java.beans
public class PropertyEditorManager extends Object
The PropertyEditorManager uses three techniques for locating an editor for a given type. First, it provides a registerEditor method to allow an editor to be specifically registered for a given type. Second it tries to locate a suitable class by adding "Editor" to the full qualified classname of the given type (e.g. "foo.bah.FozEditor"). Finally it takes the simple classname (without the package name) adds "Editor" to it and looks in a search-path of packages for a matching class.
So for an input class foo.bah.Fred, the PropertyEditorManager would first look in its tables to see if an editor had been registered for foo.bah.Fred and if so use that. Then it will look for a foo.bah.FredEditor class. Then it will look for (say) standardEditorsPackage.FredEditor class.
Default PropertyEditors will be provided for the Java primitive types "boolean", "byte", "short", "int", "long", "float", and "double"; and for the classes java.lang.String. java.awt.Color, and java.awt.Font.
Constructor and Description |
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PropertyEditorManager() |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
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static PropertyEditor |
findEditor(Class<?> targetType)
Locate a value editor for a given target type.
|
static String[] |
getEditorSearchPath()
Gets the package names that will be searched for property editors.
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static void |
registerEditor(Class<?> targetType,
Class<?> editorClass)
Register an editor class to be used to edit values of
a given target class.
|
static void |
setEditorSearchPath(String[] path)
Change the list of package names that will be used for
finding property editors.
|
public static void registerEditor(Class<?> targetType, Class<?> editorClass)
First, if there is a security manager, its checkPropertiesAccess
method is called. This could result in a SecurityException.
targetType
- the Class object of the type to be editededitorClass
- the Class object of the editor class. If
this is null, then any existing definition will be removed.SecurityException
- if a security manager exists and its
checkPropertiesAccess
method doesn't allow setting
of system properties.SecurityManager.checkPropertiesAccess()
public static PropertyEditor findEditor(Class<?> targetType)
targetType
- The Class object for the type to be editedpublic static String[] getEditorSearchPath()
The default value for this array is implementation-dependent, e.g. Sun implementation initially sets to {"sun.beans.editors"}.
public static void setEditorSearchPath(String[] path)
First, if there is a security manager, its checkPropertiesAccess
method is called. This could result in a SecurityException.
path
- Array of package names.SecurityException
- if a security manager exists and its
checkPropertiesAccess
method doesn't allow setting
of system properties.SecurityManager.checkPropertiesAccess()
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For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.