2

what im trying to do here is to sort the regex findings(for example if they was numbers). im not to sure how to go about doing this, any ideas?

NodeList abcList = firstElement.getElementsByTagName("target");
Element abcElement =(Element)abcList.item(0);
NodeList textAbcList = abcElement.getChildNodes();
String abc = (textAbcList.item(0).getNodeValue().trim());
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("Some Regex");
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(abc);
while (matcher.find()){
out.write(" abc: " + matcher.group());
}
6
  • Let me understand: you want to sort someway a list of findings (from a regex search)? In that case there are two distinct problems: finding and sorting. You need all the result first in a list. Then sort it. Please clarify what you need and then we can answer to the distinct problems...
    – helios
    Sep 28, 2012 at 9:19
  • Im parsing xml and retriving numbers. i need to sort those numbers. Sep 28, 2012 at 9:23
  • Ok. Have in mind that an XML parser will be better to parse XML. RegEx would be fine if you have some non-xml text inside your XML and needs to be parsed too.
    – helios
    Sep 28, 2012 at 9:27
  • yes i am retrieve non xml text now i need to sort that. thanks Sep 28, 2012 at 9:30
  • Added my answer. I assumed you are ok with retrieving all the results from the regex parser.
    – helios
    Sep 28, 2012 at 9:35

1 Answer 1

2

Finding

To sort results you need to find them all first. You can produce any partial sorted list if you don't know all the results beforehand. So you'll have something like:

List<Integer> results = new ArrayList<Integer>();
while (there are more results) { // here you ask the regex if it found some more item
   // add integer to results
   String found = ... // here you grab the string you've just found
   results.add(Integer.parseInt(found)); // convert the string to integer and add to list
}

Note that I'm converting the found string directly to Integer because it has more meaning as an Integer. If by any reason you want to have a string, ok, have a List<String> and don't convert.

Sorting

After you have a non-sorted list, you need to sort it. There are several methods and Java implements one very easy method. It can do sorting of any type because it doesn't do the compare between two items. This is the only part that needs to be implemented to define HOW to sort. And you'll do:

Collections.sort(results, comparator);

This method will implement mergesort (if I'm not mistaken) and ask the comparator you provide each time it needs to compare two elements. This comparator should implement interface Comparator<T> where T is the type of elements in result.

If they are integers, you don't need a comparator because it has already a "natural" order:

Collections.sort(results);

But if you want some special ordering (like ordering strings according to its integer represented value) then you can use your own comparator:

Collections.sort(results, new Comparator<String>() {
   public int compare(String a, String b) {
      int valueA = Integer.parseInt(a);
      int valueB = Integer.parseInt(b);
      return valueA - valueB;
   }
});

compare must return:

  • negative if a < b
  • 0 if a == b
  • and positive if a > b.

As we want to compare strings as if they are numbers, that's what I did: convert them to numbers and compare their numerical value.

Sorting your strigs: xxx-nnnn-nnnn

In your case you are collecting strings with that format (abc-1234-5678) and you need to sort them according to the first number. So let's assume you've already collected your strings in:

List<String> results

Then you need to sort that strings according to some arbitrary criteria. As usual you'll need to call Collections.sort providing a special comparator.

That comparator will need to compare not the whole string, but the first number from each string. By example: abc-1234-5678 and def-3456-1988. You have to compare 1234 with 3456.

Then the code will look something like:

Collections.sort(results, new Comparator<String>() {
  public int compare(String str1, String str2) {
     // obtain the number you'll use to compare
     int value1 = getImportantNumber(str1);
     int value2 = getImportantNumber(str2);
     // return comparator (remember, the sign of the results says if it's <, =, >)
     return value1 - value2;
  }

  // this method will extract the number, maybe you'll need a regex or substring, dunno
  private int getImportantNumber(String str) {
     // by example
     Matcher m = PATTERN.matcher(str);
     if (!m.find())
        return -1; // or throw an exception, depends on you're requirements
     String numberPart = m.group(...); // the number of the group catching the part you need
     return Integer.parseInt(numberPart);
  }

  private static Pattern PATTERN = Pattern.compile("...."); 
});

Which regex

I should use:

(\w+)-(\d+)(-(\d+))*

That finds:

letters-numbers[-numbers[-numbers...]]

But if you'r not sure of finding the numbers on the second place I should go for:

String[] parts = str.split("-");
for (String part: parts)
   if (this part has only numbers)
      return Integer.parseInt(part);
// if there are no only number parts
throw new RuntimeException("Not valid number part found!");
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  • sorry i should of said that the part im retreiving is abc-1234-1234 not just a digit so i need to sort by first set of numbers Sep 28, 2012 at 9:42
  • In that case you are interested in holding abc-1234-5678 and want to order this complete string according to 1234... If you confirm it I'll change the post :)
    – helios
    Sep 28, 2012 at 10:51

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