/*
* @(#)FileView.java 1.20 05/11/17
*
* Copyright 2006 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
* SUN PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms.
*/
package javax.swing.filechooser;
import java.io.File;
import javax.swing.*;
/**
* <code>FileView</code> defines an abstract class that can be implemented
* to provide the filechooser with UI information for a <code>File</code>.
* Each L&F <code>JFileChooserUI</code> object implements this
* class to pass back the correct icons and type descriptions specific to
* that L&F. For example, the Microsoft Windows L&F returns the
* generic Windows icons for directories and generic files.
* Additionally, you may want to provide your own <code>FileView</code> to
* <code>JFileChooser</code> to return different icons or additional
* information using {@link javax.swing.JFileChooser#setFileView}.
*
* <p>
*
* <code>JFileChooser</code> first looks to see if there is a user defined
* <code>FileView</code>, if there is, it gets type information from
* there first. If <code>FileView</code> returns <code>null</code> for
* any method, <code>JFileChooser</code> then uses the L&F specific
* view to get the information.
* So, for example, if you provide a <code>FileView</code> class that
* returns an <code>Icon</code> for JPG files, and returns <code>null</code>
* icons for all other files, the UI's <code>FileView</code> will provide
* default icons for all other files.
*
* <p>
*
* For an example implementation of a simple file view, see
* <code><i>yourJDK</i>/demo/jfc/FileChooserDemo/ExampleFileView.java</code>.
* For more information and examples see
* <a
href="http://java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial/uiswing/components/filechooser.html">How to Use File Choosers</a>,
* a section in <em>The Java Tutorial</em>.
*
* @see javax.swing.JFileChooser
*
* @version 1.20 11/17/05
* @author Jeff Dinkins
*
*/
public abstract class FileView {
/**
* The name of the file. Normally this would be simply
* <code>f.getName()</code>.
*/
public String getName(File f) {
return null;
};
/**
* A human readable description of the file. For example,
* a file named <i>jag.jpg</i> might have a description that read:
* "A JPEG image file of James Gosling's face".
*/
public String getDescription(File f) {
return null;
}
/**
* A human readable description of the type of the file. For
* example, a <code>jpg</code> file might have a type description of:
* "A JPEG Compressed Image File"
*/
public String getTypeDescription(File f) {
return null;
}
/**
* The icon that represents this file in the <code>JFileChooser</code>.
*/
public Icon getIcon(File f) {
return null;
}
/**
* Whether the directory is traversable or not. This might be
* useful, for example, if you want a directory to represent
* a compound document and don't want the user to descend into it.
*/
public Boolean isTraversable(File f) {
return null;
}
}