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package org.apache.commons.lang3;

Operations on CharSequence that are null safe.

See Also:
Since:3.0
/** * <p>Operations on {@link CharSequence} that are * {@code null} safe.</p> * * @see CharSequence * @since 3.0 */
public class CharSequenceUtils { private static final int NOT_FOUND = -1;

CharSequenceUtils instances should NOT be constructed in standard programming.

This constructor is public to permit tools that require a JavaBean instance to operate.

/** * <p>{@code CharSequenceUtils} instances should NOT be constructed in * standard programming. </p> * * <p>This constructor is public to permit tools that require a JavaBean * instance to operate.</p> */
public CharSequenceUtils() { super(); } //-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Returns a new CharSequence that is a subsequence of this sequence starting with the char value at the specified index.

This provides the CharSequence equivalent to String.substring(int). The length (in char) of the returned sequence is length() - start, so if start == end then an empty sequence is returned.

Params:
  • cs – the specified subsequence, null returns null
  • start – the start index, inclusive, valid
Throws:
Returns:a new subsequence, may be null
/** * <p>Returns a new {@code CharSequence} that is a subsequence of this * sequence starting with the {@code char} value at the specified index.</p> * * <p>This provides the {@code CharSequence} equivalent to {@link String#substring(int)}. * The length (in {@code char}) of the returned sequence is {@code length() - start}, * so if {@code start == end} then an empty sequence is returned.</p> * * @param cs the specified subsequence, null returns null * @param start the start index, inclusive, valid * @return a new subsequence, may be null * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException if {@code start} is negative or if * {@code start} is greater than {@code length()} */
public static CharSequence subSequence(final CharSequence cs, final int start) { return cs == null ? null : cs.subSequence(start, cs.length()); } //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Returns the index within cs of the first occurrence of the specified character, starting the search at the specified index.

If a character with value searchChar occurs in the character sequence represented by the cs object at an index no smaller than start, then the index of the first such occurrence is returned. For values of searchChar in the range from 0 to 0xFFFF (inclusive), this is the smallest value k such that:

(this.charAt(k) == searchChar) && (k >= start)
is true. For other values of searchChar, it is the smallest value k such that:
(this.codePointAt(k) == searchChar) && (k >= start)
is true. In either case, if no such character occurs inm cs at or after position start, then -1 is returned.

There is no restriction on the value of start. If it is negative, it has the same effect as if it were zero: the entire CharSequence may be searched. If it is greater than the length of cs, it has the same effect as if it were equal to the length of cs: -1 is returned.

All indices are specified in char values (Unicode code units).

Params:
  • cs – the CharSequence to be processed, not null
  • searchChar – the char to be searched for
  • start – the start index, negative starts at the string start
Returns:the index where the search char was found, -1 if not found
Since:3.6 updated to behave more like String
/** * Returns the index within <code>cs</code> of the first occurrence of the * specified character, starting the search at the specified index. * <p> * If a character with value <code>searchChar</code> occurs in the * character sequence represented by the <code>cs</code> * object at an index no smaller than <code>start</code>, then * the index of the first such occurrence is returned. For values * of <code>searchChar</code> in the range from 0 to 0xFFFF (inclusive), * this is the smallest value <i>k</i> such that: * <blockquote><pre> * (this.charAt(<i>k</i>) == searchChar) &amp;&amp; (<i>k</i> &gt;= start) * </pre></blockquote> * is true. For other values of <code>searchChar</code>, it is the * smallest value <i>k</i> such that: * <blockquote><pre> * (this.codePointAt(<i>k</i>) == searchChar) &amp;&amp; (<i>k</i> &gt;= start) * </pre></blockquote> * is true. In either case, if no such character occurs inm <code>cs</code> * at or after position <code>start</code>, then * <code>-1</code> is returned. * * <p> * There is no restriction on the value of <code>start</code>. If it * is negative, it has the same effect as if it were zero: the entire * <code>CharSequence</code> may be searched. If it is greater than * the length of <code>cs</code>, it has the same effect as if it were * equal to the length of <code>cs</code>: <code>-1</code> is returned. * * <p>All indices are specified in <code>char</code> values * (Unicode code units). * * @param cs the {@code CharSequence} to be processed, not null * @param searchChar the char to be searched for * @param start the start index, negative starts at the string start * @return the index where the search char was found, -1 if not found * @since 3.6 updated to behave more like <code>String</code> */
static int indexOf(final CharSequence cs, final int searchChar, int start) { if (cs instanceof String) { return ((String) cs).indexOf(searchChar, start); } final int sz = cs.length(); if (start < 0) { start = 0; } if (searchChar < Character.MIN_SUPPLEMENTARY_CODE_POINT) { for (int i = start; i < sz; i++) { if (cs.charAt(i) == searchChar) { return i; } } } //supplementary characters (LANG1300) if (searchChar <= Character.MAX_CODE_POINT) { final char[] chars = Character.toChars(searchChar); for (int i = start; i < sz - 1; i++) { final char high = cs.charAt(i); final char low = cs.charAt(i + 1); if (high == chars[0] && low == chars[1]) { return i; } } } return NOT_FOUND; }
Used by the indexOf(CharSequence methods) as a green implementation of indexOf.
Params:
  • cs – the CharSequence to be processed
  • searchChar – the CharSequence to be searched for
  • start – the start index
Returns:the index where the search sequence was found
/** * Used by the indexOf(CharSequence methods) as a green implementation of indexOf. * * @param cs the {@code CharSequence} to be processed * @param searchChar the {@code CharSequence} to be searched for * @param start the start index * @return the index where the search sequence was found */
static int indexOf(final CharSequence cs, final CharSequence searchChar, final int start) { return cs.toString().indexOf(searchChar.toString(), start); // if (cs instanceof String && searchChar instanceof String) { // // TODO: Do we assume searchChar is usually relatively small; // // If so then calling toString() on it is better than reverting to // // the green implementation in the else block // return ((String) cs).indexOf((String) searchChar, start); // } else { // // TODO: Implement rather than convert to String // return cs.toString().indexOf(searchChar.toString(), start); // } }
Returns the index within cs of the last occurrence of the specified character, searching backward starting at the specified index. For values of searchChar in the range from 0 to 0xFFFF (inclusive), the index returned is the largest value k such that:
(this.charAt(k) == searchChar) && (k <= start)
is true. For other values of searchChar, it is the largest value k such that:
(this.codePointAt(k) == searchChar) && (k <= start)
is true. In either case, if no such character occurs in cs at or before position start, then -1 is returned.

All indices are specified in char values (Unicode code units).

Params:
  • cs – the CharSequence to be processed
  • searchChar – the char to be searched for
  • start – the start index, negative returns -1, beyond length starts at end
Returns:the index where the search char was found, -1 if not found
Since:3.6 updated to behave more like String
/** * Returns the index within <code>cs</code> of the last occurrence of * the specified character, searching backward starting at the * specified index. For values of <code>searchChar</code> in the range * from 0 to 0xFFFF (inclusive), the index returned is the largest * value <i>k</i> such that: * <blockquote><pre> * (this.charAt(<i>k</i>) == searchChar) &amp;&amp; (<i>k</i> &lt;= start) * </pre></blockquote> * is true. For other values of <code>searchChar</code>, it is the * largest value <i>k</i> such that: * <blockquote><pre> * (this.codePointAt(<i>k</i>) == searchChar) &amp;&amp; (<i>k</i> &lt;= start) * </pre></blockquote> * is true. In either case, if no such character occurs in <code>cs</code> * at or before position <code>start</code>, then <code>-1</code> is returned. * * <p>All indices are specified in <code>char</code> values * (Unicode code units). * * @param cs the {@code CharSequence} to be processed * @param searchChar the char to be searched for * @param start the start index, negative returns -1, beyond length starts at end * @return the index where the search char was found, -1 if not found * @since 3.6 updated to behave more like <code>String</code> */
static int lastIndexOf(final CharSequence cs, final int searchChar, int start) { if (cs instanceof String) { return ((String) cs).lastIndexOf(searchChar, start); } final int sz = cs.length(); if (start < 0) { return NOT_FOUND; } if (start >= sz) { start = sz - 1; } if (searchChar < Character.MIN_SUPPLEMENTARY_CODE_POINT) { for (int i = start; i >= 0; --i) { if (cs.charAt(i) == searchChar) { return i; } } } //supplementary characters (LANG1300) //NOTE - we must do a forward traversal for this to avoid duplicating code points if (searchChar <= Character.MAX_CODE_POINT) { final char[] chars = Character.toChars(searchChar); //make sure it's not the last index if (start == sz - 1) { return NOT_FOUND; } for (int i = start; i >= 0; i--) { final char high = cs.charAt(i); final char low = cs.charAt(i + 1); if (chars[0] == high && chars[1] == low) { return i; } } } return NOT_FOUND; }
Used by the lastIndexOf(CharSequence methods) as a green implementation of lastIndexOf
Params:
  • cs – the CharSequence to be processed
  • searchChar – the CharSequence to be searched for
  • start – the start index
Returns:the index where the search sequence was found
/** * Used by the lastIndexOf(CharSequence methods) as a green implementation of lastIndexOf * * @param cs the {@code CharSequence} to be processed * @param searchChar the {@code CharSequence} to be searched for * @param start the start index * @return the index where the search sequence was found */
static int lastIndexOf(final CharSequence cs, final CharSequence searchChar, final int start) { return cs.toString().lastIndexOf(searchChar.toString(), start); // if (cs instanceof String && searchChar instanceof String) { // // TODO: Do we assume searchChar is usually relatively small; // // If so then calling toString() on it is better than reverting to // // the green implementation in the else block // return ((String) cs).lastIndexOf((String) searchChar, start); // } else { // // TODO: Implement rather than convert to String // return cs.toString().lastIndexOf(searchChar.toString(), start); // } }
Green implementation of toCharArray.
Params:
  • cs – the CharSequence to be processed
Returns:the resulting char array
/** * Green implementation of toCharArray. * * @param cs the {@code CharSequence} to be processed * @return the resulting char array */
static char[] toCharArray(final CharSequence cs) { if (cs instanceof String) { return ((String) cs).toCharArray(); } final int sz = cs.length(); final char[] array = new char[cs.length()]; for (int i = 0; i < sz; i++) { array[i] = cs.charAt(i); } return array; }
Green implementation of regionMatches.
Params:
  • cs – the CharSequence to be processed
  • ignoreCase – whether or not to be case insensitive
  • thisStart – the index to start on the cs CharSequence
  • substring – the CharSequence to be looked for
  • start – the index to start on the substring CharSequence
  • length – character length of the region
Returns:whether the region matched
/** * Green implementation of regionMatches. * * @param cs the {@code CharSequence} to be processed * @param ignoreCase whether or not to be case insensitive * @param thisStart the index to start on the {@code cs} CharSequence * @param substring the {@code CharSequence} to be looked for * @param start the index to start on the {@code substring} CharSequence * @param length character length of the region * @return whether the region matched */
static boolean regionMatches(final CharSequence cs, final boolean ignoreCase, final int thisStart, final CharSequence substring, final int start, final int length) { if (cs instanceof String && substring instanceof String) { return ((String) cs).regionMatches(ignoreCase, thisStart, (String) substring, start, length); } int index1 = thisStart; int index2 = start; int tmpLen = length; // Extract these first so we detect NPEs the same as the java.lang.String version final int srcLen = cs.length() - thisStart; final int otherLen = substring.length() - start; // Check for invalid parameters if (thisStart < 0 || start < 0 || length < 0) { return false; } // Check that the regions are long enough if (srcLen < length || otherLen < length) { return false; } while (tmpLen-- > 0) { final char c1 = cs.charAt(index1++); final char c2 = substring.charAt(index2++); if (c1 == c2) { continue; } if (!ignoreCase) { return false; } // The same check as in String.regionMatches(): if (Character.toUpperCase(c1) != Character.toUpperCase(c2) && Character.toLowerCase(c1) != Character.toLowerCase(c2)) { return false; } } return true; } }