By default, when text contains numeric values, those values are
displayed using Latin (European) digits. When other Unicode digit
shapes are preferred, use the
java.awt.font.NumericShaper class. The NumericShaper API enables you to
display a numeric value represented internally as an ASCII value
in any Unicode digit shape.
The following code snippet, from the
ArabicDigits example, shows how to use a NumericShaper
instance to convert Latin digits to Arabic digits.
The line that determines the shaping action is bolded.
ArabicDigitsPanel(String fontname) {
HashMap map = new HashMap();
Font font = new Font(fontname, Font.PLAIN, 60);
map.put(TextAttribute.FONT, font);
map.put(TextAttribute.NUMERIC_SHAPING,
NumericShaper.getShaper(NumericShaper.ARABIC));
FontRenderContext frc = new FontRenderContext(null, false, false);
layout = new TextLayout(text, map, frc);
}
...
public void paint(Graphics g) {
Graphics2D g2d = (Graphics2D)g;
layout.draw(g2d, 10, 50);
}
The NumericShaper instance for Arabic digits is fetched
and placed into a HashMap for the
TextLayout.NUMERIC_SHAPING attribute key. The hash map is passed to the TextLayout instance.
After rendering the text in the paint
method, the digits are displayed in the desired script. In this example,
the Latin digits, 0 through 9, are drawn as Arabic digits.

The previous example uses the NumericShaper.ARABIC constant
to retrieve the desired shaper, but the
NumericShaper class provides constants for many languages. These constants are
defined as bit masks and are referred to as the
NumericShaper bit mask-based constants.
An alternative way to specify a particular set of digits is to use the
NumericShaper.Range enumerated type (enum). This enum, introduced in the Java SE 7 release,
also provides a set of
constants. Although these constants are defined using different mechanisms,
the NumericShaper.ARABIC bit mask is functionally equivalent
to the NumericShaper.Range.ARABIC enum, and
there is a corresponding getShaper method for each constant type:
The
ArabicDigitsEnum example is identical to the ArabicDigits example, except it uses
the NumericShaper.Range enum to specify the language script:
ArabicDigitsEnumPanel(String fontname) {
HashMap map = new HashMap();
Font font = new Font(fontname, Font.PLAIN, 60);
map.put(TextAttribute.FONT, font);
map.put(TextAttribute.NUMERIC_SHAPING,
NumericShaper.getShaper(NumericShaper.Range.ARABIC));
FontRenderContext frc = new FontRenderContext(null, false, false);
layout = new TextLayout(text, map, frc);
}
Both getShaper methods accept a singleRange parameter.
With either constant type, you can specify a range of script-specific digits.
The bit mask-based constants can be combined using the
OR operand, or you can create a set of
NumericShaper.Range enums.
The following shows how to define a range using each constant type:
NumericShaper.MONGOLIAN | NumericShaper.THAI | NumericShaper.TIBETAN
EnumSet.of(NumericShaper.Range.MONGOLIAN,
NumericShaper.Range.THAI,
NumericShaper.Range.TIBETAN)
You can query the NumericShaper object to determine which ranges
it supports using either the
getRanges method for bit mask-based shapers or the
getRangeSet method for enum-based shapers.
Range enum-based constants.
Here are some considerations when deciding which to use:
Range API requires JDK 7 or later.
Range API covers more Unicode ranges than the
bit-masked API.
Range API.
The
ArabicDigits example was designed to use the shaper for a specific
language, but sometimes the digits must be rendered
according to the language context. For example, if the text that
precedes the digits uses the Thai script, Thai digits are preferred.
If the text is displayed in Tibetan, Tibetan digits are preferred.
You can accomplish this using one of the getContextualShaper
methods:
The first two methods use the bit-mask constants, and the
last two use the enum constants. The methods that accept a
defaultContext parameter enable you to specify the
initial shaper that is used when numeric values are displayed before
text. When no default context is defined, any leading
digits are displayed using Latin shapes.
The
ShapedDigits example shows how shapers work. Five text layouts are displayed:
ALL_RANGES bit mask,
but the shaper does not specify a default context.

The following lines of code show how the shapers, if used, are defined:
NumericShaper arabic = NumericShaper.getShaper(NumericShaper.ARABIC);
NumericShaper contextualArabic = NumericShaper.getContextualShaper(NumericShaper.ARABIC, NumericShaper.ARABIC);
NumericShaper contextualArabicASCII = NumericShaper.getContextualShaper(NumericShaper.ARABIC);
NumericShaper contextualAll = NumericShaper.getContextualShaper(NumericShaper.ALL_RANGES);
ShapedDigits.java example for further implementation details.