I am comparing version strings by removing all non numeric characters and keeping the dot "."
oldStr = "Old string v1.9.552.6"
String resultOld = oldStr.replaceAll("[^\\d.]", "");
resultOld = 1.9.552.6
newStr = "New string v2.0.1"
String resultNew = newStr.replaceAll("[^\\d.]", "");
resultNew = 2.0.1
EDIT: some example strings:
3C New 2017 program v1.2.3253.2.5beta52 --> should be 1.2.3253.2.552
3C New 2017 program v1.2.3253.2.5 b458 --> should be 1.2.3253.2.5458
My problem is that sometimes a string contains invalid numeric chars, which makes the comparison not valid.
newStr = "3New 2017-string v2.0.1"
This would result in the following invalid version string: 320172.0.1, so my question is how do I remove the invalid numeric chars (3 and 2017) from the string so I get a valid version string I can compare?
PS: I do not know the invalid numeric strings upfront, so they could be any numbers.
I already tried with comparing the chars but I think I am on the wrong track:
private void removeDuplicates(String oldStr, String newStr) {
char[] charsNew = newStr.toCharArray();
char[] charsOld = oldStr.toCharArray();
Set<Character> NewPresent = new HashSet<>();
for (int b = 0; b < charsOld.length; b++) {
if (!Arrays.equals(charsNew, charsOld)) {
NewPresent.add(charsNew[b]);
// Just to check output
Log.w("CHARS", NewPresent.toString());
}
}
}