8073347: javadoc of Formattable messed up by JDK-8019857
Summary: Change sample code formatting to the currently blessed idiom.
Reviewed-by: martin
--- a/jdk/src/java.base/share/classes/java/util/Formattable.java Tue Feb 17 11:44:51 2015 -0800
+++ b/jdk/src/java.base/share/classes/java/util/Formattable.java Tue Feb 17 12:02:38 2015 -0800
@@ -36,14 +36,14 @@
* For example, the following class prints out different representations of a
* stock's name depending on the flags and length constraints:
*
- * {@code
+ * <pre> {@code
* import java.nio.CharBuffer;
* import java.util.Formatter;
* import java.util.Formattable;
* import java.util.Locale;
* import static java.util.FormattableFlags.*;
*
- * ...
+ * ...
*
* public class StockName implements Formattable {
* private String symbol, companyName, frenchCompanyName;
@@ -89,12 +89,12 @@
* return String.format("%s - %s", symbol, companyName);
* }
* }
- * }
+ * }</pre>
*
* <p> When used in conjunction with the {@link java.util.Formatter}, the above
* class produces the following output for various format strings.
*
- * {@code
+ * <pre> {@code
* Formatter fmt = new Formatter();
* StockName sn = new StockName("HUGE", "Huge Fruit, Inc.",
* "Fruit Titanesque, Inc.");
@@ -104,7 +104,7 @@
* fmt.format("%-10.8s", sn); // -> "HUGE "
* fmt.format("%.12s", sn); // -> "Huge Fruit,*"
* fmt.format(Locale.FRANCE, "%25s", sn); // -> " Fruit Titanesque, Inc."
- * }
+ * }</pre>
*
* <p> Formattables are not necessarily safe for multithreaded access. Thread
* safety is optional and may be enforced by classes that extend and implement