230

I have a Java String object. I need to extract only digits from it. I'll give an example:

"123-456-789" I want "123456789"

Is there a library function that extracts only digits?

Thanks for the answers. Before I try these I need to know if I have to install any additional llibraries?

15 Answers 15

614

You can use regex and delete non-digits.

str = str.replaceAll("\\D+","");
11
  • 6
    nice short code. A linear search might be faster but i think yours makes more sense.
    – kasten
    Oct 27, 2010 at 7:46
  • 23
    I guess you can downvote anything you like to downvote (no sarcasm intended). But my personal opinion is: when great developers (and we have lots of them here) share some of their advice for free, then I'm going to honor that, and I only downvote stuff that's really awful (check my profile, my current ratio is 14xx up against 17 down). But that's my personal philosophy and you are free to have your own. Oct 27, 2010 at 13:19
  • 91
    This wont work if your number has a decimal point, it removes the decimal point too. str = str.replaceAll("[^\\.0123456789]",""); Jan 10, 2012 at 22:21
  • 2
    Although the regex is supremely simple and clean to look at, it suffers from performance issues and should only be used where you have a one-off strip (like a form submit). If you are processing a lot of data, this is not the way to go. Dec 19, 2012 at 21:36
  • 2
    and if you need to exclude anything, like a decimal point, (?!\\.)
    – azerafati
    Apr 17, 2014 at 10:43
50

Here's a more verbose solution. Less elegant, but probably faster:

public static String stripNonDigits(
            final CharSequence input /* inspired by seh's comment */){
    final StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(
            input.length() /* also inspired by seh's comment */);
    for(int i = 0; i < input.length(); i++){
        final char c = input.charAt(i);
        if(c > 47 && c < 58){
            sb.append(c);
        }
    }
    return sb.toString();
}

Test Code:

public static void main(final String[] args){
    final String input = "0-123-abc-456-xyz-789";
    final String result = stripNonDigits(input);
    System.out.println(result);
}

Output:

0123456789

BTW: I did not use Character.isDigit(ch) because it accepts many other chars except 0 - 9.

15
  • 4
    You should provide a size to the StringBuilder constructor (such as input.length()) to ensure that it won't need to reallocate. You don't need to demand a String here; CharSequence suffices. Also, you can separate the allocation of the StringBuilder from the collection of non-digits by writing a separate function that accepts a CharSequence as input and an Appendable instance as an output accumulator.
    – seh
    Nov 2, 2010 at 0:18
  • 1
    @seh Sounds interesting but rather than commenting why not create your own answer with the extensions?
    – RedYeti
    Jul 2, 2012 at 14:34
  • 4
    @RedYeti Letting this answer remain and adding a comment is more honourable since Sean receives upvotes then. It's also a lot quicker to critique others' code than rewrite it if you're in a hurry. Don't punish seh for making a valuable contribution, he didn't have to add those useful tidbits, and your response makes him less likely to do so next time.
    – KomodoDave
    Apr 20, 2013 at 14:18
  • 2
    I'm not "punishing" anyone - that's a complete misinterpretation of what I was saying to @seh. My point was that his comments added so much which was worthwhile and in fact changed so much that I felt it warranted an answer of it's own. I'm sure Sean Patrick Floyd isn't concerned with kudos only helping others and would be perfectly happy with seh providing his own answer. I was merely encouraging seh since I felt his contribution deserved greater visibility. How it's possible to read my comment as anything else completely puzzles me but I apologise to seh if it somehow did.
    – RedYeti
    Apr 22, 2013 at 10:50
  • 1
    I like how these discussions pick up after lying dormant for a while. Perhaps the best thing to do here is for me to edit Sean's answer, augmenting it with my suggestions. That way, Sean will continue to receive the credit unless the answer transitions to community wiki status.
    – seh
    Apr 22, 2013 at 22:27
24

Using Google Guava:

CharMatcher.inRange('0','9').retainFrom("123-456-789")

UPDATE:

Using Precomputed CharMatcher can further improve performance

CharMatcher ASCII_DIGITS=CharMatcher.inRange('0','9').precomputed();  
ASCII_DIGITS.retainFrom("123-456-789");
2
  • 5
    There is now Charmatcher.DIGIT predefined. Feb 10, 2012 at 11:48
  • CharMatcher ASCII_DIGITS = CharMatcher.digit().precomputed();
    – yv84_
    Jan 11 at 13:47
22
public String extractDigits(String src) {
    StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();
    for (int i = 0; i < src.length(); i++) {
        char c = src.charAt(i);
        if (Character.isDigit(c)) {
            builder.append(c);
        }
    }
    return builder.toString();
}
1
20
input.replaceAll("[^0-9?!\\.]","")

This will ignore the decimal points.

eg: if you have an input as 445.3kg the output will be 445.3.

1
  • I have "4.5 zi." not working because it keeps the second . too Jan 31, 2016 at 11:57
11

Using Google Guava:

CharMatcher.DIGIT.retainFrom("123-456-789");

CharMatcher is plug-able and quite interesting to use, for instance you can do the following:

String input = "My phone number is 123-456-789!";
String output = CharMatcher.is('-').or(CharMatcher.DIGIT).retainFrom(input);

output == 123-456-789

5
  • Very nice solution (+1), but it suffers from the same problem as others: lots of characters qualify as unicode digits, not only the ascii digits. This code will retain all of these characters: unicode.org/cldr/utility/list-unicodeset.jsp?a=%5Cp%7Bdigit%7D Oct 27, 2010 at 8:41
  • @seanizer: Then will this be better CharMatcher.inRange('1','9').retainFrom("123-456-789")
    – Emil
    Oct 27, 2010 at 10:32
  • @Emil more like CharMatcher.inRange('0','9'), but: yes Oct 27, 2010 at 10:33
  • inRange is what lies behind CharMatcher.DIGIT; pastie.org/1252471 It simply takes into account attitional UTF number ranges, I would still consider these as digits, since in reality they are, they are simply not ASCII encoded.
    – BjornS
    Oct 27, 2010 at 11:31
  • You can also use CharMatcher.JAVA_DIGIT for the same purpose, that will only accept digits as per Character.isDigit
    – BjornS
    Oct 27, 2010 at 11:34
8
public class FindDigitFromString 
{

    public static void main(String[] args) 
    {
        String s="  Hi How Are You 11  ";        
        String s1=s.replaceAll("[^0-9]+", "");
        //*replacing all the value of string except digit by using "[^0-9]+" regex.*
       System.out.println(s1);          
   }
}

Output: 11

7

Use regular expression to match your requirement.

String num,num1,num2;
String str = "123-456-789";
String regex ="(\\d+)";
Matcher matcher = Pattern.compile( regex ).matcher( str);
while (matcher.find( ))
{
num = matcher.group();     
System.out.print(num);                 
}
5

I inspired by code Sean Patrick Floyd and little rewrite it for maximum performance i get.

public static String stripNonDigitsV2( CharSequence input ) {
    if (input == null)
        return null;
    if ( input.length() == 0 )
        return "";

    char[] result = new char[input.length()];
    int cursor = 0;
    CharBuffer buffer = CharBuffer.wrap( input );

    while ( buffer.hasRemaining() ) {
        char chr = buffer.get();
        if ( chr > 47 && chr < 58 )
            result[cursor++] = chr;
    }

    return new String( result, 0, cursor );
}

i do Performance test to very long String with minimal numbers and result is:

  • Original code is 25,5% slower
  • Guava approach is 2.5-3 times slower
  • Regular expression with D+ is 3-3.5 times slower
  • Regular expression with only D is 25+ times slower

Btw it depends on how long that string is. With string that contains only 6 number is guava 50% slower and regexp 1 times slower

5

Using Kotlin and Lambda expressions you can do it like this:

val digitStr = str.filter { it.isDigit() }
3

You can use str.replaceAll("[^0-9]", "");

2

I have finalized the code for phone numbers +9 (987) 124124.

Unicode characters occupy 4 bytes.

public static String stripNonDigitsV2( CharSequence input ) {
    if (input == null)
        return null;
    if ( input.length() == 0 )
        return "";

    char[] result = new char[input.length()];
    int cursor = 0;
    CharBuffer buffer = CharBuffer.wrap( input );
    int i=0;
    while ( i< buffer.length()  ) { //buffer.hasRemaining()
        char chr = buffer.get(i);
        if (chr=='u'){
            i=i+5;
            chr=buffer.get(i);
        }

        if ( chr > 39 && chr < 58 )
            result[cursor++] = chr;
        i=i+1;
    }

    return new String( result, 0, cursor );
}
2

Code:

public class saasa {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        // TODO Auto-generated method stub
        String t="123-456-789";
        t=t.replaceAll("-", "");
        System.out.println(t);
    }
0
import java.util.*;
public class FindDigits{

 public static void main(String []args){
    FindDigits h=new  FindDigits();
    h.checkStringIsNumerical();
 }

 void checkStringIsNumerical(){
    String h="hello 123 for the rest of the 98475wt355";
     for(int i=0;i<h.length();i++)  {
      if(h.charAt(i)!=' '){
       System.out.println("Is this '"+h.charAt(i)+"' is a digit?:"+Character.isDigit(h.charAt(i)));
       }
    }
 }

void checkStringIsNumerical2(){
    String h="hello 123 for 2the rest of the 98475wt355";
     for(int i=0;i<h.length();i++)  {
         char chr=h.charAt(i);
      if(chr!=' '){
       if(Character.isDigit(chr)){
          System.out.print(chr) ;
       }
       }
    }
 }
}
0

i use this,

Kotlin

str.replace("[^0-9/]".toRegex(), "")

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