113

I have a string with lots of special characters. I want to remove all those, but keep alphabetical characters.

How can I do this?

1

10 Answers 10

211

That depends on what you mean. If you just want to get rid of them, do this:
(Update: Apparently you want to keep digits as well, use the second lines in that case)

String alphaOnly = input.replaceAll("[^a-zA-Z]+","");
String alphaAndDigits = input.replaceAll("[^a-zA-Z0-9]+","");

or the equivalent:

String alphaOnly = input.replaceAll("[^\\p{Alpha}]+","");
String alphaAndDigits = input.replaceAll("[^\\p{Alpha}\\p{Digit}]+","");

(All of these can be significantly improved by precompiling the regex pattern and storing it in a constant)

Or, with Guava:

private static final CharMatcher ALNUM =
  CharMatcher.inRange('a', 'z').or(CharMatcher.inRange('A', 'Z'))
  .or(CharMatcher.inRange('0', '9')).precomputed();
// ...
String alphaAndDigits = ALNUM.retainFrom(input);

But if you want to turn accented characters into something sensible that's still ascii, look at these questions:

7
  • when i am using this function it is removing all numbers as well.but i dont want numbers to remove.just want to remove special characters.Please suggest something..
    – Tanu
    Nov 26, 2010 at 11:28
  • well you said you only wanted the alphabet. But I'll update my answer in a minute Nov 26, 2010 at 11:46
  • I want to concat string but with some condition like 1.If there is only one result no concat required 2.If result is more than 1 than concat string in the following form example: stack+over+flow
    – Tanu
    Nov 26, 2010 at 11:52
  • 2
    @Tanu that's a different question. Make it a new one
    – Pekka
    Nov 26, 2010 at 11:58
  • What if I don't want spaces to be removed? or say all spaces like tabs, newlines collapsed as only one space?
    – damned
    Mar 5, 2012 at 10:23
85

I am using this.

s = s.replaceAll("\\W", ""); 

It replace all special characters from string.

Here

\w : A word character, short for [a-zA-Z_0-9]

\W : A non-word character

1
  • Does not work for <script>alert('XSS Attack')</script>. How to remove '<', '>','\' characters?
    – Manoj
    May 12, 2016 at 10:15
15

You can use the following method to keep alphanumeric characters.

replaceAll("[^a-zA-Z0-9]", "");

And if you want to keep only alphabetical characters use this

replaceAll("[^a-zA-Z]", "");
1
  • 6
    For space use replaceAll("[^a-zA-Z0-9 ]", "");
    – Qamar
    Jan 22, 2018 at 7:55
8

Replace any special characters by

replaceAll("\\your special character","new character");

ex:to replace all the occurrence of * with white space

replaceAll("\\*","");

*this statement can only replace one type of special character at a time

1
  • Definitely what I was looking for when I saw the question title "How to replace special characters in a string?" thanks!
    – Mr.Drew
    Apr 2, 2019 at 12:38
8

Following the example of the Andrzej Doyle's answer, I think the better solution is to use org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils.stripAccents():

package bla.bla.utility;

import org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils;

public class UriUtility {
    public static String normalizeUri(String s) {
        String r = StringUtils.stripAccents(s);
        r = r.replace(" ", "_");
        r = r.replaceAll("[^\\.A-Za-z0-9_]", "");
        return r;
    }
}
2
string Output = Regex.Replace(Input, @"([ a-zA-Z0-9&, _]|^\s)", "");

Here all the special characters except space, comma, and ampersand are replaced. You can also omit space, comma and ampersand by the following regular expression.

string Output = Regex.Replace(Input, @"([ a-zA-Z0-9_]|^\s)", "");

Where Input is the string which we need to replace the characters.

2

Here is a function I used to remove all possible special characters from the string

let name = name.replace(/[&\/\\#,+()$~%!.„'":*‚^_¤?<>|@ª{«»§}©®™ ]/g, '').toLowerCase();
2
  • Can you explain the regex a bit?
    – stdunbar
    Oct 6, 2020 at 2:33
  • i recommend that you add notes in your answer section to explain your code. Please read more about how to write good answers.
    – Joe Ferndz
    Oct 6, 2020 at 3:40
0

You can use basic regular expressions on strings to find all special characters or use pattern and matcher classes to search/modify/delete user defined strings. This link has some simple and easy to understand examples for regular expressions: http://www.vogella.de/articles/JavaRegularExpressions/article.html

0

You can get unicode for that junk character from charactermap tool in window pc and add \u e.g. \u00a9 for copyright symbol. Now you can use that string with that particular junk caharacter, don't remove any junk character but replace with proper unicode.

0

For spaces use "[^a-z A-Z 0-9]" this pattern

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