The JavaTM Tutorial
Previous Page Lesson Contents Next Page Start of Tutorial > Start of Trail > Start of Lesson Search
Feedback Form

Trail: JDK(TM) 1.1 -- And Beyond!
Lesson: What's New in 1.1?

Internationalization

One of the more comprehensive changes to the JDK provides support for programmers to easily write programs that are independent of the user's culture and language: We call these programs global programs. The process of writing a global program and ensuring that it can be used without change by anyone in the world is a process known as internationalization (often called "I18N" by those who don't care to type the full 20-letter word). Internationalization support is fully integrated into the classes and packages that provide language- or culture-dependent functionality. With internationalization completely built into the JDK, it becomes easy for programmers to write global applets and applications from the design phase forward.

Features added to the JDK to support internationalization include the display of Unicode characters, a locale mechanism, localized message support, locale-sensitive date, time, time zone, and number handling, collation services, character set converters, parameter formatting, and support for finding boundaries of characters, words, and sentences.

Where To Find Documentation


Previous Page Lesson Contents Next Page Start of Tutorial > Start of Trail > Start of Lesson Search
Feedback Form

Copyright 1995-2002 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.