4

I am trying to get a range of chars found in another string using Java:

String input = "test test2 Test3";
String substring = "test2";

int diffStart = StringUtils.indexOf(input, substring);
int diffEnd = StringUtils.lastIndexOf(input, substring);

I want to get

  • diffStart = 5
  • diffEnd = 10

But I am getting

  • diffStart = 5
  • diffEnd = 5

Based on Apache's Commons lastIndexOf function it should work:

public static int lastIndexOf(CharSequence seq, CharSequence searchSeq)

Finds the last index within a CharSequence, handling null. This method uses String.lastIndexOf(String) if possible.

StringUtils.lastIndexOf("aabaabaa", "ab") = 4

What am I doing wrong?

3
  • you can write diffEnd in this way : diffEnd = difStart + strOutputDiff.length(); Oct 3, 2016 at 14:37
  • but this approach only works for examples like your example ! Oct 3, 2016 at 14:38
  • Thank you Mohsen, You ar right. I have wrongly interpreted the sense of lastIndexOf.
    – Reddy SK
    Oct 3, 2016 at 15:53

1 Answer 1

4

you probably want

diffStart = String.valueOf(StringUtils.indexOf(strInputString02, strOutputDiff));
diffEnd = diffStart + strOutputDiff.length();

lastIndexOf finds the matching string, but the last instance of it.

E.g. ab1 ab2 ab3 ab4

lastindexof("ab") finds the 4th ab

indexof("ab") finds the 1st ab (position 0)

However, they always return the location of the first character.

If there is only one instance of a substring lastindexof and indexof will give the same index.

(To enhance your example more, you may also want to do some -1 checks in case the substring is not there at all)

1
  • Thank you Bruce, You are right. I have wrongly interpreted the sense of lastIndexOf
    – Reddy SK
    Oct 3, 2016 at 15:54

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