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I am trying to extract all the text from a PDF and store it inside a HashSet. As I know, HashSet does not contain duplicates so it will ignore the duplicates when I extract them. However, when I print out the results of the hash, I noticed there's duplicate blank space in it.

I want to insert the hash values into my table in MySQL but it has a primary key constraint so that gives me some trouble. Is there a way I could remove entirely all sorts of duplicate in my hash?

My code to extract the text :

public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
      String path ="D:/PDF/searchable.pdf";
        HashSet<String> uniqueWords = new HashSet<>();
        try (PDDocument document = PDDocument.load(new File(path))) {

            if (!document.isEncrypted()) {

                PDFTextStripper tStripper = new PDFTextStripper();
                String pdfFileInText = tStripper.getText(document);
                String lines[] = pdfFileInText.split("\\r?\\n");
                for (String line : lines) {
                    String[] words = line.split(" ");

                    for (String word : words) {
                        uniqueWords.add(word);

                    }

                }
              System.out.println(uniqueWords);

            }
        } catch (IOException e){
            System.err.println("Exception while trying to read pdf document - " + e);
        }
        Object[] words =  uniqueWords.toArray();
        System.out.println(words[1].toString());

        MysqlAccess connection=new MysqlAccess();

        for(int i = 1 ; i <= words.length - 1 ; i++ ) {

            connection.readDataBase(path, words[i].toString());

        }

        System.out.println("Completed");

    }

}

This is my hash:

[, highlight, of, Even, copy, file,, or, ., ,, 1, reader,, different, D, F, ll, link, ea, This, ed, document, V, P, ability, regardless, g, d, text., e, b, a, n, o, web, l, footnote., should, Most, IDRH, selection, text-searchable, positioning, u, s, what, r, PDF., happens, er, y, x, to, body, single, ca, te, together, ti, th, would, when, be, Text-Searchable, document,, text, isn't, such, kinds, sh, co, ld, font,, example, ch, this, attempt, have, t,, Notice,, contained, from, re, text.1, page,, style, page., able, if, is, You, standard, PDF, your, as, readers, you, the, in, main, an, iz]

If they are unique, why does it throws " Duplicate entry for key PRIMARY" when I try to insert into a primary key column?

Any suggestion would be appreciated.

23
  • 3
    Obviously they're not the same string.
    – shmosel
    Oct 10, 2018 at 2:52
  • Your input might have also contained things like ,, spaces, tabs and so on.
    – Jai
    Oct 10, 2018 at 2:55
  • Could reader, be a word? You don't appear to handle punctuation.
    – dave
    Oct 10, 2018 at 2:55
  • 1
    Your database might have a different notion of uniqueness. For example, it might treat foo and FOO as the same value. The error message should tell you exactly where it's failing.
    – shmosel
    Oct 10, 2018 at 3:02
  • 1
    You can use a case-insensitive set: new TreeSet<>(String.CASE_INSENSITIVE_ORDER)
    – shmosel
    Oct 10, 2018 at 3:17

1 Answer 1

2

HashSet doesn't allow any duplicate to be entered to it.

Here is the add(E e) method description of HashSet class:

public boolean add(E e)

Adds the specified element to this set if it is not already present. More formally, adds the specified element e to this set if this set contains no element e2 such that (e==null ? e2==null : e.equals(e2)). If this set already contains the element, the call leaves the set unchanged and returns false.

In your case, you are be getting string array with strings having single space and strings with multiple spaces while you are calling split method on pdfFileInText causing to have your HashSet data structure to have both single spaced string and multi-spaced string also. But while inserting to the database somewhere the string is being trimmed causing the duplicate entry.

To elaborate more on this please look into the below code snippet:

public class TestHashSetUniqueness {
public static void main(String[] args) {
    HashSet<String> hashSet = new HashSet<String>();
    String oneSpace = " ";
    String twoSpaces = "  ";

    hashSet.add(oneSpace);
    hashSet.add(twoSpaces);

    // Here HashSet size is 2 as it is treating string objects oneSpace
    // and twoSpaces as two different strings.
    System.out.println("HashSet size without trim() : "+hashSet.size());

    hashSet.clear();
    hashSet.add(oneSpace.trim());
    hashSet.add(twoSpaces.trim());

    // As we are trimming(removing the excess spaces) spaces in the strings
    // causing our HashSet to have only one element there by avoiding duplicates
    System.out.println("HashSet size with trim() : "+hashSet.size());
}

}

So while adding your strings to HashSet call trim() on the string to fix your issue.

I hope this answers your question.

3
  • Does it ignore duplicates for lowercase and uppercase like Fish and fish? My SQL won't let me insert if these two elements are in the hashset
    – TomCold
    Oct 10, 2018 at 3:18
  • No it doesn't. For a HashSet<String> the uniqueness criteria is the result of String::equals
    – Stephen C
    Oct 10, 2018 at 3:29
  • To filter duplicates based on its case, you need to use TreeSet with CASE_INSENSITIVE_ORDER comparator. Please go through the below link to get more idea. stackoverflow.com/questions/24558456/… Oct 10, 2018 at 3:31

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