How can I check whether a string is not null and not empty?
public void doStuff(String str)
{
if (str != null && str != "**here I want to check the 'str' is empty or not**")
{
/* handle empty string */
}
/* ... */
}
What about isEmpty() ?
if(str != null && !str.isEmpty())
Be sure to use the parts of && in this order, because java will not proceed to evaluate the second part if the first part of && fails, thus ensuring you will not get a null pointer exception from str.isEmpty() if str is null.
Beware, it's only available since Java SE 1.6. You have to check str.length() == 0 on previous versions.
To ignore whitespace as well:
if(str != null && !str.trim().isEmpty())
(since Java 11 str.trim().isEmpty() can be reduced to str.isBlank() which will also test for other Unicode white spaces)
Wrapped in a handy function:
public static boolean empty( final String s ) {
// Null-safe, short-circuit evaluation.
return s == null || s.trim().isEmpty();
}
Becomes:
if( !empty( str ) )
Use org.apache.commons.lang.StringUtils
I like to use Apache commons-lang for these kinds of things, and especially the StringUtils utility class:
import org.apache.commons.lang.StringUtils;
if (StringUtils.isNotBlank(str)) {
...
}
if (StringUtils.isBlank(str)) {
...
}
Just adding Android in here:
import android.text.TextUtils;
if (!TextUtils.isEmpty(str)) {
...
}
To add to #BJorn and #SeanPatrickFloyd The Guava way to do this is:
Strings.nullToEmpty(str).isEmpty();
// or
Strings.isNullOrEmpty(str);
Commons Lang is more readable at times but I have been slowly relying more on Guava plus sometimes Commons Lang is confusing when it comes to isBlank() (as in what is whitespace or not).
Guava's version of Commons Lang isBlank would be:
Strings.nullToEmpty(str).trim().isEmpty()
I will say code that doesn't allow "" (empty) AND null is suspicious and potentially buggy in that it probably doesn't handle all cases where is not allowing null makes sense (although for SQL I can understand as SQL/HQL is weird about '').
str != null && str.length() != 0
alternatively
str != null && !str.equals("")
or
str != null && !"".equals(str)
Note: The second check (first and second alternatives) assumes str is not null. It's ok only because the first check is doing that (and Java doesn't does the second check if the first is false)!
IMPORTANT: DON'T use == for string equality. == checks the pointer is equal, not the value. Two strings can be in different memory addresses (two instances) but have the same value!
Almost every library I know defines a utility class called StringUtils, StringUtil or StringHelper, and they usually include the method you are looking for.
My personal favorite is Apache Commons / Lang, where in the StringUtils class, you get both the
StringUtils.isEmpty(String) and the
StringUtils.isBlank(String) method
(The first checks whether a string is null or empty, the second checks whether it is null, empty or whitespace only)
There are similar utility classes in Spring, Wicket and lots of other libs. If you don't use external libraries, you might want to introduce a StringUtils class in your own project.
Update: many years have passed, and these days I'd recommend using Guava's Strings.isNullOrEmpty(string) method.
This works for me:
import com.google.common.base.Strings;
if (!Strings.isNullOrEmpty(myString)) {
return myString;
}
Returns true if the given string is null or is the empty string.
Consider normalizing your string references with nullToEmpty. If you
do, you can use String.isEmpty() instead of this method, and you won't
need special null-safe forms of methods like String.toUpperCase
either. Or, if you'd like to normalize "in the other direction,"
converting empty strings to null, you can use emptyToNull.
There is a new method in java-11: String#isBlank
Returns true if the string is empty or contains only white space codepoints, otherwise false.
jshell> "".isBlank()
$7 ==> true
jshell> " ".isBlank()
$8 ==> true
jshell> " ! ".isBlank()
$9 ==> false
This could be combined with Optional to check if string is null or empty
boolean isNullOrEmpty = Optional.ofNullable(str).map(String::isBlank).orElse(true);
String#isBlank
How about:
if(str!= null && str.length() != 0 )
Returns true or false based on input
Predicate<String> p = (s)-> ( s != null && !s.isEmpty());
p.test(string);
Use Apache StringUtils' isNotBlank method like
StringUtils.isNotBlank(str)
It will return true only if the str is not null and is not empty.
For completeness: If you are already using the Spring framework, the StringUtils provide the method
org.springframework.util.StringUtils.hasLength(String str)
Returns:
true if the String is not null and has length
as well as the method
org.springframework.util.StringUtils.hasText(String str)
Returns:
true if the String is not null, its length is greater than 0, and it does not contain whitespace only
You can use the functional style of checking:
Optional.ofNullable(str)
.filter(s -> !(s.trim().isEmpty()))
.ifPresent(result -> {
// your query setup goes here
});
You should use org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils.isNotBlank() or org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils.isNotEmpty. The decision between these two is based on what you actually want to check for.
The isNotBlank() checks that the input parameter is:
not Null,
not the empty string ("")
not a sequence of whitespace characters (" ")
The isNotEmpty() checks only that the input parameter is
not null
not the Empty String ("")
If you don't want to include the whole library; just include the code you want from it. You'll have to maintain it yourself; but it's a pretty straight forward function. Here it is copied from commons.apache.org
/**
* <p>Checks if a String is whitespace, empty ("") or null.</p>
*
* <pre>
* StringUtils.isBlank(null) = true
* StringUtils.isBlank("") = true
* StringUtils.isBlank(" ") = true
* StringUtils.isBlank("bob") = false
* StringUtils.isBlank(" bob ") = false
* </pre>
*
* #param str the String to check, may be null
* #return <code>true</code> if the String is null, empty or whitespace
* #since 2.0
*/
public static boolean isBlank(String str) {
int strLen;
if (str == null || (strLen = str.length()) == 0) {
return true;
}
for (int i = 0; i < strLen; i++) {
if ((Character.isWhitespace(str.charAt(i)) == false)) {
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
test equals with an empty string and null in the same conditional:
if(!"".equals(str) && str != null) {
// do stuff.
}
Does not throws NullPointerException if str is null, since Object.equals() returns false if arg is null.
the other construct str.equals("") would throw the dreaded NullPointerException. Some might consider bad form using a String literal as the object upon wich equals() is called but it does the job.
Also check this answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/531825/1532705
Simple solution :
private boolean stringNotEmptyOrNull(String st) {
return st != null && !st.isEmpty();
}
As seanizer said above, Apache StringUtils is fantastic for this, if you were to include guava you should do the following;
public List<Employee> findEmployees(String str, int dep) {
Preconditions.checkState(StringUtils.isNotBlank(str), "Invalid input, input is blank or null");
/** code here **/
}
May I also recommend that you refer to the columns in your result set by name rather than by index, this will make your code much easier to maintain.
You can use StringUtils.isEmpty(), It will result true if the string is either null or empty.
String str1 = "";
String str2 = null;
if(StringUtils.isEmpty(str)){
System.out.println("str1 is null or empty");
}
if(StringUtils.isEmpty(str2)){
System.out.println("str2 is null or empty");
}
will result in
str1 is null or empty
str2 is null or empty
I've made my own utility function to check several strings at once, rather than having an if statement full of if(str != null && !str.isEmpty && str2 != null && !str2.isEmpty). This is the function:
public class StringUtils{
public static boolean areSet(String... strings)
{
for(String s : strings)
if(s == null || s.isEmpty)
return false;
return true;
}
}
so I can simply write:
if(!StringUtils.areSet(firstName,lastName,address)
{
//do something
}
In case you are using Java 8 and want to have a more Functional Programming approach, you can define a Function that manages the control and then you can reuse it and apply() whenever is needed.
Coming to practice, you can define the Function as
Function<String, Boolean> isNotEmpty = s -> s != null && !"".equals(s)
Then, you can use it by simply calling the apply() method as:
String emptyString = "";
isNotEmpty.apply(emptyString); // this will return false
String notEmptyString = "StackOverflow";
isNotEmpty.apply(notEmptyString); // this will return true
If you prefer, you can define a Function that checks if the String is empty and then negate it with !.
In this case, the Function will look like as :
Function<String, Boolean> isEmpty = s -> s == null || "".equals(s)
Then, you can use it by simply calling the apply() method as:
String emptyString = "";
!isEmpty.apply(emptyString); // this will return false
String notEmptyString = "StackOverflow";
!isEmpty.apply(notEmptyString); // this will return true
If you are using Spring Boot then below code will do the Job
StringUtils.hasLength(str)
With Java 8 Optional you can do:
public Boolean isStringCorrect(String str) {
return Optional.ofNullable(str)
.map(String::trim)
.map(string -> !str.isEmpty())
.orElse(false);
}
In this expression, you will handle Strings that consist of spaces as well.
To check if a string is not empty you can check if it is null but this doesn't account for a string with whitespace. You could use str.trim() to trim all the whitespace and then chain .isEmpty() to ensure that the result is not empty.
if(str != null && !str.trim().isEmpty()) { /* do your stuffs here */ }
I would advise Guava or Apache Commons according to your actual need. Check the different behaviors in my example code:
import com.google.common.base.Strings;
import org.apache.commons.lang.StringUtils;
/**
* Created by hu0983 on 2016.01.13..
*/
public class StringNotEmptyTesting {
public static void main(String[] args){
String a = " ";
String b = "";
String c=null;
System.out.println("Apache:");
if(!StringUtils.isNotBlank(a)){
System.out.println(" a is blank");
}
if(!StringUtils.isNotBlank(b)){
System.out.println(" b is blank");
}
if(!StringUtils.isNotBlank(c)){
System.out.println(" c is blank");
}
System.out.println("Google:");
if(Strings.isNullOrEmpty(Strings.emptyToNull(a))){
System.out.println(" a is NullOrEmpty");
}
if(Strings.isNullOrEmpty(b)){
System.out.println(" b is NullOrEmpty");
}
if(Strings.isNullOrEmpty(c)){
System.out.println(" c is NullOrEmpty");
}
}
}
Result:
Apache:
a is blank
b is blank
c is blank
Google:
b is NullOrEmpty
c is NullOrEmpty
Simply, to ignore white space as well:
if (str == null || str.trim().length() == 0) {
// str is empty
} else {
// str is not empty
}
Consider the below example, I have added 4 test cases in main method. three test cases will pass when you follow above commented snipts.
public class EmptyNullBlankWithNull {
public static boolean nullEmptyBlankWithNull(String passedStr) {
if (passedStr != null && !passedStr.trim().isEmpty() && !passedStr.trim().equals("null")) {
// TODO when string is null , Empty, Blank
return true;
}else{
// TODO when string is null , Empty, Blank
return false;
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
String stringNull = null; // test case 1
String stringEmpty = ""; // test case 2
String stringWhiteSpace = " "; // test case 3
String stringWhiteSpaceWithNull = " null"; // test case 4
System.out.println("TestCase result:------ "+nullEmptyBlankWithNull(stringWhiteSpaceWithNull));
}
}
BUT test case 4 will return true(it has white space before null) which is wrong:
String stringWhiteSpaceWithNull = " null"; // test case 4
We have to add below conditions to make it work propper:
!passedStr.trim().equals("null")
If you use Spring framework then you can use method:
org.springframework.util.StringUtils.isEmpty(#Nullable Object str);
This method accepts any Object as an argument, comparing it to null and the empty String. As a consequence, this method will never return true for a non-null non-String object.
To check on if all the string attributes in an object is empty(Instead of using !=null on all the field names following java reflection api approach
private String name1;
private String name2;
private String name3;
public boolean isEmpty() {
for (Field field : this.getClass().getDeclaredFields()) {
try {
field.setAccessible(true);
if (field.get(this) != null) {
return false;
}
} catch (Exception e) {
System.out.println("Exception occurred in processing");
}
}
return true;
}
This method would return true if all the String field values are blank,It would return false if any one values is present in the String attributes
I've encountered a situation where I must check that "null" (as a string) must be regarded as empty. Also white space and an actual null must return true.
I've finally settled on the following function...
public boolean isEmpty(String testString) {
return ((null==testString) || "".equals((""+testString).trim()) || "null".equals((""+testString).toLowerCase()));
}
I'm creating a web application by using java ee. I have a doubt. To check correctly if a text field is NOT empty is right to do this check?
if(home_number != null || !(home_number.equals("")))
{
}
There are also .isEmpty() functin and lenght() > 0 to check if a string is NOT EMPTY. Which is the best way?
In order to handle all the corner cases (what if string is null, what if it is only composed of spaces etc...) you'll probably be better off using a library that covers that properly for you like Apache commons lang and its StringUtils class: http://commons.apache.org/proper/commons-lang/apidocs/org/apache/commons/lang3/StringUtils.html
And therefore have a more readable code :
if(StringUtils.isNotEmpty(home_number)) { ...
isEmpty is more preferable as the documentation said
Returns true if, and only if, length() is 0.
so if the length is 0 then it will return directly as true.
vs. !(home_number.equals("")
public boolean equals(Object anObject) {
if (this == anObject) {
return true;
}
if (anObject instanceof String) {
String anotherString = (String)anObject;
int n = count;
if (n == anotherString.count) {
char v1[] = value;
char v2[] = anotherString.value;
int i = offset;
int j = anotherString.offset;
while (n-- != 0) {
if (v1[i++] != v2[j++])
return false;
}
return true;
}
}
return false;
You need to trim your string first before checking if its empty
}
The cleanest pattern, in my opinion is:
if (a != null && !a.isEmpty()) {
// ...
}
And instead of repeating that hundreds of times, write a small static utility method to wrap this behavior, or use Google Guava's Strings.isNullOrEmpty()
You can check if input-field is not empty using .isEmpty(), but what if the text-field is filled with spaces ???
So, I'll recommend you to use .trim() before checking for empty String :
if(str != null && !(str.trim().isEmpty())){
// do whatever you want
}
Situation: I am coming across a lot of checks in my code. And I would like to know of a way in which I can reduce them.
if(needle!=null && haystack!=null)
{
if(needle.length()==0)
return true;
else
{
if(haystack.length()==0)
return false;
else
{
// Do 2 for loops to check character by character comparison in a substring
}
}
}
else
return false;
Perhaps a different code style would increase the readability of your code and reduce the amount of nested if statements for all of your checks.:
if (needle == null || haystack == null || haystack.isEmpty())
return false;
if (needle.isEmpty())
return true;
// compare strings here and return result.
You could consolidate that logic into a single method on a singleton 'StringFunctions' class and update the usages to use the common method as you encounter them.
You can create a wrapper class for the strings, then add a function like isValid() to them that checks if the length == 0. Use a Null Object that always returns false on isValid() to eliminate the null checks.
If you can create classes that you tell what to do, rather than passing strings that have to be null checked throughout your code, you will get more resuseable results:
class Haystack {
private static final Haystack NULL_HAYSTACK = new Haystack("");
private final String value;
public Haystack(String value) {
this.value = value;
}
public boolean containsNeedle(String needle) {
return needle != null && value.contains(needle);
}
}
I am trying to evaluate the following from a string
boolean value = evaluate("false || true && true && false || true");
I need to get a boolean value of true for this one.
Any ideas on how to solve this problem in the most efficient way?
String value = ("false || true && true && false || true");
boolean result = false;
for (String conj : value.split("\\|\\|")) {
boolean b = true;
for (String litteral : conj.split("&&"))
b &= Boolean.parseBoolean(litteral.trim());
result |= b;
}
System.out.println(result); // prints true
If the only operators are && and ||, then I think this will work:
static boolean eval(String str) {
String s = str.replaceAll("\\s|\\|\\|false|false\\|\\|", "");
return !s.contains("false") || s.contains("||true");
}
For more complicated expressions, I found this library just for that.
Don't know how efficient it is though.
You'll need a small boolean expressions grammar. A bit of recursive parsing should do the trick.
If you don't know how to write such a parser, you may use JavaCC or something similar.
there are parsergenerators available for which you can define a grammar.
But if you only got || and && as operators and true and false as values you can easily do this by yourself, by implmenting a very simple finite state machine:
1.) Split the string into the tokens
2.) parse the left most value by using Boolean.parseBoolean(token) and safe it's value in some instance variable (your state)
3.) combine your instance variable with the next boolean token using the given operator
4.) Repeat step3 until you finished through the whole string
This seems to work although i havent thorougly tested it :)
public class BooleanFSParser {
private boolean parse(String data) {
String[] tokens=data.split("\\s");
boolean state=Boolean.parseBoolean(tokens[0]);
for (int i=1;i<(tokens.length / 2) + 1;i=i+2){
if (tokens[i].equals("&&")){
state=state && Boolean.parseBoolean(tokens[i+1]);
}else{
state=state || Boolean.parseBoolean(tokens[i+1]);
}
}
return state;
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
BooleanFSParser parser = new BooleanFSParser();
boolean val = parser.parse("true && true || false");
System.out.println(String.valueOf(val));
}
}
thats should give you a cirrectly parsed value, but it will get a bit more complex if you allow brackets for example ;)
have fun and check here for the theory
Finite-state_machine
I did a little search on this but couldn't find anything useful.
The point being that if String value is either "true" or "false" the return value should be true. In every other value it should be false.
I tried these:
String value = "false";
System.out.println("test1: " + Boolean.parseBoolean(value));
System.out.println("test2: " + Boolean.valueOf(value));
System.out.println("test3: " + Boolean.getBoolean(value));
All functions returned false :(
parseBoolean(String) returns true if the String is (case-insensitive) "true", otherwise false
valueOf(String) ditto, returns the canonical Boolean Objects
getBoolean(String) is a red herring; it fetches the System property of the given name and compares that to "true"
There exists no method to test whether a String encodes a Boolean; for all practical effects, any non-"true"-String is "false".
return "true".equals(value) || "false".equals(value);
Apache commons-lang3 has BooleanUtils with a method toBooleanObject:
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject(String str)
// where:
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject(null) = null
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("true") = Boolean.TRUE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("false") = Boolean.FALSE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("on") = Boolean.TRUE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("ON") = Boolean.TRUE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("off") = Boolean.FALSE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("oFf") = Boolean.FALSE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("blue") = null
if ("true".equals(value) || "false".equals(value)) {
// do something
} else {
// do something else
}
Here's a method you can use to check if a value is a boolean:
boolean isBoolean(String value) {
return value != null && Arrays.stream(new String[]{"true", "false", "1", "0"})
.anyMatch(b -> b.equalsIgnoreCase(value));
}
Examples of using it:
System.out.println(isBoolean(null)); //false
System.out.println(isBoolean("")); //false
System.out.println(isBoolean("true")); //true
System.out.println(isBoolean("fALsE")); //true
System.out.println(isBoolean("asdf")); //false
System.out.println(isBoolean("01truefalse")); //false
The methods you're calling on the Boolean class don't check whether the string contains a valid boolean value, but they return the boolean value that represents the contents of the string: put "true" in string, they return true, put "false" in string, they return false.
You can surely use these methods, however, to check for valid boolean values, as I'd expect them to throw an exception if the string contains "hello" or something not boolean.
Wrap that in a Method ContainsBoolString and you're go.
EDIT
By the way, in C# there are methods like bool Int32.TryParse(string x, out int i) that perform the check whether the content can be parsed and then return the parsed result.
int i;
if (Int32.TryParse("Hello", out i))
// Hello is an int and its value is in i
else
// Hello is not an int
Benchmarks indicate they are way faster than the following:
int i;
try
{
i = Int32.Parse("Hello");
// Hello is an int and its value is in i
}
catch
{
// Hello is not an int
}
Maybe there are similar methods in Java? It's been a while since I've used Java...
Actually, checking for a Boolean type in a String (which is a type) is impossible. Basically you're asking how to do a 'string compare'.
Like others stated. You need to define when you want to return "true" or "false" (under what conditions). Do you want it to be case(in)sensitive? What if the value is null?
I think Boolean.valueOf() is your friend, javadoc says:
Returns a Boolean with a value represented by the specified String. The Boolean returned represents the value true if the string argument is not null and is equal, ignoring case, to the string "true".
Example: Boolean.valueOf("True") returns true.
Example: Boolean.valueOf("yes") returns false.
Can also do it by regex:
Pattern queryLangPattern = Pattern.compile("true|false", Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE);
Matcher matcher = queryLangPattern.matcher(booleanParam);
return matcher.matches();
Yes, but, didn't you parse "false"? If you parse "true", then they return true.
Maybe there's a misunderstanding: the methods don't test, if the String content represents a boolean value, they evaluate the String content to boolean.
String value = "True";
boolean result = value.equalsIgnoreCase("true") ? true : false;
Well for this, also have a look at org.apache.commons.lang.BooleanUtils#toBoolean(java.lang.String), along with many other useful functions.
return value.equals("false") || value.equals("true");
Something you should also take into consideration is character casing...
Instead of:
return value.equals("false") || value.equals("true");
Do this:
return value.equalsIgnoreCase("false") || value.equalsIgnoreCase("true");
I suggest that you take a look at the Java docs for these methods. It appears that you are using them incorrectly. These methods will not tell you if the string is a valid boolean value, but instead they return a boolean, set to true or false, based on the string that you pass in, "true" or "false".
http://www.j2ee.me/javase/6/docs/api/java/lang/Boolean.html
See oracle docs
public static boolean parseBoolean(String s) {
return ((s != null) && s.equalsIgnoreCase("true"));
}
function isBooleanString(val) {
if (val === "true" || val === "false"){
return true
} else {
return false
}
}
isBooleanString("true") // true
isBooleanString("false") // true
isBooleanString("blabla") // false