I need to split my String by spaces. For this I tried:
str = "Hello I'm your String";
String[] splited = str.split(" ");
But it doesn't seem to work.
What you have should work. If, however, the spaces provided are defaulting to... something else? You can use the whitespace regex:
str = "Hello I'm your String";
String[] splited = str.split("\\s+");
This will cause any number of consecutive spaces to split your string into tokens.
[ +\\-/;]+
- notice the \` around the
-` to escape it. Now, this will probably match This is+a+ - + - + - test
into 4 tokens, which may or may not be desired. The real problem is you can't use \\s
to match "any whitespace". You might be better off not using split, and just using Matcher m = Pattern.compile("([A-Za-z0-9]+)").matcher(text); while(m.find()) list.add(m.group(1));
to fetch words instead of splitting a big text.
While the accepted answer is good, be aware that you will end up with a leading empty string if your input string starts with a white space. For example, with:
String str = " Hello I'm your String";
String[] splitStr = str.split("\\s+");
The result will be:
splitStr[0] == "";
splitStr[1] == "Hello";
splitStr[2] == "I'm";
splitStr[3] == "Your";
splitStr[4] == "String";
So you might want to trim your string before splitting it:
String str = " Hello I'm your String";
String[] splitStr = str.trim().split("\\s+");
[edit]
In addition to the trim
caveat, you might want to consider the unicode non-breaking space character (U+00A0
). This character prints just like a regular space in string, and often lurks in copy-pasted text from rich text editors or web pages. They are not handled by .trim()
which tests for characters to remove using c <= ' '
; \s
will not catch them either.
Instead, you can use \p{Blank}
but you need to enable unicode character support as well which the regular split
won't do. For example, this will work: Pattern.compile("\\p{Blank}", UNICODE_CHARACTER_CLASS).split(words)
but it won't do the trim
part.
The following demonstrates the problem and provides a solution. It is far from optimal to rely on regex for this, but now that Java has 8bit / 16bit byte representation, an efficient solution for this becomes quite long.
public class SplitStringTest {
static final Pattern TRIM_UNICODE_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("^\\p{Blank}*(.*)\\p{Blank}*$", UNICODE_CHARACTER_CLASS);
static final Pattern SPLIT_SPACE_UNICODE_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("\\p{Blank}+", UNICODE_CHARACTER_CLASS);
public static String[] trimSplitUnicodeBySpace(String str) {
Matcher trimMatcher = TRIM_UNICODE_PATTERN.matcher(str);
boolean ignored = trimMatcher.matches();
return SPLIT_SPACE_UNICODE_PATTERN.split(trimMatcher.group(1));
}
@Test
public void test() {
String words = " Hello I'm\u00A0your String\u00A0";
// non-breaking space here --^ and there -----^
String[] split = words.split(" ");
String[] trimAndSplit = words.trim().split(" ");
String[] splitUnicode = SPLIT_SPACE_UNICODE_PATTERN.split(words);
String[] trimAndSplitUnicode = trimSplitUnicodeBySpace(words);
System.out.println("words: [" + words + "]");
System.out.println("split: [" + String.join("][", split) + "]");
System.out.println("trimAndSplit: [" + String.join("][", trimAndSplit) + "]");
System.out.println("splitUnicode: [" + String.join("][", splitUnicode) + "]");
System.out.println("trimAndSplitUnicode: [" + String.join("][", trimAndSplitUnicode) + "]");
}
}
Results in:
words: [ Hello I'm your String ]
split: [][Hello][][][][I'm your][String ]
trimAndSplit: [Hello][][][][I'm your][String ]
splitUnicode: [][Hello][I'm][your][String]
trimAndSplitUnicode: [Hello][I'm][your][String]
+
I do believe that putting a regular expression in the str.split parentheses should solve the issue. The Java String.split() method is based upon regular expressions so what you need is:
str = "Hello I'm your String";
String[] splitStr = str.split("\\s+");
Use Stringutils.split()
to split the string by whites paces. For example StringUtils.split("Hello World")
returns "Hello" and "World";
In order to solve the mentioned case we use split method like this
String split[]= StringUtils.split("Hello I'm your String");
when we print the split array the output will be :
Hello
I'm
your
String
Try
String[] splited = str.split("\\s");
http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/regex/pre_char_classes.html
if somehow you don't wanna use String split method then you can use StringTokenizer class in Java as..
StringTokenizer tokens = new StringTokenizer("Hello I'm your String", " ");
String[] splited = new String[tokens.countTokens()];
int index = 0;
while(tokens.hasMoreTokens()){
splited[index] = tokens.nextToken();
++index;
}
Try this one
String str = "This is String";
String[] splited = str.split("\\s+");
String split_one=splited[0];
String split_second=splited[1];
String split_three=splited[2];
Log.d("Splited String ", "Splited String" + split_one+split_second+split_three);
OK, so we have to do splitting as you already got the answer I would generalize it.
If you want to split any string by spaces, delimiter(special chars).
First, remove the leading space as they create most of the issues.
str1 = " Hello I'm your String ";
str2 = " Are you serious about this question_ boy, aren't you? ";
First remove the leading space which can be space, tab etc.
String s = str1.replaceAll("^\\s+","");//starting with whitespace one or more
Now if you want to split by space or any special char.
String[] sa = s.split("[^\\w]+");//split by any non word char
But as w contains [a-zA-Z_0-9] ,so if you want to split by underscore(_) also use
String[] sa = s.split("[!,? ._'@]+");//for str2 after removing leading space
replaceAll("^\\s+","")
saved my day. That worked for my case. Thank you
Commented
May 21, 2020 at 13:37
An alternative way would be:
import java.util.regex.Pattern;
...
private static final Pattern SPACE = Pattern.compile(" ");
String[] arr = SPACE.split(str); // str is the string to be split
Saw it here
You can separate string using the below code:
String theString="Hello world";
String[] parts = theString.split(" ");
String first = parts[0];//"hello"
String second = parts[1];//"World"
Very Simple Example below:
Hope it helps.
String str = "Hello I'm your String";
String[] splited = str.split(" ");
var splited = str.split(" ");
var splited1=splited[0]; //Hello
var splited2=splited[1]; //I'm
var splited3=splited[2]; //your
var splited4=splited[3]; //String
Since it's been a while since these answers were posted, here's another more current way to do what's asked:
List<String> output = new ArrayList<>();
try (Scanner sc = new Scanner(inputString)) {
while (sc.hasNext()) output.add(sc.next());
}
Now you have a list of strings (which is arguably better than an array); if you do need an array, you can do output.toArray(new String[0]);
Not only white space, but my solution also solves the invisible characters as well.
str = "Hello I'm your String";
String[] splited = str.split("\p{Z}");
Here is a method to trim a String that has a "," or white space
private String shorterName(String s){
String[] sArr = s.split("\\,|\\s+");
String output = sArr[0];
return output;
}
Simple to Spit String by Space
String CurrentString = "First Second Last";
String[] separated = CurrentString.split(" ");
for (int i = 0; i < separated.length; i++) {
if (i == 0) {
Log.d("FName ** ", "" + separated[0].trim() + "\n ");
} else if (i == 1) {
Log.d("MName ** ", "" + separated[1].trim() + "\n ");
} else if (i == 2) {
Log.d("LName ** ", "" + separated[2].trim());
}
}
Join solutions in one!
public String getFirstNameFromFullName(String fullName){
int indexString = fullName.trim().lastIndexOf(' ');
return (indexString != -1) ? fullName.trim().split("\\s+")[0].toUpperCase() : fullName.toUpperCase();
}
Single quotes for char instead of double
String[] splited = str.split(' ');
All your need is
org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils.split(message, " ")
You need not use trim your string or consider enable unicode character support , and you also could ignore multi-spaces in the string.
fork
link near top left corner.