Externalizable, Serializable, Cloneable
public class DataFlavor extends Object implements Externalizable, Cloneable
DataFlavor provides meta information about data. DataFlavor is typically used to access data on the clipboard, or during a drag and drop operation.  An instance of DataFlavor encapsulates a content type as defined in RFC 2045 and RFC 2046. A content type is typically referred to as a MIME type. 
A content type consists of a media type (referred to as the primary type), a subtype, and optional parameters. See RFC 2045 for details on the syntax of a MIME type.
 The JRE data transfer implementation interprets the parameter "class" of a MIME type as a representation class. The representation class reflects the class of the object being transferred. In other words, the representation class is the type of object returned by Transferable.getTransferData(java.awt.datatransfer.DataFlavor). For example, the MIME type of imageFlavor is "image/x-java-image;class=java.awt.Image", the primary type is image, the subtype is x-java-image, and the representation class is java.awt.Image. When getTransferData is invoked with a DataFlavor of imageFlavor, an instance of java.awt.Image is returned. It's important to note that DataFlavor does no error checking against the representation class. It is up to consumers of DataFlavor, such as Transferable, to honor the representation class. 
 Note, if you do not specify a representation class when creating a DataFlavor, the default representation class is used. See appropriate documentation for DataFlavor's constructors. 
 Also, DataFlavor instances with the "text" primary MIME type may have a "charset" parameter. Refer to RFC 2046 and selectBestTextFlavor(java.awt.datatransfer.DataFlavor[]) for details on "text" MIME types and the "charset" parameter. 
 Equality of DataFlavors is determined by the primary type, subtype, and representation class. Refer to equals(DataFlavor) for details. When determining equality, any optional parameters are ignored. For example, the following produces two DataFlavors that are considered identical: 
DataFlavor flavor1 = new DataFlavor(Object.class, "X-test/test; class=<java.lang.Object>; foo=bar"); DataFlavor flavor2 = new DataFlavor(Object.class, "X-test/test; class=<java.lang.Object>; x=y"); // The following returns true. flavor1.equals(flavor2);As mentioned,
flavor1 and flavor2 are considered identical. As such, asking a Transferable for either DataFlavor returns the same results. For more information on using data transfer with Swing see the How to Use Drag and Drop and Data Transfer, section in The Java Tutorial.
| Modifier and Type | Field | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| static final DataFlavor | allHtmlFlavor | Represents a piece of an HTML markup. | 
| static final DataFlavor | fragmentHtmlFlavor | Represents a piece of an HTML markup. | 
| static final DataFlavor | imageFlavor | The  DataFlavorrepresenting a Java Image class, where: | 
| static final DataFlavor | javaFileListFlavor | To transfer a list of files to/from Java (and the underlying platform) a  DataFlavorof this type/subtype and representation class ofjava.util.Listis used. | 
| static final String | javaJVMLocalObjectMimeType | To transfer a reference to an arbitrary Java object reference that has no associated MIME Content-type, across a  Transferableinterface WITHIN THE SAME JVM, aDataFlavorwith this type/subtype is used, with arepresentationClassequal to the type of the class/interface being passed across theTransferable. | 
| static final String | javaRemoteObjectMimeType | In order to pass a live link to a Remote object via a Drag and Drop  ACTION_LINKoperation a Mime Content Type of application/x-java-remote-object should be used, where the representation class of theDataFlavorrepresents the type of theRemoteinterface to be transferred. | 
| static final String | javaSerializedObjectMimeType | A MIME Content-Type of application/x-java-serialized-object represents a graph of Java object(s) that have been made persistent. | 
| static final DataFlavor | plainTextFlavor | 
Deprecated.  as of 1.3. | 
| static final DataFlavor | selectionHtmlFlavor | Represents a piece of an HTML markup. | 
| static final DataFlavor | stringFlavor | The  DataFlavorrepresenting a Java Unicode String class, where: | 
| Constructor | Description | 
|---|---|
| DataFlavor() | Constructs a new  DataFlavor. | 
| DataFlavor | Constructs a  DataFlavorthat represents a Java class. | 
| DataFlavor | Constructs a  DataFlavorfrom amimeTypestring. | 
| DataFlavor | Constructs a  DataFlavorthat represents aMimeType. | 
| DataFlavor | Constructs a  DataFlavorthat represents aMimeType. | 
| Modifier and Type | Method | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| Object | clone() | Returns a clone of this  DataFlavor. | 
| boolean | equals | This method has the same behavior as  equals(Object). | 
| boolean | equals | Indicates whether some other object is "equal to" this one. | 
| boolean | equals | 
Deprecated.  As inconsistent with  hashCode()contract, useisMimeTypeEqual(String)instead. | 
| final Class | getDefaultRepresentationClass() | Returns the default representation class. | 
| final String | getDefaultRepresentationClassAsString() | Returns the name of the default representation class. | 
| String | getHumanPresentableName() | Returns the human presentable name for the data format that this  DataFlavorrepresents. | 
| String | getMimeType() | Returns the MIME type string for this  DataFlavor. | 
| String | getParameter | Returns the human presentable name for this  DataFlavorifparamNameequals "humanPresentableName". | 
| String | getPrimaryType() | Returns the primary MIME type for this  DataFlavor. | 
| Reader | getReaderForText | Gets a Reader for a text flavor, decoded, if necessary, for the expected charset (encoding). | 
| Class | getRepresentationClass() | Returns the  Classwhich objects supporting thisDataFlavorwill return when thisDataFlavoris requested. | 
| String | getSubType() | Returns the sub MIME type of this  DataFlavor. | 
| static final DataFlavor | getTextPlainUnicodeFlavor() | Returns a  DataFlavorrepresenting plain text with Unicode encoding, where: | 
| int | hashCode() | Returns hash code for this  DataFlavor. | 
| boolean | isFlavorJavaFileListType() | Returns  trueif theDataFlavorspecified represents a list of file objects. | 
| boolean | isFlavorRemoteObjectType() | Returns  trueif theDataFlavorspecified represents a remote object. | 
| boolean | isFlavorSerializedObjectType() | Returns  trueif theDataFlavorspecified represents a serialized object. | 
| boolean | isFlavorTextType() | Returns whether this  DataFlavoris a valid text flavor for this implementation of the Java platform. | 
| final boolean | isMimeTypeEqual | Compares the  mimeTypeof twoDataFlavorobjects. | 
| boolean | isMimeTypeEqual | Returns whether the string representation of the MIME type passed in is equivalent to the MIME type of this  DataFlavor. | 
| boolean | isMimeTypeSerializedObject() | Does the  DataFlavorrepresent a serialized object? | 
| boolean | isRepresentationClassByteBuffer() | Returns whether the representation class for this  DataFlavorisjava.nio.ByteBufferor a subclass thereof. | 
| boolean | isRepresentationClassCharBuffer() | Returns whether the representation class for this  DataFlavorisjava.nio.CharBufferor a subclass thereof. | 
| boolean | isRepresentationClassInputStream() | Does the  DataFlavorrepresent ajava.io.InputStream? | 
| boolean | isRepresentationClassReader() | Returns whether the representation class for this  DataFlavorisjava.io.Readeror a subclass thereof. | 
| boolean | isRepresentationClassRemote() | Returns  trueif the representation class isRemote. | 
| boolean | isRepresentationClassSerializable() | Returns  trueif the representation class can be serialized. | 
| boolean | match | Identical to  equals(DataFlavor). | 
| protected String | normalizeMimeType | 
Deprecated.  This method is never invoked by this implementation from 1.1 onwards | 
| protected String | normalizeMimeTypeParameter | 
Deprecated.  This method is never invoked by this implementation from 1.1 onwards | 
| void | readExternal | Restores this  DataFlavorfrom a Serialized state. | 
| static final DataFlavor | selectBestTextFlavor | Selects the best text  DataFlavorfrom an array ofDataFlavors. | 
| void | setHumanPresentableName | Sets the human presentable name for the data format that this  DataFlavorrepresents. | 
| String | toString() | String representation of this  DataFlavorand its parameters. | 
| protected static final Class | tryToLoadClass | Tries to load a class from: the bootstrap loader, the system loader, the context loader (if one is present) and finally the loader specified. | 
| void | writeExternal | Serializes this  DataFlavor. | 
public static final DataFlavor stringFlavor
DataFlavor representing a Java Unicode String class, where: 
     representationClass = java.lang.String
     mimeType            = "application/x-java-serialized-object"
 
public static final DataFlavor imageFlavor
DataFlavor representing a Java Image class, where: 
     representationClass = java.awt.Image
     mimeType            = "image/x-java-image"
  Will be null if java.awt.Image is not visible, the java.desktop module is not loaded, or the java.desktop module is not in the run-time image.@Deprecated public static final DataFlavor plainTextFlavor
getReaderForText(java.awt.datatransfer.Transferable) instead of Transferable.getTransferData(DataFlavor.plainTextFlavor).DataFlavor representing plain text with Unicode encoding, where: 
     representationClass = InputStream
     mimeType            = "text/plain; charset=unicode"
  This DataFlavor has been deprecated because: public static final String javaSerializedObjectMimeType
 The representation class associated with this DataFlavor identifies the Java type of an object returned as a reference from an invocation java.awt.datatransfer.getTransferData.
public static final DataFlavor javaFileListFlavor
DataFlavor of this type/subtype and representation class of java.util.List is used. Each element of the list is required/guaranteed to be of type java.io.File.public static final String javaJVMLocalObjectMimeType
Transferable interface WITHIN THE SAME JVM, a DataFlavor with this type/subtype is used, with a representationClass equal to the type of the class/interface being passed across the Transferable.  The object reference returned from Transferable.getTransferData for a DataFlavor with this MIME Content-Type is required to be an instance of the representation Class of the DataFlavor.
public static final String javaRemoteObjectMimeType
ACTION_LINK operation a Mime Content Type of application/x-java-remote-object should be used, where the representation class of the DataFlavor represents the type of the Remote interface to be transferred.public static final DataFlavor selectionHtmlFlavor
Transferable instance, no additional changes will be made. This DataFlavor instance represents the same HTML markup as DataFlavor instances which content MIME type does not contain document parameter and representation class is the String class. 
     representationClass = String
     mimeType            = "text/html"
 
public static final DataFlavor fragmentHtmlFlavor
Transferable instance, no additional changes will be made. 
     representationClass = String
     mimeType            = "text/html"
 
public static final DataFlavor allHtmlFlavor
Transferable instance, no additional changes will be made. 
     representationClass = String
     mimeType            = "text/html"
 
public DataFlavor()
DataFlavor. This constructor is provided only for the purpose of supporting the Externalizable interface. It is not intended for public (client) use.public DataFlavor(Class<?> representationClass, String humanPresentableName)
DataFlavor that represents a Java class.  The returned DataFlavor will have the following characteristics: 
    representationClass = representationClass
    mimeType            = application/x-java-serialized-object
 
representationClass - the class used to transfer data in this flavorhumanPresentableName - the human-readable string used to identify this flavor; if this parameter is null then the value of the MIME Content Type is usedNullPointerException - if representationClass is null
public DataFlavor(String mimeType, String humanPresentableName)
DataFlavor that represents a MimeType.  The returned DataFlavor will have the following characteristics: 
 If the mimeType is "application/x-java-serialized-object; class=<representation class>", the result is the same as calling new DataFlavor(Class.forName(<representation class>). 
Otherwise:
     representationClass = InputStream
     mimeType            = mimeType
 
mimeType - the string used to identify the MIME type for this flavor; if the mimeType does not specify a "class=" parameter, or if the class is not successfully loaded, then an IllegalArgumentException is thrownhumanPresentableName - the human-readable string used to identify this flavor; if this parameter is null then the value of the MIME Content Type is usedIllegalArgumentException - if mimeType is invalid or if the class is not successfully loadedNullPointerException - if mimeType is null
public DataFlavor(String mimeType, String humanPresentableName, ClassLoader classLoader) throws ClassNotFoundException
DataFlavor that represents a MimeType.  The returned DataFlavor will have the following characteristics: 
 If the mimeType is "application/x-java-serialized-object; class=<representation class>", the result is the same as calling new DataFlavor(Class.forName(<representation class>). 
Otherwise:
     representationClass = InputStream
     mimeType            = mimeType
 
mimeType - the string used to identify the MIME type for this flavorhumanPresentableName - the human-readable string used to identify this flavorclassLoader - the class loader to useClassNotFoundException - if the class is not loadedIllegalArgumentException - if mimeType is invalidNullPointerException - if mimeType is null
public DataFlavor(String mimeType) throws ClassNotFoundException
DataFlavor from a mimeType string. The string can specify a "class=<fully specified Java class name>" parameter to create a DataFlavor with the desired representation class. If the string does not contain "class=" parameter, java.io.InputStream is used as default.mimeType - the string used to identify the MIME type for this flavor; if the class specified by "class=" parameter is not successfully loaded, then a ClassNotFoundException is thrownClassNotFoundException - if the class is not loadedIllegalArgumentException - if mimeType is invalidNullPointerException - if mimeType is null
protected static final Class<?> tryToLoadClass(String className, ClassLoader fallback) throws ClassNotFoundException
className - the name of the class to be loadedfallback - the fallback loaderClassNotFoundException - if class is not foundpublic String toString()
DataFlavor and its parameters. The resulting String contains the name of the DataFlavor class, this flavor's MIME type, and its representation class. If this flavor has a primary MIME type of "text", supports the charset parameter, and has an encoded representation, the flavor's charset is also included. See selectBestTextFlavor for a list of text flavors which support the charset parameter.public static final DataFlavor getTextPlainUnicodeFlavor()
DataFlavor representing plain text with Unicode encoding, where: 
     representationClass = java.io.InputStream
     mimeType            = "text/plain;
                            charset=<platform default Unicode encoding>"
 
utf-16le. Oracle's implementation for Solaris and Linux uses the encoding iso-10646-ucs-2.DataFlavor representing plain text with Unicode encodingpublic static final DataFlavor selectBestTextFlavor(DataFlavor[] availableFlavors)
DataFlavor from an array of DataFlavors. Only DataFlavor.stringFlavor, and equivalent flavors, and flavors that have a primary MIME type of "text", are considered for selection. Flavors are first sorted by their MIME types in the following order:
 For example, "text/sgml" will be selected over "text/html", and DataFlavor.stringFlavor will be chosen over DataFlavor.plainTextFlavor. 
If two or more flavors share the best MIME type in the array, then that MIME type will be checked to see if it supports the charset parameter.
The following MIME types support, or are treated as though they support, the charset parameter:
DataFlavor which uses that MIME type. If so, the JRE will assume from that point on that the MIME type supports the charset parameter and will not check again. If the parameter is not explicitly listed, the JRE will assume from that point on that the MIME type does not support the charset parameter and will not check again. Because this check is performed on an arbitrarily chosen DataFlavor, developers must ensure that all DataFlavors with a "text/<other>" MIME type specify the charset parameter if it is supported by that MIME type. Developers should never rely on the JRE to substitute the platform's default charset for a "text/<other>" DataFlavor. Failure to adhere to this restriction will lead to undefined behavior.  If the best MIME type in the array does not support the charset parameter, the flavors which share that MIME type will then be sorted by their representation classes in the following order: java.io.InputStream, java.nio.ByteBuffer, [B, <all others>. 
If two or more flavors share the best representation class, or if no flavor has one of the three specified representations, then one of those flavors will be chosen non-deterministically.
 If the best MIME type in the array does support the charset parameter, the flavors which share that MIME type will then be sorted by their representation classes in the following order: java.io.Reader, java.lang.String, java.nio.CharBuffer, [C, <all others>. 
If two or more flavors share the best representation class, and that representation is one of the four explicitly listed, then one of those flavors will be chosen non-deterministically. If, however, no flavor has one of the four specified representations, the flavors will then be sorted by their charsets. Unicode charsets, such as "UTF-16", "UTF-8", "UTF-16BE", "UTF-16LE", and their aliases, are considered best. After them, the platform default charset and its aliases are selected. "US-ASCII" and its aliases are worst. All other charsets are chosen in alphabetical order, but only charsets supported by this implementation of the Java platform will be considered.
 If two or more flavors share the best charset, the flavors will then again be sorted by their representation classes in the following order: java.io.InputStream, java.nio.ByteBuffer, [B, <all others>. 
If two or more flavors share the best representation class, or if no flavor has one of the three specified representations, then one of those flavors will be chosen non-deterministically.
availableFlavors - an array of available DataFlavorsnull, if availableFlavors is null, has zero length, or contains no text flavorspublic Reader getReaderForText(Transferable transferable) throws UnsupportedFlavorException, IOException
java.io.Reader, java.lang.String, java.nio.CharBuffer, [C, java.io.InputStream, java.nio.ByteBuffer, and [B.  Because text flavors which do not support the charset parameter are encoded in a non-standard format, this method should not be called for such flavors. However, in order to maintain backward-compatibility, if this method is called for such a flavor, this method will treat the flavor as though it supports the charset parameter and attempt to decode it accordingly. See selectBestTextFlavor for a list of text flavors which do not support the charset parameter.
transferable - the Transferable whose data will be requested in this flavorReader to read the Transferable's dataIllegalArgumentException - if the representation class is not one of the seven listed aboveIllegalArgumentException - if the Transferable has null dataNullPointerException - if the Transferable is null
UnsupportedEncodingException - if this flavor's representation is java.io.InputStream, java.nio.ByteBuffer, or [B and this flavor's encoding is not supported by this implementation of the Java platformUnsupportedFlavorException - if the Transferable does not support this flavorIOException - if the data cannot be read because of an I/O errorpublic String getMimeType()
DataFlavor.public Class<?> getRepresentationClass()
Class which objects supporting this DataFlavor will return when this DataFlavor is requested.Class which objects supporting this DataFlavor will return when this DataFlavor is requestedpublic String getHumanPresentableName()
DataFlavor represents. This name would be localized for different countries.DataFlavor representspublic String getPrimaryType()
DataFlavor.DataFlavor
public String getSubType()
DataFlavor.DataFlavor
public String getParameter(String paramName)
DataFlavor if paramName equals "humanPresentableName". Otherwise returns the MIME type value associated with paramName.paramName - the parameter name requestednull if there is no associated valuepublic void setHumanPresentableName(String humanPresentableName)
DataFlavor represents. This name would be localized for different countries.humanPresentableName - the new human presentable namepublic boolean equals(Object o)
 The equals method implements an equivalence relation on non-null object references: 
x, x.equals(x) should return true. x and y, x.equals(y) should return true if and only if y.equals(x) returns true. x, y, and z, if x.equals(y) returns true and y.equals(z) returns true, then x.equals(z) should return true. x and y, multiple invocations of x.equals(y) consistently return true or consistently return false, provided no information used in equals comparisons on the objects is modified. x, x.equals(null) should return false. An equivalence relation partitions the elements it operates on into equivalence classes; all the members of an equivalence class are equal to each other. Members of an equivalence class are substitutable for each other, at least for some purposes.
 The equals comparison for the DataFlavor class is implemented as follows: Two DataFlavors are considered equal if and only if their MIME primary type and subtype and representation class are equal. Additionally, if the primary type is "text", the subtype denotes a text flavor which supports the charset parameter, and the representation class is not java.io.Reader, java.lang.String, java.nio.CharBuffer, or [C, the charset parameter must also be equal. If a charset is not explicitly specified for one or both DataFlavors, the platform default encoding is assumed. See selectBestTextFlavor for a list of text flavors which support the charset parameter.
public boolean equals(DataFlavor that)
equals(Object). The only difference being that it takes a DataFlavor instance as a parameter.that - the DataFlavor to compare with this
true if that is equivalent to this DataFlavor; false otherwise@Deprecated public boolean equals(String s)
hashCode() contract, use isMimeTypeEqual(String) instead.mimeType against the passed in String and representationClass is not considered in the comparison. If representationClass needs to be compared, then equals(new DataFlavor(s)) may be used.s - the mimeType to comparetrue if the String (MimeType) is equal; false otherwise or if s is null
public int hashCode()
DataFlavor. For two equal DataFlavors, hash codes are equal. For the String that matches DataFlavor.equals(String), it is not guaranteed that DataFlavor's hash code is equal to the hash code of the String.public boolean match(DataFlavor that)
equals(DataFlavor).that - the DataFlavor to compare with this
true if that is equivalent to this DataFlavor; false otherwisepublic boolean isMimeTypeEqual(String mimeType)
DataFlavor. Parameters are not included in the comparison.mimeType - the string representation of the MIME typetrue if the string representation of the MIME type passed in is equivalent to the MIME type of this DataFlavor; false otherwiseNullPointerException - if mimeType is null
public final boolean isMimeTypeEqual(DataFlavor dataFlavor)
mimeType of two DataFlavor objects. No parameters are considered.dataFlavor - the DataFlavor to be comparedtrue if the MimeTypes are equal, otherwise false
public boolean isMimeTypeSerializedObject()
DataFlavor represent a serialized object?public final Class<?> getDefaultRepresentationClass()
public final String getDefaultRepresentationClassAsString()
public boolean isRepresentationClassInputStream()
DataFlavor represent a java.io.InputStream?DataFlavor represent a java.io.InputStream
public boolean isRepresentationClassReader()
DataFlavor is java.io.Reader or a subclass thereof.DataFlavor is java.io.Reader or a subclass thereofpublic boolean isRepresentationClassCharBuffer()
DataFlavor is java.nio.CharBuffer or a subclass thereof.DataFlavor is java.nio.CharBuffer or a subclass thereofpublic boolean isRepresentationClassByteBuffer()
DataFlavor is java.nio.ByteBuffer or a subclass thereof.DataFlavor is java.nio.ByteBuffer or a subclass thereofpublic boolean isRepresentationClassSerializable()
true if the representation class can be serialized.true if the representation class can be serializedpublic boolean isRepresentationClassRemote()
true if the representation class is Remote.true if the representation class is Remote
public boolean isFlavorSerializedObjectType()
true if the DataFlavor specified represents a serialized object.true if the DataFlavor specified represents a Serialized Objectpublic boolean isFlavorRemoteObjectType()
true if the DataFlavor specified represents a remote object.true if the DataFlavor specified represents a Remote Objectpublic boolean isFlavorJavaFileListType()
true if the DataFlavor specified represents a list of file objects.true if the DataFlavor specified represents a java.util.List of java.io.File objectspublic boolean isFlavorTextType()
DataFlavor is a valid text flavor for this implementation of the Java platform. Only flavors equivalent to DataFlavor.stringFlavor and DataFlavors with a primary MIME type of "text" can be valid text flavors.  If this flavor supports the charset parameter, it must be equivalent to DataFlavor.stringFlavor, or its representation must be java.io.Reader, java.lang.String, java.nio.CharBuffer, [C, java.io.InputStream, java.nio.ByteBuffer, or [B. If the representation is java.io.InputStream, java.nio.ByteBuffer, or [B, then this flavor's charset parameter must be supported by this implementation of the Java platform. If a charset is not specified, then the platform default charset, which is always supported, is assumed. 
 If this flavor does not support the charset parameter, its representation must be java.io.InputStream, java.nio.ByteBuffer, or [B. 
 See selectBestTextFlavor for a list of text flavors which support the charset parameter.
true if this DataFlavor is a valid text flavor as described above; false otherwisepublic void writeExternal(ObjectOutput os) throws IOException
DataFlavor.writeExternal in interface Externalizable
os - the stream to write the object toIOException - Includes any I/O exceptions that may occurpublic void readExternal(ObjectInput is) throws IOException, ClassNotFoundException
DataFlavor from a Serialized state.readExternal in interface Externalizable
is - the stream to read data from in order to restore the objectIOException - if I/O errors occurClassNotFoundException - If the class for an object being restored cannot be found.public Object clone() throws CloneNotSupportedException
DataFlavor.clone in class Object
DataFlavor
CloneNotSupportedException - if the object's class does not support the Cloneable interface. Subclasses that override the clone method can also throw this exception to indicate that an instance cannot be cloned.@Deprecated protected String normalizeMimeTypeParameter(String parameterName, String parameterValue)
DataFlavor for every MIME Type parameter to allow DataFlavor subclasses to handle special parameters like the text/plain charset parameters, whose values are case insensitive. (MIME type parameter values are supposed to be case sensitive.  This method is called for each parameter name/value pair and should return the normalized representation of the parameterValue.
parameterName - the parameter nameparameterValue - the parameter value@Deprecated protected String normalizeMimeType(String mimeType)
DataFlavor subtypes the opportunity to change how the normalization of MIME types is accomplished. One possible use would be to add default parameter/value pairs in cases where none are present in the MIME type string passed in.mimeType - the mime type
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