Say I have 2 strings,
String s1 = "AbBaCca";
String s2 = "bac";
I want to preform a check returning that s2 is contained within s1. I can do this with:
return s1.contains(s2);
I am pretty sure that contains() is case sensitive, however I can't determine this for sure from reading the documentation. If it is then I suppose my best method would be something like:
return s1.toLowerCase().contains(s2.toLowerCase());
All this aside, does anyone know of another (possibly better) way to accomplish this without caring about case-sensitivity?
Source: Tips4all
Yes, contains is case sensitive. You can use java.util.regex.Pattern with the CASE_INSENSITIVE flag for case insensitive matching:
ReplyDeletePattern.compile(Pattern.quote(s2), Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE).matcher(s1).find();
EDIT: If s2 contains regex special characters (of which there are many) it's important to quote it first. I've corrected my answer since it is the first one people will see, but vote up Matt Quail's since he pointed this out.
One problem with the answer by Dave L. is when s2 contains regex markup such as \d etc.
ReplyDeleteYou want to call Pattern.quote() on s2:
Pattern.compile(Pattern.quote(s2), Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE).matcher(s1).find();
Yes this is achievable, I just did it for a school assignment actually.
ReplyDeleteString s1 = "abBaCca";
String s2 = "bac";
String s1Lower = s1;
//s1Lower is exact same string, now convert it to lowercase, I left the s1 intact for print purposes if needed
s1Lower = s1Lower.toLowerCase();
if (s1Lower.contains(s2)) {
//THIS statement will be TRUE
String trueStatement = "TRUE!"
}
return trueStatement;
This code will return the String "TRUE!" as it found that your characters were contained.
DrJava would be an extremely easy way to test this when the documentation fails you. Just type a couple of test cases into its Interactions window, and you should find out.
ReplyDeleteYou can use
ReplyDeleteorg.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils.containsIgnoreCase("AbBaCca", "bac");
apache commons lib is very useful for this sort of things. And this particular one may be better than regular expressions as regex is always expensive in terms of performance.
I'm not sure what your main question is here, but yes, .contains is case sensitive.
ReplyDeleteIt will look for the exact sequence of characters that are passed to it.
ReplyDeleteIf you want to ignore case then what you have there looks fine to me.
String x="abCd";
ReplyDeleteSystem.out.println(Pattern.compile("c",Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE).matcher(x).find());
A simpler way of doing this (without worrying about pattern matching) would be converting both Strings to lowercase:
ReplyDeleteString foobar = "fooBar";
String bar = "FOO";
if (foobar.toLowerCase().contains(bar.toLowerCase()) {
System.out.println("It's a match!");
}