. is a special character in regular expressions, which is what is used to split a string.
To get around this, you need to escape the .. That leads us to \. Unfortunately, \ is ALSO a special character in the java string, so that must also be escaped, to make \\.
Our "final" result is ip.split("\\.");
In a related issue, the whole process can be averted entirely. There's no sense in doing something that a standard library already has done for us.
Consider the following
byte[] ipOctets = InetAddress.getByName(ip).getAddress();
The only issue here is to remember that if you want the int value, you have to extract it with & like int octet = ipOctets[0] & 0xFF;
.means "any character" :) You need a "real dot"[.]– dasblinkenlight Jul 12 '12 at 17:25.will or will not match new line character. – nhahtdh Jul 12 '12 at 17:26