2

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());
            }
        }
    }
10
  • Do your version code has any specific format Dec 24, 2017 at 13:08
  • Like it will contain v and than version code ? so you could search for v and than a numeric integer Dec 24, 2017 at 13:09
  • Not gonna work, sometimes the string does not contain a "v", so splitting will not work unfortuntaly. That is why I am removing all the non numeric characters.
    – Simon
    Dec 24, 2017 at 13:11
  • You can search for last space and take that word and remove the non numeric characters from last word Dec 24, 2017 at 13:13
  • Good thinking but what if I have a string like: 3New 2017-stringv2.0.1, this possibility is there.
    – Simon
    Dec 24, 2017 at 13:14

3 Answers 3

1

try this

/([\d]+\..*?[^a-zA-Z]*)/g

here is the regex 101 demo https://regex101.com/r/GCs7mb/3

  • 1st Capturing Group ([\d]+..?[^a-zA-Z]) Match a single character present in the list below [\d]+
    • Quantifier — Matches between one and unlimited times, as many times as possible, giving back as needed (greedy) \d matches a digit (equal to [0-9]) . matches the character . literally (case sensitive) .*? matches any character (except for line terminators) ? Quantifier — Matches between zero and unlimited times, as few times as possible, expanding as needed (lazy) Match a single character not present in the list below [^a-zA-Z]
    • Quantifier — Matches between zero and unlimited times, as many times as possible, giving back as needed (greedy) a-z a single character in the range between a (index 97) and z (index 122) (case sensitive) A-Z a single character in the range between A (index 65) and Z (index 90) (case sensitive) Global pattern flags g modifier: global. All matches (don't return after first match)
12
  • Thx JBone but a string could also not contain a "v" character. ABDevelopers brought me on a track using regex but this regex (\d(\.\d*)*)+\s*\s*(\d+) includes the numbers "2017" whrn I use it on "3C New 2017 program v1.2.3253.2.5beta52"
    – Simon
    Dec 24, 2017 at 14:34
  • It doesn`t, with following example string (3C New 2017 program v1.2.3253.2.5beta52) it still includes the 2017 but it should remove it. I am using following regex (\d(\.\d*)*)+\s*\s*(\d+) Any suggestions? I am close.
    – Simon
    Dec 24, 2017 at 14:36
  • put that input string here.
    – JBone
    Dec 24, 2017 at 14:39
  • 3C New 2017 program v1.2.3253.2.5beta52 --> should result in 1.2.3253.2.552
    – Simon
    Dec 24, 2017 at 14:40
  • OK I see the problem. Let me correct. I did not see the beta at the end
    – JBone
    Dec 24, 2017 at 14:42
1

Why not try this

/(\d+\.)+\d+[a-z]*\d*/g

Matching any x. 1 or more times followed by a digit This way all your versions will be extracted out if they follow the x.x format

This will return the version with the 'beta' You can then use another regex on that string to exclude the illegal beta

/[^a-z]/g
9
  • Thx but this also leaves out the "last part" --> beta52 or b458 (52 or 458 should be included), pls check my updated question with some example inputs.
    – Simon
    Dec 24, 2017 at 14:55
  • will it always be either b or beta followed by the number?
    – Nanotron
    Dec 24, 2017 at 15:00
  • No but these are only examples, I should only get the correct version part, leaving out the illegal numeric values in front.
    – Simon
    Dec 24, 2017 at 15:02
  • I have updated the answer, First i wanted to extract out the part of the string containing only the versioning info. After that we can work on removing the illegal letters.
    – Nanotron
    Dec 24, 2017 at 15:23
  • Thx this works for the 1st example, it outputs 1.2.3253.2.5beta52 (I can then remove the non numeric characters) but it does not woth for the 2nd example, b458 is skipped. Ok I see your edit now.
    – Simon
    Dec 24, 2017 at 15:27
0

After hours of testing and searching, I found the pattern I need. Upvotes for the answer of JBone and Nanotron, for pointing me in the right direction.

For anyone who wants to use it, here is the working code:

private String getVersion(String Str) {

        StringBuilder version = new StringBuilder();

        Pattern p = Pattern.compile("(\\d+\\.)+\\s*\\s*(\\d+)|(\\d+)(?!.*\\d)");
        Matcher m = p.matcher(Str);

        while (m.find()) {

            version.append(m.group());
        }

        return version.toString();

    }

Results:

Str = "3C New 2017 program v1.2.3253.2.5beta52" --> 1.2.3253.2.552
Str = "3C New 2017 program v1.2.3253.2.5 b458" --> 1.2.3253.2.5458

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