Split string with dot as delimiter
I see only solutions here but no full explanation of the problem so I decided to post this answer
Problem
You need to know few things about text.split(delim)
. split
method:
- accepts as argument regular expression (regex) which describes delimiter on which we want to split,
- if
delim
exists at end oftext
like ina,b,c,,
(where delimiter is,
)split
at first will create array like["a" "b" "c" "" ""]
but since in most cases we don't really need these trailing empty strings it also removes them automatically for us. So it creates another array without these trailing empty strings and returns it.
You also need to know that dot .
is special character in regex. It represents any character (except line separators but this can be changed with Pattern.DOTALL
flag).
So for string like "abc"
if we split on "."
split
method will
- create array like
["" "" "" ""]
, - but since this array contains only empty strings and they all are trailing they will be removed (like shown in previous second point)
which means we will get as result empty array []
(with no elements, not even empty string), so we can't use fn[0]
because there is no index 0.
Solution
To solve this problem you simply need to create regex which will represents dot. To do so we need to escape that .
. There are few ways to do it, but simplest is probably by using \
(which in String needs to be written as "\\"
because \
is also special there and requires another \
to be escaped).
So solution to your problem may look like
String[] fn = filename.split("\\.");
Bonus
You can also use other ways to escape that dot like
- using character class
split("[.]")
- wrapping it in quote
split("\\Q.\\E")
- using proper Pattern instance with
Pattern.LITERAL
flag - or simply use
split(Pattern.quote("."))
and let regex do escaping for you.
split()
accepts a regular expression, so you need to escape .
to not consider it as a regex meta character. Here's an example :
String[] fn = filename.split("\\.");
return fn[0];
Split uses regular expressions, where '.' is a special character meaning anything. You need to escape it if you actually want it to match the '.' character:
String[] fn = filename.split("\\.");
(one '\' to escape the '.' in the regular expression, and the other to escape the first one in the Java string)
Also I wouldn't suggest returning fn[0] since if you have a file named something.blabla.txt
, which is a valid name you won't be returning the actual file name. Instead I think it's better if you use:
int idx = filename.lastIndexOf('.');
return filename.subString(0, idx);