129

I have the following if statement:

String newStr4 = strr.split("2012")[0];
if (newStr4.startsWith("Mon")) {
    str4.add(newStr4);
}

I want it to include startsWith Mon Tues Weds Thurs Friday etc. Is there a simple way to this when using strings? I tried || but it didn't work.

2
  • 4
    You mean you tried "Mon||Tues" etc.? Or did you use newStr4.startsWith("Mon")||newStr4.startsWith("Tues") ...? Either way, please define "it didn't work".
    – Thomas
    Mar 20, 2012 at 16:14
  • Are you trying to parse a date by any chance?? If so use SimpleDateFormat...
    – Adam
    Mar 20, 2012 at 16:50

10 Answers 10

210

Do you mean this:

if (newStr4.startsWith("Mon") || newStr4.startsWith("Tues") || ...)

Or you could use regular expression:

if (newStr4.matches("(Mon|Tues|Wed|Thurs|Fri).*"))
2
  • 3
    Is there any performance difference in the two methods you suggested? Mar 2, 2016 at 2:13
  • 14
    @TheCrazyProgrammer Of course there is; matching via regular expressions is much more expensive than raw string method calls. Exact figures I cannot give, but this is the general consensus.
    – klaar
    Mar 21, 2016 at 15:47
71

Besides the solutions presented already, you could use the Apache Commons Lang library:

if(StringUtils.startsWithAny(newStr4, new String[] {"Mon","Tues",...})) {
  //whatever
}

Update: the introduction of varargs at some point makes the call simpler now:

StringUtils.startsWithAny(newStr4, "Mon", "Tues",...)
0
50

No one mentioned Stream so far, so here it is:

if (Stream.of("Mon", "Tues", "Wed", "Thurs", "Fri").anyMatch(s -> newStr4.startsWith(s)))
4
  • 12
    great (and up-to-date) answer... btw s -> newStr4.startsWith(s) can be replaced by newStr7::startsWith to be clearer Jan 10, 2017 at 16:46
  • How can I ignoreCase here ? Nov 21, 2017 at 1:14
  • You can use String toLowerCase() function. Sep 12, 2018 at 10:14
  • If you already have an iterable, use .stream()on it as mentioned here
    – cachius
    Feb 24, 2023 at 16:52
9

A simple solution is:

if (newStr4.startsWith("Mon") || newStr4.startsWith("Tue") || newStr4.startsWith("Wed"))
// ... you get the idea ...

A fancier solution would be:

List<String> days = Arrays.asList("SUN", "MON", "TUE", "WED", "THU", "FRI", "SAT");
String day = newStr4.substring(0, 3).toUpperCase();
if (days.contains(day)) {
    // ...
}
2
5

it is even simpler and more neat this way:

let newStr4 = strr.split("2012")[0];
if (['Mon', 'Tues', 'Weds', 'Thurs', 'Friday'].some(word => newStr4.startsWith(word))) {
    str4.add(newStr4);
}
3

Of course, be mindful that your program will only be useful in english speaking countries if you detect dates this way. You might want to consider:

Set<String> dayNames = Calendar.getInstance()
 .getDisplayNames(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK,
      Calendar.SHORT,
      Locale.getDefault())
 .keySet();

From there you can use .startsWith or .matches or whatever other method that others have mentioned above. This way you get the default locale for the jvm. You could always pass in the locale (and maybe default it to the system locale if it's null) as well to be more robust.

3

Call stream() on the list itself if you already have a List of elements:

List<String> myItems = Arrays.asList("a", "b", "c");

Like this:

boolean result = myItems.stream().anyMatch(s -> newArg4.startsWith(s));

Instead of using Stream.of...

1
  • This is important, else you will pass the list to startsWith which results in java: incompatible types: invalid method reference incompatible types: java.util.List<java.lang.String> cannot be converted to java.lang.String. IntelliJ hints this as Reference to 'startsWith' is ambiguous, both 'startsWith(String, int)' and 'startsWith(String)' match which doesn't really help.
    – cachius
    Feb 24, 2023 at 16:50
1
if(newStr4.startsWith("Mon") || newStr4.startsWith("Tues") || newStr4.startsWith("Weds") .. etc)

You need to include the whole str.startsWith(otherStr) for each item, since || only works with boolean expressions (true or false).

There are other options if you have a lot of things to check, like regular expressions, but they tend to be slower and more complicated regular expressions are generally harder to read.

An example regular expression for detecting day name abbreviations would be:

if(Pattern.matches("Mon|Tues|Wed|Thurs|Fri", stringToCheck)) {
0

When you say you tried to use OR, how exactly did you try and use it? In your case, what you will need to do would be something like so:

String newStr4 = strr.split("2012")[0];
if(newStr4.startsWith("Mon") || newStr4.startsWith("Tues")...)
str4.add(newStr4);
0

If the task is to check if string matches any of the multiple values ignoring case, there are 2 options:

  1. Based on the answer by dejvuth, you can do a batch-checking ignoring case as follows:
    if (Stream.of("Mon", "Tues", "Wed", "Thurs", "Fri")
        .anyMatch(s -> StringUtils.startsWithIgnoreCase(newStr4, s)));
  1. Use the following method based on an implementation in StringUtils:

    public static boolean startsWithAnyIgnoreCase(
        CharSequence sequence, CharSequence... searchStrings) {
          if (!isEmpty(sequence) && !ArrayUtils.isEmpty(searchStrings)) {
            CharSequence[] searchStringsArray = searchStrings;
            int length = searchStrings.length;
    
            for (int i = 0; i < length; ++i) {
              CharSequence searchString = searchStringsArray[i];
              if (startsWithIgnoreCase(sequence, searchString)) {
                return true;
              }
            }
          }
      return false;
    }
    

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