Milliseconds since the beginning of the epoch starting at 1 January
     1970 00:00:00UTC, i.e.Long.MIN_VALUEtoLong.MAX_VALUE. | 
The following conversion characters are used for formatting dates:
| 'B' | Locale-specific full month name, e.g. "January","February". | 
| 'b' | Locale-specific abbreviated month name,
     e.g. "Jan","Feb". | 
| 'h' | Same as 'b'. | 
| 'A' | Locale-specific full name of the day of the week,
     e.g. "Sunday","Monday" | 
| 'a' | Locale-specific short name of the day of the week,
     e.g. "Sun","Mon" | 
| 'C' | Four-digit year divided by 100, formatted as two digits
     with leading zero as necessary, i.e.00 - 99 | 
| 'Y' | Year, formatted as at least four digits with leading zeros as
     necessary, e.g. 0092equals92CE for the Gregorian
     calendar. | 
| 'y' | Last two digits of the year, formatted with leading zeros as
     necessary, i.e. 00 - 99. | 
| 'j' | Day of year, formatted as three digits with leading zeros as
     necessary, e.g. 001 - 366for the Gregorian calendar. | 
| 'm' | Month, formatted as two digits with leading zeros as necessary,
     i.e. 01 - 13. | 
| 'd' | Day of month, formatted as two digits with leading zeros as
     necessary, i.e. 01 - 31 | 
| 'e' | Day of month, formatted as two digits, i.e. 1 - 31. | 
The following conversion characters are used for formatting common date/time compositions.
| 'R' | Time formatted for the 24-hour clock as "%tH:%tM" | 
| 'T' | Time formatted for the 24-hour clock as "%tH:%tM:%tS". | 
| 'r' | Time formatted for the 12-hour clock as "%tI:%tM:%tS %Tp".
     The location of the morning or afternoon marker ('%Tp') may be
     locale-dependent. | 
| 'D' | Date formatted as "%tm/%td/%ty". | 
| 'F' | ISO 8601
     complete date formatted as "%tY-%tm-%td". | 
| 'c' | Date and time formatted as "%ta %tb %td %tT %tZ %tY",
     e.g."Sun Jul 20 16:17:00 EDT 1969". | 
Any characters not explicitly defined as date/time conversion suffixes are illegal and are reserved for future extensions.
The following table summarizes the supported flags. y means the flag is supported for the indicated argument types.
| Flag | General | Character | Integral | Floating Point | Date/Time | Description | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| '-' | y | y | y | y | y | The result will be left-justified. | 
| '#' | y1 | - | y3 | y | - | The result should use a conversion-dependent alternate form | 
| '+' | - | - | y4 | y | - | The result will always include a sign | 
| ' ' | - | - | y4 | y | - | The result will include a leading space for positive values | 
| '0' | - | - | y | y | - | The result will be zero-padded | 
| ',' | - | - | y2 | y5 | - | The result will include locale-specific grouping separators | 
| '(' | - | - | y4 | y5 | - | The result will enclose negative numbers in parentheses | 
 1 Depends on the definition of Formattable.
 
 2 For 'd' conversion only.
 
 3 For 'o', 'x', and 'X'
 conversions only.
 
 4 For 'd', 'o', 'x', and
 'X' conversions applied to BigInteger
 or 'd' applied to byte, Byte, short, Short, int and Integer, long, and Long.
 
 5 For 'e', 'E', 'f',
 'g', and 'G' conversions only.
 
Any characters not explicitly defined as flags are illegal and are reserved for future extensions.
The width is the minimum number of characters to be written to the output. For the line separator conversion, width is not applicable; if it is provided, an exception will be thrown.
For general argument types, the precision is the maximum number of characters to be written to the output.
 For the floating-point conversions 'a', 'A', 'e',
 'E', and 'f' the precision is the number of digits after the
 radix point.  If the conversion is 'g' or 'G', then the
 precision is the total number of digits in the resulting magnitude after
 rounding.
 
For character, integral, and date/time argument types and the percent and line separator conversions, the precision is not applicable; if a precision is provided, an exception will be thrown.
 The argument index is a decimal integer indicating the position of the
 argument in the argument list.  The first argument is referenced by
 "1$", the second by "2$", etc.
 
 Another way to reference arguments by position is to use the
 '<' ('\u003c') flag, which causes the argument for
 the previous format specifier to be re-used.  For example, the following two
 statements would produce identical strings:
 
   Calendar c = ...;
   String s1 = String.format("Duke's Birthday: %1$tm %1$te,%1$tY", c);
   String s2 = String.format("Duke's Birthday: %1$tm %<te,%<tY", c);
 This section is intended to provide behavioral details for formatting, including conditions and exceptions, supported data types, localization, and interactions between flags, conversions, and data types. For an overview of formatting concepts, refer to the Summary
 Any characters not explicitly defined as conversions, date/time
 conversion suffixes, or flags are illegal and are reserved for
 future extensions.  Use of such a character in a format string will
 cause an UnknownFormatConversionException or UnknownFormatFlagsException to be thrown.
 
 If the format specifier contains a width or precision with an invalid
 value or which is otherwise unsupported, then a IllegalFormatWidthException or IllegalFormatPrecisionException
 respectively will be thrown.
 
 If a format specifier contains a conversion character that is not
 applicable to the corresponding argument, then an IllegalFormatConversionException will be thrown.
 
 All specified exceptions may be thrown by any of the format
 methods of Formatter as well as by any format convenience
 methods such as String.format and
 PrintStream.printf.
 
 Conversions denoted by an upper-case character (i.e. 'B',
 'H', 'S', 'C', 'X', 'E',
 'G', 'A', and 'T') are the same as those for the
 corresponding lower-case conversion characters except that the result is
 converted to upper case according to the rules of the prevailing Locale.  The result is equivalent to the following
 invocation of String.toUpperCase()
 
    out.toUpperCase() 
 The following general conversions may be applied to any argument type:
| 'b' | '\u0062' | Produces either " true" or "false" as returned byBoolean.toString(boolean). If the argument is   If the  | 
| 'B' | '\u0042' | The upper-case variant of 'b'. | 
| 'h' | '\u0068' | Produces a string representing the hash code value of the object.  If the argument, arg is   If the  | 
| 'H' | '\u0048' | The upper-case variant of 'h'. | 
| 's' | '\u0073' | Produces a string.  If the argument is   If the  | 
| 'S' | '\u0053' | The upper-case variant of 's'. | 
The following flags apply to general conversions:
| '-' | '\u002d' | Left justifies the output.  Spaces ('\u0020') will be
     added at the end of the converted value as required to fill the minimum
     width of the field.  If the width is not provided, then a MissingFormatWidthExceptionwill be thrown.  If this flag is not given
     then the output will be right-justified. | 
| '#' | '\u0023' | Requires the output use an alternate form. The definition of the form is specified by the conversion. | 
 The width is the minimum number of characters to
 be written to the
 output.  If the length of the converted value is less than the width then
 the output will be padded by '  ' ('\u0020')
 until the total number of characters equals the width.  The padding is on
 the left by default.  If the '-' flag is given, then the padding
 will be on the right.  If the width is not specified then there is no
 minimum.
 
 The precision is the maximum number of characters to be written to the
 output.  The precision is applied before the width, thus the output will be
 truncated to precision characters even if the width is greater than
 the precision.  If the precision is not specified then there is no explicit
 limit on the number of characters.
 
char and Character.  It
 may also be applied to the types byte, Byte,
 short, and Short, int and Integer when
 Character.isValidCodePoint(int) returns true.  If it returns
 false then an IllegalFormatCodePointException will be
 thrown.
 | 'c' | '\u0063' | Formats the argument as a Unicode character as described in Unicode Character
     Representation.  This may be more than one 16-bit charin
     the case where the argument represents a supplementary character. If the  | 
| 'C' | '\u0043' | The upper-case variant of 'c'. | 
 The '-' flag defined for General
 conversions applies.  If the '#' flag is given, then a FormatFlagsConversionMismatchException will be thrown.
 
The width is defined as for General conversions.
 The precision is not applicable.  If the precision is specified then an
 IllegalFormatPrecisionException will be thrown.
 
Numeric conversions are divided into the following categories:
Numeric types will be formatted according to the following algorithm:
After digits are obtained for the integer part, fractional part, and exponent (as appropriate for the data type), the following transformation is applied:
'0'
  + z.
 ',' ('\u002c')
 flag is given, then the locale-specific grouping separator is
 inserted by scanning the integer part of the string from least significant
 to most significant digits and inserting a separator at intervals defined by
 the locale's grouping
 size.
 '0' flag is given, then the locale-specific zero digits are inserted
 after the sign character, if any, and before the first non-zero digit, until
 the length of the string is equal to the requested field width.
 '(' flag is given, then a
 '(' ('\u0028') is prepended and a ')'
 ('\u0029') is appended.
 '(' flag is not given, then a '-' ('\u002d')
 is prepended.
 '+' flag is given and the value is positive or zero (or
 floating-point positive zero), then a '+' ('\u002b')
 will be prepended.
  If the value is NaN or positive infinity the literal strings "NaN" or
 "Infinity" respectively, will be output.  If the value is negative infinity,
 then the output will be "(Infinity)" if the '(' flag is given
 otherwise the output will be "-Infinity".  These values are not localized.
 
Byte, Short, Integer, and Long
 The following conversions may be applied to byte, Byte,
 short, Short, int and Integer,
 long, and Long.
 
| 'd' | '\u0064' | Formats the argument as a decimal integer. The localization algorithm is applied.  If the   If the  | 
| 'o' | '\u006f' | Formats the argument as an integer in base eight.  No localization
     is applied.  If x is negative then the result will be an unsigned value
     generated by adding 2n to the value where   If the   If the   If  | 
| 'x' | '\u0078' | Formats the argument as an integer in base sixteen. No
     localization is applied.  If x is negative then the result will be an unsigned value
     generated by adding 2n to the value where   If the   If the   If  | 
| 'X' | '\u0058' | The upper-case variant of 'x'.  The entire string
     representing the number will be converted to upper case including the'x'(if any) and
     all hexadecimal digits'a'-'f'('\u0061' -  '\u0066'). | 
 If the conversion is 'o', 'x', or 'X' and
 both the '#' and the '0' flags are given, then result will
 contain the radix indicator ('0' for octal and "0x" or
 "0X" for hexadecimal), some number of zeros (based on the width),
 and the value.
 
 If the '-' flag is not given, then the space padding will occur
 before the sign.
 
The following flags apply to numeric integral conversions:
| '+' | '\u002b' | Requires the output to include a positive sign for all positive
     numbers.  If this flag is not given then only negative values will
     include a sign.  If both the  | 
| ' ' | '\u0020' | Requires the output to include a single extra space
     ('\u0020') for non-negative values.  If both the  | 
| '0' | '\u0030' | Requires the output to be padded with leading zeros to the minimum field
     width following any sign or radix indicator except when converting NaN
     or infinity.  If the width is not provided, then a MissingFormatWidthExceptionwill be thrown. If both the  | 
| ',' | '\u002c' | Requires the output to include the locale-specific group separators as described in the "group" section of the localization algorithm. | 
| '(' | '\u0028' | Requires the output to prepend a '('('\u0028') and append a')'('\u0029') to negative values. | 
If no flags are given the default formatting is as follows:
width
 '-' ('\u002d')
  The width is the minimum number of characters to
 be written to the output.  This includes any signs, digits, grouping
 separators, radix indicator, and parentheses.  If the length of the
 converted value is less than the width then the output will be padded by
 spaces ('\u0020') until the total number of characters equals
 width.  The padding is on the left by default.  If '-' flag is
 given then the padding will be on the right.  If width is not specified then
 there is no minimum.
 
 The precision is not applicable.  If precision is specified then an
 IllegalFormatPrecisionException will be thrown.
 
 The following conversions may be applied to BigInteger.
 
| 'd' | '\u0064' | Requires the output to be formatted as a decimal integer. The localization algorithm is applied.  If the  | 
| 'o' | '\u006f' | Requires the output to be formatted as an integer in base eight.
     No localization is applied.  If x is negative then the result will be a signed value
     beginning with   If x is positive or zero and the   If the   If the   If the  | 
| 'x' | '\u0078' | Requires the output to be formatted as an integer in base
     sixteen.  No localization is applied.  If x is negative then the result will be a signed value
     beginning with   If x is positive or zero and the   If the   If the   If the  | 
| 'X' | '\u0058' | The upper-case variant of 'x'.  The entire string
     representing the number will be converted to upper case including the'x'(if any) and
     all hexadecimal digits'a'-'f'('\u0061' - '\u0066'). | 
 If the conversion is 'o', 'x', or 'X' and
 both the '#' and the '0' flags are given, then result will
 contain the base indicator ('0' for octal and "0x" or
 "0X" for hexadecimal), some number of zeros (based on the width),
 and the value.
 
 If the '0' flag is given and the value is negative, then the
 zero padding will occur after the sign.
 
 If the '-' flag is not given, then the space padding will occur
 before the sign.
 
All flags defined for Byte, Short, Integer, and Long apply. The default behavior when no flags are given is the same as for Byte, Short, Integer, and Long.
The specification of width is the same as defined for Byte, Short, Integer, and Long.
 The precision is not applicable.  If precision is specified then an
 IllegalFormatPrecisionException will be thrown.
 
 The following conversions may be applied to float, Float, double and Double.
 
| 'e' | '\u0065' | Requires the output to be formatted using computerized scientific notation.  The localization algorithm is applied. The formatting of the magnitude m depends upon its value. If m is NaN or infinite, the literal strings "NaN" or "Infinity", respectively, will be output. These values are not localized.  If m is positive-zero or negative-zero, then the exponent
     will be  Otherwise, the result is a string that represents the sign and magnitude (absolute value) of the argument. The formatting of the sign is described in the localization algorithm. The formatting of the magnitude m depends upon its value.  Let n be the unique integer such that 10n
     <= m < 10n+1; then let a be the
     mathematically exact quotient of m and 10n so
     that 1 <= a < 10. The magnitude is then represented as the
     integer part of a, as a single decimal digit, followed by the
     decimal separator followed by decimal digits representing the fractional
     part of a, followed by the exponent symbol   The number of digits in the result for the fractional part of
     m or a is equal to the precision.  If the precision is not
     specified then the default value is  If the  | 
| 'E' | '\u0045' | The upper-case variant of 'e'.  The exponent symbol
     will be'E'('\u0045'). | 
| 'g' | '\u0067' | Requires the output to be formatted in general scientific notation
     as described below. The localization
     algorithm is applied. After rounding for the precision, the formatting of the resulting magnitude m depends on its value. If m is greater than or equal to 10-4 but less than 10precision then it is represented in decimal format. If m is less than 10-4 or greater than or equal to 10precision, then it is represented in computerized scientific notation.  The total number of significant digits in m is equal to the
     precision.  If the precision is not specified, then the default value is
       If the  | 
| 'G' | '\u0047' | The upper-case variant of 'g'. | 
| 'f' | '\u0066' | Requires the output to be formatted using decimal
     format.  The localization algorithm is
     applied. The result is a string that represents the sign and magnitude (absolute value) of the argument. The formatting of the sign is described in the localization algorithm. The formatting of the magnitude m depends upon its value. If m NaN or infinite, the literal strings "NaN" or "Infinity", respectively, will be output. These values are not localized. The magnitude is formatted as the integer part of m, with no leading zeroes, followed by the decimal separator followed by one or more decimal digits representing the fractional part of m.  The number of digits in the result for the fractional part of
     m or a is equal to the precision.  If the precision is not
     specified then the default value is  | 
| 'a' | '\u0061' | Requires the output to be formatted in hexadecimal exponential
     form.  No localization is applied. The result is a string that represents the sign and magnitude (absolute value) of the argument x.  If x is negative or a negative-zero value then the result
     will begin with   If x is positive or a positive-zero value and the
      The formatting of the magnitude m depends upon its value. 
  If the  | 
| 'A' | '\u0041' | The upper-case variant of 'a'.  The entire string
     representing the number will be converted to upper case including the'x'('\u0078') and'p'('\u0070' and all hexadecimal digits'a'-'f'('\u0061' - '\u0066'). | 
All flags defined for Byte, Short, Integer, and Long apply.
 If the '#' flag is given, then the decimal separator will
 always be present.
 
If no flags are given the default formatting is as follows:
width
 '-'
  The width is the minimum number of characters
 to be written to the output.  This includes any signs, digits, grouping
 separators, decimal separators, exponential symbol, radix indicator,
 parentheses, and strings representing infinity and NaN as applicable.  If
 the length of the converted value is less than the width then the output
 will be padded by spaces ('\u0020') until the total number of
 characters equals width.  The padding is on the left by default.  If the
 '-' flag is given then the padding will be on the right.  If width
 is not specified then there is no minimum.
 
 If the conversion is 'e',
 'E' or 'f', then the precision is the number of digits
 after the decimal separator.  If the precision is not specified, then it is
 assumed to be 6.
 
 If the conversion is 'g' or 'G', then the precision is
 the total number of significant digits in the resulting magnitude after
 rounding.  If the precision is not specified, then the default value is
 6.  If the precision is 0, then it is taken to be
 1.
 
 If the conversion is 'a' or 'A', then the precision
 is the number of hexadecimal digits after the radix point.  If the
 precision is not provided, then all of the digits as returned by Double.toHexString(double) will be output.
 
 The following conversions may be applied BigDecimal.
 
| 'e' | '\u0065' | Requires the output to be formatted using computerized scientific notation.  The localization algorithm is applied. The formatting of the magnitude m depends upon its value.  If m is positive-zero or negative-zero, then the exponent
     will be  Otherwise, the result is a string that represents the sign and magnitude (absolute value) of the argument. The formatting of the sign is described in the localization algorithm. The formatting of the magnitude m depends upon its value.  Let n be the unique integer such that 10n
     <= m < 10n+1; then let a be the
     mathematically exact quotient of m and 10n so
     that 1 <= a < 10. The magnitude is then represented as the
     integer part of a, as a single decimal digit, followed by the
     decimal separator followed by decimal digits representing the fractional
     part of a, followed by the exponent symbol   The number of digits in the result for the fractional part of
     m or a is equal to the precision.  If the precision is not
     specified then the default value is   If the  | 
| 'E' | '\u0045' | The upper-case variant of 'e'.  The exponent symbol
     will be'E'('\u0045'). | 
| 'g' | '\u0067' | Requires the output to be formatted in general scientific notation
     as described below. The localization
     algorithm is applied. After rounding for the precision, the formatting of the resulting magnitude m depends on its value. If m is greater than or equal to 10-4 but less than 10precision then it is represented in decimal format. If m is less than 10-4 or greater than or equal to 10precision, then it is represented in computerized scientific notation.  The total number of significant digits in m is equal to the
     precision.  If the precision is not specified, then the default value is
       If the  | 
| 'G' | '\u0047' | The upper-case variant of 'g'. | 
| 'f' | '\u0066' | Requires the output to be formatted using decimal
     format.  The localization algorithm is
     applied. The result is a string that represents the sign and magnitude (absolute value) of the argument. The formatting of the sign is described in the localization algorithm. The formatting of the magnitude m depends upon its value. The magnitude is formatted as the integer part of m, with no leading zeroes, followed by the decimal separator followed by one or more decimal digits representing the fractional part of m.  The number of digits in the result for the fractional part of
     m or a is equal to the precision. If the precision is not
     specified then the default value is  | 
All flags defined for Byte, Short, Integer, and Long apply.
 If the '#' flag is given, then the decimal separator will
 always be present.
 
The default behavior when no flags are given is the same as for Float and Double.
The specification of width and precision is the same as defined for Float and Double.
 This conversion may be applied to long, Long, Calendar, Date and TemporalAccessor
 
| 't' | '\u0074' | Prefix for date and time conversion characters. | 
| 'T' | '\u0054' | The upper-case variant of 't'. | 
 The following date and time conversion character suffixes are defined
 for the 't' and 'T' conversions.  The types are similar to
 but not completely identical to those defined by GNU date and
 POSIX strftime(3c).  Additional conversion types are provided to
 access Java-specific functionality (e.g. 'L' for milliseconds
 within the second).
 
The following conversion characters are used for formatting times:
| 'H' | '\u0048' | Hour of the day for the 24-hour clock, formatted as two digits with
     a leading zero as necessary i.e. 00 - 23.00corresponds to midnight. | 
| 'I' | '\u0049' | Hour for the 12-hour clock, formatted as two digits with a leading
     zero as necessary, i.e. 01 - 12.01corresponds to
     one o'clock (either morning or afternoon). | 
| 'k' | '\u006b' | Hour of the day for the 24-hour clock, i.e. 0 - 23.0corresponds to midnight. | 
| 'l' | '\u006c' | Hour for the 12-hour clock, i.e. 1 - 12.1corresponds to one o'clock (either morning or afternoon). | 
| 'M' | '\u004d' | Minute within the hour formatted as two digits with a leading zero
     as necessary, i.e. 00 - 59. | 
| 'S' | '\u0053' | Seconds within the minute, formatted as two digits with a leading
     zero as necessary, i.e. 00 - 60("60" is a special
     value required to support leap seconds). | 
| 'L' | '\u004c' | Millisecond within the second formatted as three digits with
     leading zeros as necessary, i.e. 000 - 999. | 
| 'N' | '\u004e' | Nanosecond within the second, formatted as nine digits with leading
     zeros as necessary, i.e. 000000000 - 999999999.  The precision
     of this value is limited by the resolution of the underlying operating
     system or hardware. | 
| 'p' | '\u0070' | Locale-specific morning or afternoon marker
     in lower case, e.g." am" or "pm".  Use of the
     conversion prefix'T'forces this output to upper case.  (Note
     that'p'produces lower-case output.  This is different from
     GNUdateand POSIXstrftime(3c)which produce
     upper-case output.) | 
| 'z' | '\u007a' | RFC 822
     style numeric time zone offset from GMT, e.g. -0800.  This
     value will be adjusted as necessary for Daylight Saving Time.  Forlong,Long, andDatethe time zone used is
     the default time zone for this
     instance of the Java virtual machine. | 
| 'Z' | '\u005a' | A string representing the abbreviation for the time zone.  This
     value will be adjusted as necessary for Daylight Saving Time.  For long,Long, andDatethe time zone used is
     the default time zone for this
     instance of the Java virtual machine.  The Formatter's locale will
     supersede the locale of the argument (if any). | 
| 's' | '\u0073' | Seconds since the beginning of the epoch starting at 1 January 1970 00:00:00UTC, i.e.Long.MIN_VALUE/1000toLong.MAX_VALUE/1000. | 
| 'Q' | '\u004f' | Milliseconds since the beginning of the epoch starting at 1 January
     1970 00:00:00UTC, i.e.Long.MIN_VALUEtoLong.MAX_VALUE. The precision of this value is limited by
     the resolution of the underlying operating system or hardware. | 
The following conversion characters are used for formatting dates:
| 'B' | '\u0042' | Locale-specific full month name, e.g. "January","February". | 
| 'b' | '\u0062' | Locale-specific abbreviated month name,
     e.g. "Jan","Feb". | 
| 'h' | '\u0068' | Same as 'b'. | 
| 'A' | '\u0041' | Locale-specific full name of the day of the week,
     e.g. "Sunday","Monday" | 
| 'a' | '\u0061' | Locale-specific short name of the day of the week,
     e.g. "Sun","Mon" | 
| 'C' | '\u0043' | Four-digit year divided by 100, formatted as two digits
     with leading zero as necessary, i.e.00 - 99 | 
| 'Y' | '\u0059' | Year, formatted to at least
     four digits with leading zeros as necessary, e.g. 0092equals92CE for the Gregorian calendar. | 
| 'y' | '\u0079' | Last two digits of the year, formatted with leading zeros as
     necessary, i.e. 00 - 99. | 
| 'j' | '\u006a' | Day of year, formatted as three digits with leading zeros as
     necessary, e.g. 001 - 366for the Gregorian calendar.001corresponds to the first day of the year. | 
| 'm' | '\u006d' | Month, formatted as two digits with leading zeros as necessary,
     i.e. 01 - 13, where "01" is the first month of the
     year and ("13" is a special value required to support lunar
     calendars). | 
| 'd' | '\u0064' | Day of month, formatted as two digits with leading zeros as
     necessary, i.e. 01 - 31, where "01" is the first day
     of the month. | 
| 'e' | '\u0065' | Day of month, formatted as two digits, i.e. 1 - 31where
     "1" is the first day of the month. | 
The following conversion characters are used for formatting common date/time compositions.
| 'R' | '\u0052' | Time formatted for the 24-hour clock as "%tH:%tM" | 
| 'T' | '\u0054' | Time formatted for the 24-hour clock as "%tH:%tM:%tS". | 
| 'r' | '\u0072' | Time formatted for the 12-hour clock as "%tI:%tM:%tS
     %Tp".  The location of the morning or afternoon marker
     ('%Tp') may be locale-dependent. | 
| 'D' | '\u0044' | Date formatted as "%tm/%td/%ty". | 
| 'F' | '\u0046' | ISO 8601
     complete date formatted as "%tY-%tm-%td". | 
| 'c' | '\u0063' | Date and time formatted as "%ta %tb %td %tT %tZ %tY",
     e.g."Sun Jul 20 16:17:00 EDT 1969". | 
 The '-' flag defined for General
 conversions applies.  If the '#' flag is given, then a FormatFlagsConversionMismatchException will be thrown.
 
 The width is the minimum number of characters to
 be written to the output.  If the length of the converted value is less than
 the width then the output will be padded by spaces
 ('\u0020') until the total number of characters equals width.
 The padding is on the left by default.  If the '-' flag is given
 then the padding will be on the right.  If width is not specified then there
 is no minimum.
 
 The precision is not applicable.  If the precision is specified then an
 IllegalFormatPrecisionException will be thrown.
 
The conversion does not correspond to any argument.
| '%' | The result is a literal '%'('\u0025') The width is the minimum number of characters to
 be written to the output including the   The   The precision is not applicable.  If the precision is specified an
  | 
The conversion does not correspond to any argument.
| 'n' | the platform-specific line separator as returned by System.getProperty("line.separator"). | 
 Flags, width, and precision are not applicable.  If any are provided an
 IllegalFormatFlagsException, IllegalFormatWidthException,
 and IllegalFormatPrecisionException, respectively will be thrown.
 
Format specifiers can reference arguments in three ways:
1$", the second by "2$", etc.  An argument
 may be referenced more than once.
 For example:
   formatter.format("%4$s %3$s %2$s %1$s %4$s %3$s %2$s %1$s",
                    "a", "b", "c", "d")
   // -> "d c b a d c b a"
 '<' ('\u003c') flag which causes the argument for
 the previous format specifier to be re-used.  If there is no previous
 argument, then a MissingFormatArgumentException is thrown.
 
    formatter.format("%s %s %<s %<s", "a", "b", "c", "d")
    // -> "a b b b"
    // "c" and "d" are ignored because they are not referenced
 '<' flag.  Each format specifier
 which uses ordinary indexing is assigned a sequential implicit index into
 argument list which is independent of the indices used by explicit or
 relative indexing.
 
   formatter.format("%s %s %s %s", "a", "b", "c", "d")
   // -> "a b c d"
 It is possible to have a format string which uses all forms of indexing, for example:
   formatter.format("%2$s %s %<s %s", "a", "b", "c", "d")
   // -> "b a a b"
   // "c" and "d" are ignored because they are not referenced
  The maximum number of arguments is limited by the maximum dimension of a
 Java array as defined by
 The Java™ Virtual Machine Specification.
 If the argument index is does not correspond to an
 available argument, then a MissingFormatArgumentException is thrown.
 
If there are more arguments than format specifiers, the extra arguments are ignored.
 Unless otherwise specified, passing a null argument to any
 method or constructor in this class will cause a NullPointerException to be thrown.
| Modifier and Type | Class and Description | 
|---|---|
| static class  | Formatter.BigDecimalLayoutFormEnum for  BigDecimalformatting. | 
| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
| Formatter()Constructs a new formatter. | 
| Formatter(Appendable a)Constructs a new formatter with the specified destination. | 
| Formatter(Appendable a,
         Locale l)Constructs a new formatter with the specified destination and locale. | 
| Formatter(File file)Constructs a new formatter with the specified file. | 
| Formatter(File file,
         String csn)Constructs a new formatter with the specified file and charset. | 
| Formatter(File file,
         String csn,
         Locale l)Constructs a new formatter with the specified file, charset, and
 locale. | 
| Formatter(Locale l)Constructs a new formatter with the specified locale. | 
| Formatter(OutputStream os)Constructs a new formatter with the specified output stream. | 
| Formatter(OutputStream os,
         String csn)Constructs a new formatter with the specified output stream and
 charset. | 
| Formatter(OutputStream os,
         String csn,
         Locale l)Constructs a new formatter with the specified output stream, charset,
 and locale. | 
| Formatter(PrintStream ps)Constructs a new formatter with the specified print stream. | 
| Formatter(String fileName)Constructs a new formatter with the specified file name. | 
| Formatter(String fileName,
         String csn)Constructs a new formatter with the specified file name and charset. | 
| Formatter(String fileName,
         String csn,
         Locale l)Constructs a new formatter with the specified file name, charset, and
 locale. | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| void | close()Closes this formatter. | 
| void | flush()Flushes this formatter. | 
| Formatter | format(Locale l,
      String format,
      Object... args)Writes a formatted string to this object's destination using the
 specified locale, format string, and arguments. | 
| Formatter | format(String format,
      Object... args)Writes a formatted string to this object's destination using the
 specified format string and arguments. | 
| IOException | ioException()Returns the  IOExceptionlast thrown by this formatter'sAppendable. | 
| Locale | locale()Returns the locale set by the construction of this formatter. | 
| Appendable | out()Returns the destination for the output. | 
| String | toString()Returns the result of invoking  toString()on the destination
 for the output. | 
public Formatter()
 The destination of the formatted output is a StringBuilder
 which may be retrieved by invoking out() and whose
 current content may be converted into a string by invoking toString().  The locale used is the default locale for
 formatting for this instance of the Java
 virtual machine.
public Formatter(Appendable a)
The locale used is the default locale for formatting for this instance of the Java virtual machine.
a - Destination for the formatted output.  If a is
         null then a StringBuilder will be created.public Formatter(Locale l)
 The destination of the formatted output is a StringBuilder
 which may be retrieved by invoking out() and whose current
 content may be converted into a string by invoking toString().
l - The locale to apply during
         formatting.  If l is null then no localization
         is applied.public Formatter(Appendable a, Locale l)
a - Destination for the formatted output.  If a is
         null then a StringBuilder will be created.l - The locale to apply during
         formatting.  If l is null then no localization
         is applied.public Formatter(String fileName) throws FileNotFoundException
The charset used is the default charset for this instance of the Java virtual machine.
The locale used is the default locale for formatting for this instance of the Java virtual machine.
fileName - The name of the file to use as the destination of this
         formatter.  If the file exists then it will be truncated to
         zero size; otherwise, a new file will be created.  The output
         will be written to the file and is buffered.SecurityException - If a security manager is present and checkWrite(fileName) denies write
          access to the fileFileNotFoundException - If the given file name does not denote an existing, writable
          regular file and a new regular file of that name cannot be
          created, or if some other error occurs while opening or
          creating the filepublic Formatter(String fileName, String csn) throws FileNotFoundException, UnsupportedEncodingException
The locale used is the default locale for formatting for this instance of the Java virtual machine.
fileName - The name of the file to use as the destination of this
         formatter.  If the file exists then it will be truncated to
         zero size; otherwise, a new file will be created.  The output
         will be written to the file and is buffered.csn - The name of a supported charsetFileNotFoundException - If the given file name does not denote an existing, writable
          regular file and a new regular file of that name cannot be
          created, or if some other error occurs while opening or
          creating the fileSecurityException - If a security manager is present and checkWrite(fileName) denies write
          access to the fileUnsupportedEncodingException - If the named charset is not supportedpublic Formatter(String fileName, String csn, Locale l) throws FileNotFoundException, UnsupportedEncodingException
fileName - The name of the file to use as the destination of this
         formatter.  If the file exists then it will be truncated to
         zero size; otherwise, a new file will be created.  The output
         will be written to the file and is buffered.csn - The name of a supported charsetl - The locale to apply during
         formatting.  If l is null then no localization
         is applied.FileNotFoundException - If the given file name does not denote an existing, writable
          regular file and a new regular file of that name cannot be
          created, or if some other error occurs while opening or
          creating the fileSecurityException - If a security manager is present and checkWrite(fileName) denies write
          access to the fileUnsupportedEncodingException - If the named charset is not supportedpublic Formatter(File file) throws FileNotFoundException
The charset used is the default charset for this instance of the Java virtual machine.
The locale used is the default locale for formatting for this instance of the Java virtual machine.
file - The file to use as the destination of this formatter.  If the
         file exists then it will be truncated to zero size; otherwise,
         a new file will be created.  The output will be written to the
         file and is buffered.SecurityException - If a security manager is present and checkWrite(file.getPath()) denies
          write access to the fileFileNotFoundException - If the given file object does not denote an existing, writable
          regular file and a new regular file of that name cannot be
          created, or if some other error occurs while opening or
          creating the filepublic Formatter(File file, String csn) throws FileNotFoundException, UnsupportedEncodingException
The locale used is the default locale for formatting for this instance of the Java virtual machine.
file - The file to use as the destination of this formatter.  If the
         file exists then it will be truncated to zero size; otherwise,
         a new file will be created.  The output will be written to the
         file and is buffered.csn - The name of a supported charsetFileNotFoundException - If the given file object does not denote an existing, writable
          regular file and a new regular file of that name cannot be
          created, or if some other error occurs while opening or
          creating the fileSecurityException - If a security manager is present and checkWrite(file.getPath()) denies
          write access to the fileUnsupportedEncodingException - If the named charset is not supportedpublic Formatter(File file, String csn, Locale l) throws FileNotFoundException, UnsupportedEncodingException
file - The file to use as the destination of this formatter.  If the
         file exists then it will be truncated to zero size; otherwise,
         a new file will be created.  The output will be written to the
         file and is buffered.csn - The name of a supported charsetl - The locale to apply during
         formatting.  If l is null then no localization
         is applied.FileNotFoundException - If the given file object does not denote an existing, writable
          regular file and a new regular file of that name cannot be
          created, or if some other error occurs while opening or
          creating the fileSecurityException - If a security manager is present and checkWrite(file.getPath()) denies
          write access to the fileUnsupportedEncodingException - If the named charset is not supportedpublic Formatter(PrintStream ps)
The locale used is the default locale for formatting for this instance of the Java virtual machine.
 Characters are written to the given PrintStream object and are therefore encoded using that object's
 charset.
ps - The stream to use as the destination of this formatter.public Formatter(OutputStream os)
The charset used is the default charset for this instance of the Java virtual machine.
The locale used is the default locale for formatting for this instance of the Java virtual machine.
os - The output stream to use as the destination of this formatter.
         The output will be buffered.public Formatter(OutputStream os, String csn) throws UnsupportedEncodingException
The locale used is the default locale for formatting for this instance of the Java virtual machine.
os - The output stream to use as the destination of this formatter.
         The output will be buffered.csn - The name of a supported charsetUnsupportedEncodingException - If the named charset is not supportedpublic Formatter(OutputStream os, String csn, Locale l) throws UnsupportedEncodingException
os - The output stream to use as the destination of this formatter.
         The output will be buffered.csn - The name of a supported charsetl - The locale to apply during
         formatting.  If l is null then no localization
         is applied.UnsupportedEncodingException - If the named charset is not supportedpublic Locale locale()
 The format method
 for this object which has a locale argument does not change this value.
null if no localization is applied, otherwise a
          localeFormatterClosedException - If this formatter has been closed by invoking its close() methodpublic Appendable out()
FormatterClosedException - If this formatter has been closed by invoking its close() methodpublic String toString()
toString() on the destination
 for the output.  For example, the following code formats text into a
 StringBuilder then retrieves the resultant string:
 
   Formatter f = new Formatter();
   f.format("Last reboot at %tc", lastRebootDate);
   String s = f.toString();
   // -> s == "Last reboot at Sat Jan 01 00:00:00 PST 2000"
 An invocation of this method behaves in exactly the same way as the invocation
     out().toString() 
  Depending on the specification of toString for the Appendable, the returned string may or may not contain the characters
 written to the destination.  For instance, buffers typically return
 their contents in toString(), but streams cannot since the
 data is discarded.
toString in class ObjecttoString() on the destination
          for the outputFormatterClosedException - If this formatter has been closed by invoking its close() methodpublic void flush()
Flushable interface, its flush method will be invoked.
 Flushing a formatter writes any buffered output in the destination to the underlying stream.
flush in interface FlushableFormatterClosedException - If this formatter has been closed by invoking its close() methodpublic void close()
Closeable interface, its close method will be invoked.
 Closing a formatter allows it to release resources it may be holding (such as open files). If the formatter is already closed, then invoking this method has no effect.
 Attempting to invoke any methods except ioException() in
 this formatter after it has been closed will result in a FormatterClosedException.
close in interface Closeableclose in interface AutoCloseablepublic IOException ioException()
IOException last thrown by this formatter's Appendable.
  If the destination's append() method never throws
 IOException, then this method will always return null.
null if
          no such exception exists.public Formatter format(String format, Object... args)
format - A format string as described in Format string
         syntax.args - Arguments referenced by the format specifiers in the format
         string.  If there are more arguments than format specifiers, the
         extra arguments are ignored.  The maximum number of arguments is
         limited by the maximum dimension of a Java array as defined by
         The Java™ Virtual Machine Specification.IllegalFormatException - If a format string contains an illegal syntax, a format
          specifier that is incompatible with the given arguments,
          insufficient arguments given the format string, or other
          illegal conditions.  For specification of all possible
          formatting errors, see the Details
          section of the formatter class specification.FormatterClosedException - If this formatter has been closed by invoking its close() methodpublic Formatter format(Locale l, String format, Object... args)
l - The locale to apply during
         formatting.  If l is null then no localization
         is applied.  This does not change this object's locale that was
         set during construction.format - A format string as described in Format string
         syntaxargs - Arguments referenced by the format specifiers in the format
         string.  If there are more arguments than format specifiers, the
         extra arguments are ignored.  The maximum number of arguments is
         limited by the maximum dimension of a Java array as defined by
         The Java™ Virtual Machine Specification.IllegalFormatException - If a format string contains an illegal syntax, a format
          specifier that is incompatible with the given arguments,
          insufficient arguments given the format string, or other
          illegal conditions.  For specification of all possible
          formatting errors, see the Details
          section of the formatter class specification.FormatterClosedException - If this formatter has been closed by invoking its close() method Submit a bug or feature 
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