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Suppose I have a string that contains Ü. How would I find all those unicode characters? Should I test for their code? How would I do that?

For example, given the string "AÜXÜ", I'd like to transform it to "AYXY". I'd like to do the same for other unicode characters, and I would hate to have to store them in a translation map of some sort.

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How do you know what Ü will map to without your own map? There is no simple mapping and I suspect in different languages any mapping might differ – Mark Nov 4 at 12:44
actually you can do it by looking at chars one by one. It depends the "range" of the char, but it's quiet low level, and I assume there already exists something to achieve this task. see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode – Aif Nov 4 at 12:45

5 Answers

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Your definition of "unicode characters" is a bit vague. This is usually used by starters to denote all UTF-8 characters which are NOT covered by the standard ISO 8859 charset. Is this true in your case? If so, then you likely need to loop through every character of the String and test its codepoint if it is covered by the ISO 8859 charset or not.

You can also just have a Map and do the replace in a loop if the map contains the key. For example:

Map<Character, Character> charReplacementMap = new HashMap<Character, Character>() {{
    put('Ü', 'Y');
    // Put more here.
}};

String originalString = "AÜAÜ";
StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();

for (char currentChar : originalString.toCharArray()) {
    Character replacementChar = charReplacementMap.get(currentChar);
    builder.append(replacementChar != null ? replacementChar : currentChar);
}

String newString = builder.toString();

Or, do you mean "all characters whith diacritical marks" with it? If so, then you can use java.text.Normalizer to get rid of all diacritical marks:

/**
 * Remove any diacritical marks (accents like ç, ñ, é, etc) from
 * the given string (so that it returns plain c, n, e, etc).
 * @param string The string to remove diacritical marks from.
 * @return The string with removed diacritical marks, if any.
 */
public static String removeDiacriticalMarks(String string) {
    return Normalizer.normalize(string, Form.NFD)
        .replaceAll("\\p{InCombiningDiacriticalMarks}+", "");
}

One pitfall, Ü would become U, not Y. Not sure if that's what you're after. If you want to replace by pronounced character, you'll really need to create a mapping. Sure, it's a tedious work, but it's done in less time than you needed to follow this topic ;)

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It's how I usually did it. But this would require you add each character in the map. – Geo Nov 4 at 12:49
I don't see any other efficient option to replace a certain character by a certain character and that for more than one character. – BalusC Nov 4 at 12:52
If you don't add each character to the map, how do you define the replacement? Or do you want all non-ascii characters replaced by a single ascii character? – C. Ross Nov 4 at 12:52
@BalusC - actually, the real definition of what is a Unicode character (codepoint) is very precise. The problem is that the OP does not understand that the ASCII characters are a proper subset of the Unicode codepoints. – Stephen C Nov 4 at 12:54
Or do you just want to remove diacritical marks? I've edited my post with it. – BalusC Nov 4 at 12:54
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It isn't clear to me exactly what is gained by transforming "AÜXÜ" to "AYXY". Is this because Ü is pronounced like Y in a particular language? What language? And what other rules might apply?


In terms of terminology...

"a"

The above is a Unicode string. It contains a single UTF-16 encoded character.

If you wish to limit the range of characters to the English alphabet, have a look at the Normalization performed in this answer.

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It was just a replacement example. I'll actually replace the character by _XX_ :) – Geo Nov 4 at 12:53
vote up 2 vote down

You could loop through your string and for every character call

If (Character.UnicodeBlock.of(c) != Character.UnicodeBlock.BASIC_LATIN) {
 // replace with Y
}
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Good one to test codepoints, but I don't have the impression that he want to replace every character by Y. – BalusC Nov 4 at 12:50
Well he says unicode characters by that I understand that he probably means replace all non ascii characters with Y. whatever – jitter Nov 4 at 12:53
vote up 1 vote down

I'm not sure from your example what you're trying to do - if you're just trying to replace all non-ASCII values with Y, then you could loop through the string looking for codepoints outside of the range 0 to 127, and replace them those code points with Y.

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vote up 3 vote down

You could go the other way round and ask if the character is a ascii character.

public static boolean isAscii(char ch) {
    return ch < 128;
}

You'd have to analyse the string char by char then of course.

(the method is from commons-lang Charutils which contains loads of useful Character methods)

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