58

The problem it's easy. Is there any function in JAVA to compare two Strings and return true ignoring the accented chars?

ie

String x = "Joao";
String y = "João";

return that are equal.

Thanks

13
  • 9
    but those are NOT equal, why would you want them to be equal when they are not?
    – user177800
    Mar 3, 2010 at 16:55
  • 6
    @fuzzy both are usually the same name (it's the Portuguese version for John). Some people are just lazy to include accents Mar 3, 2010 at 16:57
  • 1
    In Spanish, n and ñ are considered different letters.
    – Nicolás
    Mar 3, 2010 at 17:01
  • 8
    Yeah, but by his example, it seems he wants to compare names and is not too worried about false positives Mar 3, 2010 at 17:03
  • 10
    this can be extremely useful for searching. Users are too lazy to properly type accents on a qwerty keyboard. Maybe the question should be rephrased to determining whether two strings are similar instead of equal though. Jan 19, 2012 at 10:16

6 Answers 6

69

I think you should be using the Collator class. It allows you to set a strength and locale and it will compare characters appropriately.

From the Java 1.6 API:

You can set a Collator's strength property to determine the level of difference considered significant in comparisons. Four strengths are provided: PRIMARY, SECONDARY, TERTIARY, and IDENTICAL. The exact assignment of strengths to language features is locale dependant. For example, in Czech, "e" and "f" are considered primary differences, while "e" and "ě" are secondary differences, "e" and "E" are tertiary differences and "e" and "e" are identical.

I think the important point here (which people are trying to make) is that "Joao"and "João" should never be considered as equal, but if you are doing sorting you don't want them to be compared based on their ASCII value because then you would have something like Joao, John, João, which is not good. Using the collator class definitely handles this correctly.

3
  • 3
    @Software Monkey: I agree too, even though I wrote the accepted answer. :-P Mar 3, 2010 at 19:39
  • 1
    FYI folks, created a bit of code here that follows your guidelines, so thanks for that. However I didn't see a way to do a comparison that is ACCENT insensitive, but CASE sensitive, following the Collator's rules... did I miss something? Feb 3, 2012 at 19:54
  • 1
    @Joao you won't be able to do that with the Collator class because the strength is set as the minimum level. So to get case sensitivity you need TERTIARY, but for accent insensitivity you only want PRIMARY. So they won't work together. You might be better using Chris Jester-Youngs solution to filter off the accent characters then compare the strings normally. Feb 6, 2012 at 10:30
26

You didn't hear this from me (because I disagree with the premise of the question), but, you can use java.text.Normalizer, and normalize with NFD: this splits off the accent from the letter it's attached to. You can then filter off the accent characters and compare.

2
  • 6
    The two steps are combined into one by StringUtils.stripAccents commons.apache.org/proper/commons-lang/javadocs/api-3.1/org/…
    – cquezel
    May 31, 2013 at 19:18
  • 1
    This is very valid especially in systems that need to compare international data. 1- Probably very few systems in the world handle anything multilingual properly. Case in point it's mentioned in the threads below that even java has buggy Unicode support. 2- When you have services that accept data from 3rd parties that all goes down the tubes. Since no one ever handles the data consistently. 2- As mentioned before people just don't type data in properly at all. Either because lazy, typos etc... 3- Joao may as well be a Spanish user unfortunately using an English computer.
    – user432024
    Aug 16, 2013 at 19:27
10

Or use stripAccents from apache StringUtils library if you want to compare/sort ignoring accents :

 public int compareStripAccent(String a, String b) {
    return StringUtils.stripAccents(a).compareTo(StringUtils.stripAccents(b));
}
9

Java's Collator returns 0 for both "a" and "á", if you configure it to ignore diacritics:

public boolean isSame(String a, String b) {
    Collator insenstiveStringComparator = Collator.getInstance();
    insenstiveStringComparator.setStrength(Collator.PRIMARY);
    return insenstiveStringComparator.compare(a, b) == 0;
}

isSame("a", "á") yields true

0
2
public boolean insenstiveStringComparator (String a, String b) {
    java.text.Collator collate = java.text.Collator.getInstance();
    collate.setStrength(java.text.Collator.PRIMARY);
    collate.setDecomposition(java.text.Collator.CANONICAL_DECOMPOSITION); 
    return collate.equals(a, b);    
}
-2

The problem with these sort of conversions is that there isn't always a clear-cut mapping from accented to non-accented characters. It depends on codepages, localizations, etc. For example, is this a with an accent equivalent to an "a"? Not a problem for a human, but trickier for the computer.

AFAIK Java does not have a built in conversion that can look up the current localization options and make these sort of conversions. You may need some external library that handles unicode better, like ICU (http://site.icu-project.org/ )

1
  • Java does have it, it's called the Collater and is specifically made for this kind of problem. Oct 19, 2016 at 13:21

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.