2

Say I have a String as below and I would like to check if at least one character is a numerical value greater than 0 (check for 1 non zero element number). Is there a way to do this without running splitting the String and making a loop etc.? I assume there is a regex solution but I do not know much regex.

String x = "maark ran 0000 to the 23 0 1 3 000 0"

^this should pass

String x2 = "jeff ran 0 0 0000 00 0 0 times 00 0"

^this should fail

I have tried the following:

String line = fileScanner.nextLine();
if(!(line.contains("[1-9]+")) 
    <fail case>
else 
    <pass case> 
3
  • Like myString.matches(".*[1-9].*")? Jun 26, 2015 at 0:48
  • 1
    RegEx can get pretty wild, but you should at least learn enough to be able to do the simple stuff like this.
    – Teepeemm
    Jun 26, 2015 at 0:49
  • @DavidEhrmann mystring.matches works! thank you :)
    – rocky
    Jun 26, 2015 at 1:18

4 Answers 4

3

Use find() of the Matcher class. It returns true or false whether a string contains a match or not.

Pattern.compile("[1-9]").matcher(string).find();
3
public boolean contains(CharSequence s)

This method does not take a regular expression as a parameter.You need use:

    // compile your regexp
    Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("[1-9]+");
    // create matcher using pattern
    Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(line);
    // get result
    if (matcher.find()) {
        // detailed information
        System.out.println("I found the text '"+matcher.group()+"' starting at index "+matcher.start()+" and ending at index "+ matcher.end()+".");
        // and do something
    } else {
        System.out.println("I found nothing!");
    }

}

3

Try this:

if (string.matches(".*[1-9].*"))
    <pass case>
else 
    <fail case>

The presence of a non-zero digit is enough to guarantee there's a non-zero value (somewhere) in the input.

2
  • This pattern will cause you to read the entire string, which we would like to avoid. Jun 26, 2015 at 1:10
  • @MatthewMarkMiller There is nothing in the question about not reading the entire string. The only mention of a particular implementation is "without running splitting the String and making a loop".
    – Bohemian
    Jun 26, 2015 at 2:54
2

And a (possibly) more efficient way using streams:

s.chars().anyMatch((c)-> c >= '1' && c <= '9');

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