What is difference between TextUtils.isEmpty(string)
and string.isEmpty
?
Both do the same operation.
Is it advantageous to use TextUtils.isEmpty(string)
?
What is difference between TextUtils.isEmpty(string)
and string.isEmpty
?
Both do the same operation.
Is it advantageous to use TextUtils.isEmpty(string)
?
Yes, TextUtils.isEmpty(string)
is preferred.
For string.isEmpty()
, a null string value will throw a NullPointerException
TextUtils
will always return a boolean value.
In code, the former simply calls the equivalent of the other, plus a null check.
return string == null || string.length() == 0;
TextUtils.isEmpty(string)
check also if the String
object is null
or not so if you try to use that String
you didn't get NullPointerException
Apr 3, 2016 at 17:33
null
, it’s actually preferred to use a method that will fail immediately, if the application is in an inconsistent state, rather than continuing with an assumption like “null
is equivalent to an empty string” and fail at some unspecific later point.
TextUtils.isEmpty
. You want TextUtils
when working with strings which you do expect can be null
e.g. because they are returned from some null
-using API.
Jun 16, 2017 at 11:46
In class TextUtils
public static boolean isEmpty(@Nullable CharSequence str) {
if (str == null || str.length() == 0) {
return true;
} else {
return false;
}
}
checks if string length is zero and if string is null to avoid throwing NullPointerException
in class String
public boolean isEmpty() {
return count == 0;
}
checks if string length is zero only, this may result in NullPointerException
if you try to use that string and it is null.
Take a look at the doc
for the String#isEmpty they specify:
boolean
isEmpty() Returns true if, and only if, length() is 0.
and for the TextUtils.isEmpty the documentation explains:
public static boolean isEmpty (CharSequence str)
Returns true if the string is null or 0-length.
so the main difference is that using the TextUtils.isEmpty, you dont care or dont need to check if the string is null referenced or not,
in the other case yes.
TextUtils.isEmpty()
is better in Android SDK because of inner null check, so you don't need to check string for null before checking its emptiness yourself.
But with Kotlin, you can use String?.isEmpty()
and String?.isNotEmpty()
instead of TextUtils.isEmpty()
and !TextUtils.isEmpty()
, it will be more reader friendly
So I think it is preferred to use String?.isEmpty()
in Kotlin and TextUtils.isEmpty()
in Android Java SDK
String?.isNullOrEmpty
might be what you are looking for