/* * Copyright (C) 2017 The Android Open Source Project * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package com.android.dialer.calllogutils; import android.content.Context; import android.icu.lang.UCharacter; import android.icu.text.BreakIterator; import android.os.Build.VERSION; import android.os.Build.VERSION_CODES; import android.text.format.DateUtils; import android.text.format.Formatter; import com.android.dialer.util.DialerUtils; import java.util.ArrayList; import java.util.List; import java.util.Locale; /** Utility class for formatting data and data usage in call log entries. */ public class CallEntryFormatter { /** * Formats the provided date into a value suitable for display in the current locale. * *
For example, returns a string like "Wednesday, May 25, 2016, 8:02PM" or "Chorshanba, 2016 * may 25,20:02". * *
For pre-N devices, the returned value may not start with a capital if the local convention
* is to not capitalize day names. On N+ devices, the returned value is always capitalized.
*/
public static CharSequence formatDate(Context context, long callDateMillis) {
CharSequence dateValue =
DateUtils.formatDateRange(
context,
callDateMillis /* startDate */,
callDateMillis /* endDate */,
DateUtils.FORMAT_SHOW_TIME
| DateUtils.FORMAT_SHOW_DATE
| DateUtils.FORMAT_SHOW_WEEKDAY
| DateUtils.FORMAT_SHOW_YEAR);
// We want the beginning of the date string to be capitalized, even if the word at the beginning
// of the string is not usually capitalized. For example, "Wednesdsay" in Uzbek is "chorshanba”
// (not capitalized). To handle this issue we apply title casing to the start of the sentence so
// that "chorshanba, 2016 may 25,20:02" becomes "Chorshanba, 2016 may 25,20:02".
//
// The ICU library was not available in Android until N, so we can only do this in N+ devices.
// Pre-N devices will still see incorrect capitalization in some languages.
if (VERSION.SDK_INT < VERSION_CODES.N) {
return dateValue;
}
// Using the ICU library is safer than just applying toUpperCase() on the first letter of the
// word because in some languages, there can be multiple starting characters which should be
// upper-cased together. For example in Dutch "ij" is a digraph in which both letters should be
// capitalized together.
// TITLECASE_NO_LOWERCASE is necessary so that things that are already capitalized like the
// month ("May") are not lower-cased as part of the conversion.
return UCharacter.toTitleCase(
Locale.getDefault(),
dateValue.toString(),
BreakIterator.getSentenceInstance(),
UCharacter.TITLECASE_NO_LOWERCASE);
}
private static CharSequence formatDuration(Context context, long elapsedSeconds) {
long minutes = 0;
long seconds = 0;
if (elapsedSeconds >= 60) {
minutes = elapsedSeconds / 60;
elapsedSeconds -= minutes * 60;
seconds = elapsedSeconds;
return context.getString(R.string.call_details_duration_format, minutes, seconds);
} else {
seconds = elapsedSeconds;
return context.getString(R.string.call_details_short_duration_format, seconds);
}
}
/**
* Formats a string containing the call duration and the data usage (if specified).
*
* @param elapsedSeconds Total elapsed seconds.
* @param dataUsage Data usage in bytes, or null if not specified.
* @return String containing call duration and data usage.
*/
public static CharSequence formatDurationAndDataUsage(
Context context, long elapsedSeconds, Long dataUsage) {
CharSequence duration = formatDuration(context, elapsedSeconds);
List