First thing you should use a CSV parsing library to parse the comma separated values. Correctly parsing CSV data isn't as trivial as it first seems. There are lots of good arguments to not reinvent that wheel.
This will also future proof your code and be code you don't have to test or maintain.
I know the temptation to do something like data.split(','); is strong, but it is fragile and brittle solution. For just one example, what if any of the values contain the ','.
Second thing you should do is then parse the pairs. Again the temptation to use String.split("="); will be strong, but it can be brittle and fragile if the right hand side of the = has an = in it.
I am not a blind proponent of regular expressions, but used with restraint they can be just the right tool for the job. Here is the regular expression to parse the name value pairs.
The regular expression ^(.*)\s?=\s?("?([^"]*)"?|"(.*)")$, click the regular expression to test it online interactively. This works even for multiple double quotes in the right hand side of the name value pair.
This will match only what is on the left side of the first = and everything else on the right hand side, and strip the optional " off the string values, while still matching the non-quoted number values.
Given a List<String> list of the encoded name value pairs.
final Pattern p = Pattern.compile("^(.*)\s?=\s?("?([^"]*)"?|"(.*)")$");
final Map<String, String> map = new HashMap<String, String>(list.size());
for (final String nvp : list)
{
final Matcher m = p.matcher(nvp);
m.matches();
final String name = m.group(1);
final String value = m.group(2);
System.out.format("name = %s | value = %s\n", name, value);
}
Stringinto aMap? – Isaac Truett May 4 '11 at 17:45