Examples of resetSyntax()


Examples of java.io.StreamTokenizer.resetSyntax()

        if (arg0 instanceof String)
        {
            StringReader sr = new StringReader((String) arg0);
            StreamTokenizer st = new StreamTokenizer(sr);
            st.resetSyntax();
            st.whitespaceChars(',', ',');
            st.quoteChar('"');
            st.eolIsSignificant(false);

        
View Full Code Here

Examples of java.io.StreamTokenizer.resetSyntax()

     * @return array of CLI output lines
     */
    public CLIOpResult readAllAsOpResult(long timeout, long lineTimeout) throws Exception {
        String output = readAllUnformated(timeout, lineTimeout);
        StreamTokenizer st = new StreamTokenizer(new StringReader(output));
        st.resetSyntax();
        st.whitespaceChars(' ', ' ');
        st.wordChars('#', '+');
        st.wordChars('-', 'Z');
        st.wordChars('a', 'z');
        st.quoteChar('"');
View Full Code Here

Examples of java.io.StreamTokenizer.resetSyntax()

        private static String readUnicodeData(int ch, String filename) {
            String s = null;
            try {
                StreamTokenizer st = new StreamTokenizer(new FileReader(filename));
                st.resetSyntax();
                st.eolIsSignificant(true);
                for (int i=0; i<ch; ++i) {
                    s = st.toString();
                    st.nextToken(); // eol token
                    st.nextToken(); // next line
View Full Code Here

Examples of java.io.StreamTokenizer.resetSyntax()

     * Create a StreamTokenizer suitable for parsing the tag text.
     */
    static StreamTokenizer makeTokenizer(String tagValue) {
        StreamTokenizer tokenizer =
            new StreamTokenizer(new StringReader(tagValue));
        tokenizer.resetSyntax();
        tokenizer.wordChars('A','Z');
        tokenizer.wordChars('a','z');
        tokenizer.wordChars('0','9');
        tokenizer.wordChars('-','-');
        tokenizer.wordChars('_','_');
View Full Code Here

Examples of java.io.StreamTokenizer.resetSyntax()

            args = new String[2];
            args[0] = "find";
            args[1] = line.substring(5);
        } else {
            final StreamTokenizer tok = new StreamTokenizer(new StringReader(line));
            tok.resetSyntax();
            tok.wordChars(0x21, 0x7FFF);
            tok.quoteChar('"');
            tok.whitespaceChars(0x20, 0x20);
           
            final List<String> argList = new ArrayList<String>(3);
View Full Code Here

Examples of java.io.StreamTokenizer.resetSyntax()

    if (rangeString == null) return;

    // set up a tokenzier to parse the string
    StreamTokenizer tokenizer =
      new StreamTokenizer(new StringReader(rangeString));
    tokenizer.resetSyntax();        
    tokenizer.whitespaceChars(0, ' ');   
    tokenizer.wordChars(' '+1,'\u00FF');
    tokenizer.ordinaryChar('[');
    tokenizer.ordinaryChar('(');
    tokenizer.ordinaryChar(',');
View Full Code Here

Examples of java.io.StreamTokenizer.resetSyntax()

            new StreamTokenizer(new StringReader(line));

        // We reset the syntax so that we don't convert to numbers,
        // otherwise, if PTII is "d:\\tmp\\ptII\ 2.0", then
        // we have no end of problems.
        streamTokenizer.resetSyntax();
        streamTokenizer.whitespaceChars(0 , 32);
        streamTokenizer.wordChars(33, 127);

        // We can't use quoteChar here because it does backslash
        // substitution, so "c:\ptII" ends up as "c:ptII"
View Full Code Here

Examples of java.io.StreamTokenizer.resetSyntax()

    // scientific notation (E or D); however, Double.valueOf does.
    // The strategy here is to disable StreamTokenizer's number parsing.
    // We'll only get whitespace delimited words, EOL's and EOF's.
    // These words should all be numbers, for Double.valueOf to parse.

    tokenizer.resetSyntax();
    tokenizer.wordChars(0, 255);
    tokenizer.whitespaceChars(0, ' ');
    tokenizer.eolIsSignificant(true);
    java.util.Vector v = new java.util.Vector();
View Full Code Here

Examples of java.io.StreamTokenizer.resetSyntax()

    if (rangeString == null) return;

    // set up a tokenzier to parse the string
    StreamTokenizer tokenizer =
      new StreamTokenizer(new StringReader(rangeString));
    tokenizer.resetSyntax();        
    tokenizer.whitespaceChars(0, ' ');   
    tokenizer.wordChars(' '+1,'\u00FF');
    tokenizer.ordinaryChar('[');
    tokenizer.ordinaryChar('(');
    tokenizer.ordinaryChar(',');
View Full Code Here

Examples of java.io.StreamTokenizer.resetSyntax()

     * similarly to that used by sun.security.provider.PolicyParser, except
     * that comments are disabled and no quote character is set (yet).
     */
    private static StreamTokenizer createTokenizer(String s) {
  StreamTokenizer st = new StreamTokenizer(new StringReader(s));
  st.resetSyntax();
  st.wordChars('a', 'z');
  st.wordChars('A', 'Z');
  st.wordChars('.', '.');
  st.wordChars('0', '9');
  st.wordChars('_', '_');
View Full Code Here
TOP
Copyright © 2018 www.massapi.com. All rights reserved.
All source code are property of their respective owners. Java is a trademark of Sun Microsystems, Inc and owned by ORACLE Inc. Contact coftware#gmail.com.