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Locale-specific data must be tailored according to the conventions of the end user's language and region. The text displayed by a user interface is the most obvious example of locale-specific data. For example, an application with a Cancel button in the U.S. will have an Abbrechen button in Germany. In other countries this button will have other labels. Obviously you don't want to hardcode this button label. Wouldn't it be nice if you could automatically get the correct label for a givenLocale
? Fortunately you can, provided that you isolate the locale-specific objects in aResourceBundle
.In this lesson you'll learn how to create and access
ResourceBundle
objects. If you're in a hurry to examine some coding examples, go ahead and check out the last two sections in this lesson. Then you can come back to the first two sections to get some conceptual information aboutResourceBundle
objects.About the ResourceBundle Class
ResourceBundle
objects contain locale-specific objects. When you need a locale-specific object, you fetch it from aResourceBundle
, which returns the object that matches the end user'sLocale
. This section explains how aResourceBundle
is related to aLocale
, and describes theResourceBundle
subclasses.Preparing to Use a ResourceBundle
Before you create yourResourceBundle
objects, you should do a little planning. First, identify the locale-specific objects in your program. Then organize them into categories and store them in differentResourceBundle
objects accordingly.Backing a ResourceBundle with Properties Files
If your application containsString
objects that need to be translated into various languages, you can store theseString
objects in aPropertyResourceBundle
, which is backed up by a set of properties files. Since the properties files are simple text files, they can be created and maintained by your translators. You don't have to change the source code. In this section you'll learn how to set up the properties files that back up aPropertyResourceBundle
.Using a ListResourceBundle
TheListResourceBundle
class, which is a subclass ofResourceBundle
, manages locale-specific objects with a list. AListResourceBundle
is backed by a class file, which means that you must code and compile a new source file each time support for an additionalLocale
is needed. However,ListResourceBundle
objects are useful because unlike properties files, they can store any type of locale-specific object. By stepping through a sample program, this section demonstrates how to use aListResourceBundle
.
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