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This text file below is a collection of what are a Person object... which the person object has the name and phone number

jill nim # 9090092323
alladin # 4243535345
Defy duck # 4354656575

I am trying to restore this file for the program to use, but i dont know how to split these strings so i can pass to person instance

Person s = new Person( String Name, String phonenumber);

how do i pass the those names and number to make new instance of person.

   public void restore(String fileName) {
       // TODO : implement this method.
       // restore bst from a file, if file exists.
       // do nothing, otherwise.
       File fichier = new File(fileName);
            if (fichier.exists())

                try {
                    Scanner n = new Scanner(new File(fileName));

                        while(n.hasNextLine()){     
                            Person s = new Person( n.nextLine(), n.next(pattern));
                        }       
                    } catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
                        // TODO Auto-generated catch block
                        e.printStackTrace();
                    }
2
  • If it's in the format that you specified, I suggest that you not use .split(). I just don't see a reason to do it for the case when you only need to separate two tokens. Might as well use .substring() with indexOf() instead.
    – Steve P.
    Nov 11, 2013 at 3:11
  • thank you i took your suggestion
    – ClearMist
    Nov 11, 2013 at 3:54

4 Answers 4

3

There's a split method in the String class.

Split your nextLine() with "#" i.e. nextLine().split("#") to get an array of Strings where your array[0] will be the name, and array[1] will be the phone number. You can then call your constructor new Person(array[0].trim(), array[1].trim()) (the trim is to get rid of any extra spaces after splitting)

2

You could use split(), but it's completely unnecessary for this situation. In your case, you could just use .substring() and indexOf(), here's how you would do it:

String fromFile = "jill nim # 9090092323";
Person s = new Person(fromFile.substring(0, fromFile.indexOf('#') -1), 
                      fromFile.substring(fromfile.indexOf('#') + 2);

Using .split() not only creates an array, but also creates a Pattern object, both of which are unnecessary.

3
  • What makes split unnecessary? Is there a performance trade off vs using a combination of substring and indexOf?
    – Shobit
    Nov 11, 2013 at 4:43
  • 1
    @Shobit Why would you want to use extra space when you don't have to?
    – Steve P.
    Nov 11, 2013 at 4:49
  • @Shobit Besides the array, you're creating a new Pattern object, unnecessarily.
    – Steve P.
    Nov 11, 2013 at 5:09
2

user StringTokenizer for you case like:

String foo = "foo # 1234";

StringTokenizer sr =  new StringTokenizer(foo,"#");

while(sr.hasMoreElements())
{
System.out.println(sr.nextElement());
}
1

just use split("#");

String line = line.nextLine();

String[] tokens = line.split("#");

String name = tokens[0].trim();

String phone = tokens[1].trim();

Person s = new Person(name, phone);

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