I tried using this but didn't work-
return value.replaceAll("/[^A-Za-z0-9 ]/", "");
I tried using this but didn't work-
return value.replaceAll("/[^A-Za-z0-9 ]/", "");
value.replaceAll("[^A-Za-z0-9]", "")
[^abc]
When a caret^
appears as the first character inside square brackets, it negates the pattern. This pattern matches any character except a or b or c.
Looking at the keyword as two function:
[(Pattern)] = match(Pattern)
[^(Pattern)] = notMatch(Pattern)
Moreover regarding a pattern:
A-Z = all characters included from A to Z
a-z = all characters included from a to z
0=9 = all characters included from 0 to 9
Therefore it will substitute all the char NOT included in the pattern
I made this method for creating filenames:
public static String safeChar(String input)
{
char[] allowed = "0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ-_".toCharArray();
char[] charArray = input.toString().toCharArray();
StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
for (char c : charArray)
{
for (char a : allowed)
{
if(c==a) result.append(a);
}
}
return result.toString();
}
If you want to also allow alphanumeric characters which don't belong to the ascii characters set, like for instance german umlaut's, you can consider using the following solution:
String value = "your value";
// this could be placed as a static final constant, so the compiling is only done once
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("[^\\w]", Pattern.UNICODE_CHARACTER_CLASS);
value = pattern.matcher(value).replaceAll("");
Please note that the usage of the UNICODE_CHARACTER_CLASS flag could have an impose on performance penalty (see javadoc of this flag)
Guava's CharMatcher provides a concise solution:
output = CharMatcher.javaLetterOrDigit().retainFrom(input);
Simple method:
public boolean isBlank(String value) {
return (value == null || value.equals("") || value.equals("null") || value.trim().equals(""));
}
public String normalizeOnlyLettersNumbers(String str) {
if (!isBlank(str)) {
return str.replaceAll("[^\\p{L}\\p{Nd}]+", "");
} else {
return "";
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
String value = " Chlamydia_spp. IgG, IgM & IgA Abs (8006) ";
System.out.println(value.replaceAll("[^A-Za-z0-9]", ""));
}
output: ChlamydiasppIgGIgMIgAAbs8006
Github: https://github.com/AlbinViju/Learning/blob/master/StripNonAlphaNumericFromString.java
You should be aware that [^a-zA-Z]
will replace characters not being itself in the character range A-Z/a-z. That means special characters like é
, ß
etc. or cyrillic characters and such will be removed.
If the replacement of these characters is not wanted use pre-defined character classes instead:
str.replaceAll("[^\\p{IsAlphabetic}\\p{IsDigit}]", "");
PS: \p{Alnum}
does not achieve this effect, it acts the same as [A-Za-z0-9]
.
Use
[^A-Za-z0-9]
.Note: removed the space since that is not typically considered alphanumeric.