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I want to split string by setting all non-alphabet as separator.

String[] word_list = line.split("[^a-zA-Z]");

But with the following input

11:11 Hello World

word_list contains many empty string before "hello" and "world"

Please kindly tell me why. Thank You.

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  • Do you expect as result with 11:11 Hello World as input?
    – Sam
    Mar 17, 2012 at 6:13

3 Answers 3

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Because your regular expression matches each individual non-alpha character. It would be like separating

",,,,,,Hello,World"

on commas.

You will want an expression that matches an entire sequence of non-alpha characters at once such as:

line.split("[^a-zA-Z][^a-zA-Z]*")

I still think you will get one leading empty string with your example since it would be like separating ",Hello,World" if comma were your separator.

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  • Thanks blackcompe. I thought it would, but wasn't sure since I've used some regex implementations support + and others that don't. Wasn't sure about Java's String.split().
    – rayd09
    Mar 17, 2012 at 6:17
  • Finally, I first replace the heading non-alphabet character with empty string and then call split() with this regex :)
    – Bear
    Mar 17, 2012 at 6:21
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Here's your string, where each ^ character shows a match for [^a-zA-Z]:

11:11 Hello World
^^^^^^     ^

The split method finds each of these matches, and basically returns all substrings between the ^ characters. Since there's six matches before any useful data, you end up with 5 empty substrings before you get the string "Hello".

To prevent this, you can manually filter the result to ignore any empty strings.

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  • I like ur explanation as it is very clear. But I can only give one tick,sorry.
    – Bear
    Mar 17, 2012 at 6:27
0

Will the following do?

String[] word_list = line.replaceAll("[^a-zA-Z ]","").replaceAll(" +", " ").trim().split("[^a-zA-Z]");

What I am doing here is removing all non-alphabet characters before doing the split and then replacing multiple spaces by a single space.

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