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So, I'm trying to parse some text file which has multiple lines of text. My job is to go through all words and print them out in file.

So, I read all lines, I'm looping through them and splitting every line by spaces, like this:

line.split("\\s+");

Now, the problem is that in some cases Java does not see space between two words...

I was also trying to loop through string which has space but Java doesn't see it, and Character.isSpaceChar(char) returned true...

And now I'm completly confused...

Here is code:

public void createMap(String inputPath, String outputPath)
            throws IOException {
                File f = new File(inputPath);
        FileWriter fw = new FileWriter(outputPath);
        List<String> lines = Files.readAllLines(f.toPath(),
                StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
        for (String l : lines) {
            for (String w : l.split("\\s+")) {
                if (isNotRubbish(w.trim())) {
                    fw.write(w.trim() + "\n");
                }
            }
        }
        fw.close();
    }
private boolean isNotRubbish(String w) {
        Pattern p = Pattern.compile("@?\\p{L}+",
                Pattern.UNICODE_CHARACTER_CLASS);
        Matcher m = p.matcher(w);
        return m.matches();
    }
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  • 2
    Can you give a reproducable example for those some cases ?
    – jlordo
    Mar 23, 2014 at 0:56
  • So, maybe it's not ASCII spaces. But impossible to say since you provide little in the way of actionable details. Mar 23, 2014 at 0:57
  • Of course... I forgot about giving an example Beogradu u fajlu Štaba vrhovne komande ( JVUO ) pod oznakom K There, "u fajlu" and "oznakom K" is not separated, but everything other is
    – mister11
    Mar 23, 2014 at 0:57
  • 3
    Without seeing an actual copied/pasted sample of the data, and the code around the line.split(), it is unlikely anybody can help you. Mar 23, 2014 at 0:58
  • 1
    Print the integer values of each character to determine what those space characters actually are
    – Bohemian
    Mar 23, 2014 at 1:05

1 Answer 1

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I suspect that you have in your text character which is similar to non-breakable-space which is not white space so it can't be matched via \\s.

In that case try to use \p{Zs} instead of \s.

As mentioned in http://www.regular-expressions.info/unicode.html

\p{Zs} will match any kind of space character

BTW if you would also like to include other separators than spaces like tabulators \t or line breaks \r \n you can combine \p{Zs} with \s like [\p{Zs}\s]

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  • Well, now I have another problem then... How to split string by spaces or by non-printable ASCII
    – mister11
    Mar 23, 2014 at 1:27
  • Thanks man... I can vote you up because of my reputation :)
    – mister11
    Mar 23, 2014 at 1:35

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