| 
 | JavaTM 2 Platform Std. Ed. v1.4.2 | ||||||||||
| PREV PACKAGE NEXT PACKAGE | FRAMES NO FRAMES | ||||||||||
See:
          Description
| Interface Summary | |
| ErrorListener | To provide customized error handling, implement this interface and
 use the setErrorListener method to register an instance of the implmentation
 with the Transformer. | 
| Result | An object that implements this interface contains the information needed to build a transformation result tree. | 
| Source | An object that implements this interface contains the information needed to act as source input (XML source or transformation instructions). | 
| SourceLocator | This interface is primarily for the purposes of reporting where an error occurred in the XML source or transformation instructions. | 
| Templates | An object that implements this interface is the runtime representation of processed transformation instructions. | 
| URIResolver | An object that implements this interface that can be called by the processor to turn a URI used in document(), xsl:import, or xsl:include into a Source object. | 
| Class Summary | |
| OutputKeys | Provides string constants that can be used to set output properties for a Transformer, or to retrieve output properties from a Transformer or Templates object. | 
| Transformer | An instance of this abstract class can transform a source tree into a result tree. | 
| TransformerFactory | A TransformerFactory instance can be used to create TransformerandTemplatesobjects. | 
| Exception Summary | |
| TransformerConfigurationException | Indicates a serious configuration error. | 
| TransformerException | This class specifies an exceptional condition that occured during the transformation process. | 
| Error Summary | |
| TransformerFactoryConfigurationError | Thrown when a problem with configuration with the Transformer Factories exists. | 
This package defines the generic APIs for processing transformation
        instructions, and performing a transformation from source to result. These
        interfaces have no dependencies on SAX or the DOM standard, and try to make as
        few assumptions as possible about the details of the source and result of a
        transformation. It achieves this by defining
        Source and
        Result interfaces.
To define concrete classes for the user, the API defines specializations
        of the interfaces found at the root level. These interfaces are found in
        javax.xml.transform.sax, javax.xml.transform.dom,
        and javax.xml.transform.stream.
The API allows a concrete
          TransformerFactory object to be created from
          the static function
          TransformerFactory.newInstance().
      
        
This API defines two interface objects called
          Source and
          Result. In order to pass Source and Result
          objects to the interfaces, concrete classes must be used.
          Three concrete representations are defined for each of these
          objects:
          StreamSource and
          StreamResult,
          SAXSource and
          SAXResult, and
          DOMSource and
          DOMResult. Each of these objects defines
          a FEATURE string (which is i the form of a URL), which can be passed into
          TransformerFactory.getFeature(java.lang.String) to see if the
          given type of Source or Result object is supported. For instance, to test if a
          DOMSource and a StreamResult is supported, you can apply the following
          test.
    TransformerFactory tfactory = TransformerFactory.newInstance();
    if (tfactory.getFeature(DOMSource.FEATURE) && tfactory.getFeature(StreamResult.FEATURE))
    {
       ...
    }
   
     
Namespaces present something of a problem area when dealing with XML objects. Qualified Names appear in XML markup as prefixed names. But the prefixes themselves do not hold identity. Rather, it is the URIs that they contextually map to that hold the identity. Therefore, when passing a Qualified Name like "xyz:foo" among Java programs, one must provide a means to map "xyz" to a namespace.
One solution has been to create a "QName" object that holds the namespace URI, as well as the prefix and local name, but this is not always an optimal solution, as when, for example, you want to use unique strings as keys in a dictionary object. Not having a string representation also makes it difficult to specify a namespaced identity outside the context of an XML document.
In order to pass namespaced values to transformations, for instance as a set of properties to the Serializer, this specification defines that a String "qname" object parameter be passed as two-part string, the namespace URI enclosed in curly braces ({}), followed by the local name. If the qname has a null URI, then the String object only contains the local name. An application can safely check for a non-null URI by testing to see if the first character of the name is a '{' character.
For example, if a URI and local name were obtained from an element defined with <xyz:foo xmlns:xyz="http://xyz.foo.com/yada/baz.html"/>, then the Qualified Name would be "{http://xyz.foo.com/yada/baz.html}foo". Note that the prefix is lost.
Serialization of the result tree to a stream can be controlled with
        the Transformer.setOutputProperties(java.util.Properties) and the
        Transformer.setOutputProperty(java.lang.String, java.lang.String) methods.
        Strings that match the XSLT
        specification for xsl:output attributes can be referenced from the
        OutputKeys class. Other strings can be
        specified as well. If the transformer does not recognize an output key, a
        IllegalArgumentException is thrown, unless the
        key name is namespace qualified. Output key names that are
        qualified by a namespace are ignored or passed on to the serializer
        mechanism.
If all that is desired is the simple identity transformation of a
        source to a result, then TransformerFactory
        provides a
        TransformerFactory.newTransformer() method
        with no arguments. This method creates a Transformer that effectively copies
        the source to the result. This method may be used to create a DOM from SAX
        events or to create an XML or HTML stream from a DOM or SAX events.  
The transformation API throw three types of specialized exceptions. A
     TransformerFactoryConfigurationError is parallel to
     the FactoryConfigurationError, and is thrown
     when a configuration problem with the TransformerFactory exists. This error
     will typically be thrown when the transformation factory class specified with
     the "javax.xml.transform.TransformerFactory" system property cannot be found or
     instantiated.
A TransformerConfigurationException
     may be thrown if for any reason a Transformer can not be created. A
     TransformerConfigurationException may be thrown if there is a syntax error in
     the transformation instructions, for example when
     TransformerFactory.newTransformer(javax.xml.transform.Source) is
     called.
TransformerException is a general
     exception that occurs during the course of a transformation. A transformer
     exception may wrap another exception, and if any of the
     TransformerException.printStackTrace()
     methods are called on it, it will produce a list of stack dumps, starting from
     the most recent. The transformer exception also provides a
     SourceLocator object which indicates where
     in the source tree or transformation instructions the error occurred.
     TransformerException.getMessageAndLocation()
     may be called to get an error message with location info, and
     TransformerException.getLocationAsString()
     may be called to get just the location string.
Transformation warnings and errors are normally first sent to a
     ErrorListener, at which point the
     implementor may decide to report the error or warning, and may decide to throw
     an exception for a non-fatal error. The error listener may be set via
     TransformerFactory.setErrorListener(javax.xml.transform.ErrorListener) for
     reporting errors that have to do with syntax errors in the transformation
     instructions, or via
     Transformer.setErrorListener(javax.xml.transform.ErrorListener) to report
     errors that occur during the transformation. The error listener on both objects
     should always be valid and non-null, whether set by the user or a default
     implementation provided by the processor.
The API provides a way for URIs referenced from within the stylesheet
     instructions or within the transformation to be resolved by the calling
     application. This can be done by creating a class that implements the
     URIResolver interface, with its one method,
     URIResolver.resolve(java.lang.String, java.lang.String), and use this class to
     set the URI resolution for the transformation instructions or transformation
     with TransformerFactory.setURIResolver(javax.xml.transform.URIResolver) or
     Transformer.setURIResolver(javax.xml.transform.URIResolver). The
     URIResolver.resolve method takes two String arguments, the URI found in the
     stylesheet instructions or built as part of the transformation process, and the
     base URI in effect when the URI passed as the first argument was encountered.
     The returned Source object must be usable by
     the transformer, as specified in its implemented features.
| 
 | JavaTM 2 Platform Std. Ed. v1.4.2 | ||||||||||
| PREV PACKAGE NEXT PACKAGE | FRAMES NO FRAMES | ||||||||||
Copyright 2003 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Also see the documentation redistribution policy.