public interface DataContentHandler
DataContentHandlers
the framework can be extended to convert streams in to objects, and
to write objects to streams. Applications don't generally call the methods in DataContentHandlers directly. Instead, an application calls the equivalent methods in DataHandler. The DataHandler will attempt to find an appropriate DataContentHandler that corresponds to its MIME type using the current DataContentHandlerFactory. The DataHandler then calls through to the methods in the DataContentHandler.
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
Object |
getContent(DataSource ds)
Return an object representing the data in its most preferred form.
|
Object |
getTransferData(DataFlavor df,
DataSource ds)
Returns an object which represents the data to be transferred.
|
DataFlavor[] |
getTransferDataFlavors()
Returns an array of DataFlavor objects indicating the flavors the
data can be provided in.
|
void |
writeTo(Object obj,
String mimeType,
OutputStream os)
Convert the object to a byte stream of the specified MIME type
and write it to the output stream.
|
DataFlavor[] getTransferDataFlavors()
Object getTransferData(DataFlavor df, DataSource ds) throws UnsupportedFlavorException, IOException
df
- The DataFlavor representing the requested type.ds
- The DataSource representing the data to be converted.UnsupportedFlavorException
- if the handler doesn't
support the requested flavorIOException
- if the data can't be accessedObject getContent(DataSource ds) throws IOException
getTransferDataFlavors
method.ds
- The DataSource representing the data to be converted.IOException
- if the data can't be accessedvoid writeTo(Object obj, String mimeType, OutputStream os) throws IOException
obj
- The object to be converted.mimeType
- The requested MIME type of the resulting byte stream.os
- The output stream into which to write the converted
byte stream.IOException
- errors writing to the stream Submit a bug or feature
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.
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