DefaultTextpublic class DefaultText extends NodeImpl implements TextThe Text interface inherits from CharacterData
and represents the textual content (termed character data in XML) of an
Element or Attr . If there is no markup inside
an element's content, the text is contained in a single object
implementing the Text interface that is the only child of
the element. If there is markup, it is parsed into the information items
(elements, comments, etc.) and Text nodes that form the list
of children of the element.
When a document is first made available via the DOM, there is only one
Text node for each block of text. Users may create adjacent
Text nodes that represent the contents of a given element
without any intervening markup, but should be aware that there is no way
to represent the separations between these nodes in XML or HTML, so they
will not (in general) persist between DOM editing sessions. The
normalize() method on Node merges any such
adjacent Text objects into a single node for each block of
text.
See also the Document Object Model (DOM) Level 2 Core Specification.
This is an empty implementation. |
Methods Summary |
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public void | appendData(java.lang.String arg)Append the string to the end of the character data of the node. Upon
success, data provides access to the concatenation of
data and the DOMString specified.
throw new DOMException(DOMException.NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR, "Method not supported");
| public void | deleteData(int offset, int count)Remove a range of 16-bit units from the node. Upon success,
data and length reflect the change.
throw new DOMException(DOMException.NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR, "Method not supported");
| public java.lang.String | getData()The character data of the node that implements this interface. The DOM
implementation may not put arbitrary limits on the amount of data
that may be stored in a CharacterData node. However,
implementation limits may mean that the entirety of a node's data may
not fit into a single DOMString . In such cases, the user
may call substringData to retrieve the data in
appropriately sized pieces.
return null;
| public int | getLength()The number of 16-bit units that are available through data
and the substringData method below. This may have the
value zero, i.e., CharacterData nodes may be empty.
return 0;
| public java.lang.String | getWholeText()
throw new DOMException(DOMException.NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR, "Method not supported");
| public void | insertData(int offset, java.lang.String arg)Insert a string at the specified 16-bit unit offset.
throw new DOMException(DOMException.NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR, "Method not supported");
| public boolean | isElementContentWhitespace()DOM Level 3 CR
throw new DOMException(DOMException.NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR, "Method not supported");
| public boolean | isWhitespaceInElementContent()
throw new DOMException(DOMException.NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR, "Method not supported");
| public void | replaceData(int offset, int count, java.lang.String arg)Replace the characters starting at the specified 16-bit unit offset
with the specified string.
throw new DOMException(DOMException.NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR, "Method not supported");
| public org.w3c.dom.Text | replaceWholeText(java.lang.String content)
throw new DOMException(DOMException.NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR, "Method not supported");
| public void | setData(java.lang.String data)The character data of the node that implements this interface. The DOM
implementation may not put arbitrary limits on the amount of data
that may be stored in a CharacterData node. However,
implementation limits may mean that the entirety of a node's data may
not fit into a single DOMString . In such cases, the user
may call substringData to retrieve the data in
appropriately sized pieces.
throw new DOMException(DOMException.NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR, "Method not supported");
| public org.w3c.dom.Text | splitText(int offset)Breaks this node into two nodes at the specified offset ,
keeping both in the tree as siblings. After being split, this node
will contain all the content up to the offset point. A
new node of the same type, which contains all the content at and
after the offset point, is returned. If the original
node had a parent node, the new node is inserted as the next sibling
of the original node. When the offset is equal to the
length of this node, the new node has no data.
throw new DOMException(DOMException.NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR, "Method not supported");
| public java.lang.String | substringData(int offset, int count)Extracts a range of data from the node.
throw new DOMException(DOMException.NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR, "Method not supported");
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