I have a string of following format

Select * where {{0} rdfs:label "Aruba" } limit 10

Now I would like to replace {0} with some new text, but the problem is message format is unable to parse the string due to the first curly bracket. I know if i use '{' it would escape it, but the problem is I have loads of such type of string and I cannot manually add single quotes before and after the curly bracket. Even if I write a function to do this, it would escape the curly brackets for the placeholder {0} as well.

Is their a better alternative to message format, something like ruby string interpolation. I just want a way to write a string template where i can replace certain parts with new string

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right now I have coded like this: NewString=OlString.replace("{0}", "Value");...is this is an inefficient method? – Priyam Aug 13 '11 at 1:43
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3 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

Newer Java versions have java.util.Formatter with its printf like methods. (There are also some variants of them dispersed throughout the API, like String.format and PrintStream.printf).

There you would write

String some_text = "Hello";
String pattern = "Select * where {%s rdfs:label \"Aruba\" } limit 10";
String replaced = String.format(pattern, some_text);
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right now I have coded like this: NewString=OlString.replace("{0}", "Value");...do you think this is an inefficient method? – Priyam Aug 13 '11 at 1:43
This depends on the size of your OIString, and how many of these replacements you have. If only one replacement, it will be about the same cost as using MessageFormat or Formatter, I think. – Paŭlo Ebermann Aug 13 '11 at 1:55
In case you want to replace {0} only, this is probably more efficient than using anything smarter. But is efficiency the important thing here? – maaartinus Aug 13 '11 at 1:58
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What's wrong with regular expression?

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right now I have coded like this: NewString=OlString.replace("{0}", "Value");...do you think this is an inefficient method? – Priyam Aug 13 '11 at 1:44
@user658209: Look here: stackoverflow.com/questions/6262397/… – Zwei Steinen Aug 13 '11 at 1:57
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Replace all direct uses of MessageFormat by your method. In your method, look for the curly braces and replace them based on the context before passing it to MessageFormat. Something as stupid as

s.replace("{", "'{'").replace("}", "'}'").replaceAll("'\\{'(\\d+)'\\}'", "{$1}")

could do, depending on what kinds of arguments you're using.

Don't use this (especially String.replaceAll) in case you're concerned with efficiency. My solution is useful in case you need to preserve the power of MessageFormat. An efficient solution would parse the input string once and recognize which braces should be quoted. Look at the source code of Pattern.replaceAll for how it can be done.

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