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CHAPTER 3
Specifying Document Types
From the user's
perspective, a document can take many different forms, including: a
PDF file, an image from a digital camera, an email, a word
processor document, or a web page. Before printing a document of a
particular format, the client needs to ensure that the printer can
understand the format. Sometimes a printer can directly print
documents of a given format: photo printers can directly print
images of various formats, and PostScript™ printers can
directly print a PostScript™ document. However, there are few
printers that can directly print a wide range of formats; most
printers require some higher-level software support to translate
the source document into a format they can print.
A printing API needs to provide a
way to describe document types so that:
- The printer can report what
formats it can print.
- The client can describe the
format of the data it wants to print.
- The client can describe the
encoding of text data.
The Java™ Print
Service API describes document types using the DocFlavor class. A
DocFlavor is comprised of:
- A MIME type that tells the
printer how to interpret the data.
- A representation class name
indicating the Java class that describes how the data is sent to
the printer.
To describe an HTML page
to a print service, a client might choose to use a DocFlavor with a
MIME type string of "text/html; charset=utf-16" and a
representation class name of "java.io.InputStream". The
client can obtain this DocFlavor in one of two ways:
- Construct a DocFlavor:DocFlavor
htmlStreamFlavor = new DocFlavor("text/html; charset=utf-16",
"java.io.InputStream");
- Use the pre-defined instance that
represents this type of DocFlavor:DocFlavor.INPUT_STREAM
TEXT_HTML_UTF_16 . The Java Print Service API provides a set of
pre-defined instances for common doc flavors as a convenience.
Because the HTML page
contains text data, the MIME type String includes the text
encoding, which is charset=utf-16 in this example. The client is
responsible for accurately describing the print data to the print
service. The section,
Client-Formatted Print
Data, explains how to properly construct a DocFlavor to
accomplish this. If the text encoding is not included in the MIME
type, unexpected results can occur, as explained in the section,
Importance of Character
Encoding. The client can allow the service to determine
the format of data that the client supplies as a Java object. The
Service-Formatted Print
Data section describes using a DocFlavor to represent
service-formatted print data.
Keep in mand that, just because the DocFlavor API has a
pre-declared doc flavor, this doesn't mean that an implementation
of the particular flavor is available. For example, even if you use
the pre-defined DocFlavor representing HTML text in
UTF-16, you won't be able to print the HTML unless you have a print
service that supports printing HTML. Again, it is the user's
responsibility to ensure that a printer supports a particular
format.
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