5

I need to check whether a Chinese province is contained within an address in Chinese.

I am able to read and write Chinese characters easily.

I tried to use the indexOf() method of String to check whether a province (e.g. 广东) is contained within an address (中国 广东). However, this always returns -1.

When I try to check for numbers (e.g. whether 103 is contained within 9910399) it works fine.

Do I need to do something different to handle UTF-8 string matching? Thanks. Matt

2
  • 3
    Java String is always UTF-16 internally, so whichever problems you have are not UTF-8 related. Are you 100% sure that the characters in the string are the exact same ones you're searching for? Check with System.out.println((int)s.charAt(i)) on both sides. Aug 30, 2011 at 20:43
  • 2
    Your example works for me, have you checked that your .java file saves with the right encoding? Aug 30, 2011 at 20:52

1 Answer 1

2

I have just tried your example and although I do not have Chineese fonts on my system, so the characters are not displayed correctly indexOf() works fine for me.

So, check encoding of your source files (*.java). For example if you are using eclipse check it under Window/Preferences/General/Workspace/Text file Encoding. I am using UTF-8.

The second think is the encoding used by java compiler. In case of eclipse you do not have to say anything. I think that for javac you probably should explicitely set encoding using -encoding. Otherwise the default OS encoding will be probably used.

Good luck.

3
  • Hi Alex, thanks a lot! I realized I was not specific enough. You are absolutely right - the above example works fine if I just use the strings directly. The problem happens when I read these strings from a file. I printed out the actual characters and I noticed that ASCII 34 was showing up before the Unicode characters.
    – Matt Smith
    Aug 30, 2011 at 21:52
  • It looks I am not having a Chinese-specific problem - its a file reading problem. I have 2 files - province and address. I had the character A in province and AB in address. When I read them using readline() and print them out I see the following printed out (1) For province while only had A - 34:65:34 (2) for addreseses which only had AB - 34:65:66:34 Not sure what I should do to make sure that province is matched to address, or A matches to AB
    – Matt Smith
    Aug 30, 2011 at 22:21
  • @Matt - AlexR is correct; look at the relevant I/O methods that take encoding (String IDs or Charset) inputs. You must always decode textual data inputs as appropriate (including Java source files). See here for a basic primer. See here for a primitive app that can help diagnose problems.
    – McDowell
    Aug 30, 2011 at 22:59

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.