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I am able to handle null check on a String with this below piece of code

 if (acct != null && !acct.isEmpty()|| !acct.equals(""))

what i mean from the above code is , if

  1. Accountid is not equal to null And
  2. Accountid length is greater than 0 (These two is a combination of checks )

Or

  1. Accountid is not equal to ""

Does my code satisfy these combination i mentioned above , or do i need to add any brackets ?? to satisfy the combination ( first 1 and 2 ) i mentioned above ??

Thanks

3
  • 7
    Didn't you test it yourself?
    – adarshr
    Jan 23, 2012 at 12:00
  • So you mean , this should be this way if ((acct != null && !acct.isEmpty())|| !acct.equals(""))
    – user663724
    Jan 23, 2012 at 12:02
  • 1
    Note that you will get a NullPointerException when acct is null.
    – Jesper
    Jan 23, 2012 at 12:12

3 Answers 3

2

Yes it does, and is always evaluated before or, i.e. your code is the same as

if ((acct != null && !acct.isEmpty()) || !acct.equals(""))

However, logically it does not make sense to me. Do you really need the last part? Isn't "acct.isEmpty()" the same as "acct.equals(""))" in this specific instance?

2

isEmpty() and .equals("") are exactly the same condition. And your test will throw a NullPointerException if acct is null.

I don't understand exactly which test you want to make, but this one is wrong. Think about it once again, and implement a unit test to test all the cases:

  • null string,
  • empty string,
  • not empty string.
0

As per your question framed by you, it should have brackets as below

if ((acct != null && !acct.isEmpty()) || !("".equals(acct) )) 

After the || operator, the code is changed which will avoid facing NullPointerException when acct is NULL.

This SO answer explains more about using "".equals().

https://stackoverflow.com/a/3321548/713414

1
  • I kind of know what you're saying but as others have pointed out, this will still cause a NullPointerException. The bracketing means the test on the other side of the '||' will be executed whether 'acct!=null' or not. Jan 23, 2012 at 12:16

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