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Working with Text |
You can categorize characters according to their properties. For instance, 'X' is an upper case letter and '4' is a decimal digit. Checking character properties is a common way to verify the data entered by end-users. If you are selling books online, for example, your order entry screen should verify that the characters in the quantity field are all digits.
Developers who aren't used to writing global software might determine a character's properties by comparing it with character constants. For instance, they might write code like this:
The preceding code is wrong because it works only with English text. To internationalize the previous example, replace it with the following statements:char ch; ... // This code is WRONG! if ((ch >= 'a' && ch <= 'z') || (ch >= 'A' && ch <= 'Z')) // ch is a letter ... if (ch >= '0' && ch <= '9') // ch is a digit ... if ((ch == ' ') || (ch == '\n') || (ch == '\t')) // ch is a whitespaceThechar ch; ... // This code is OK! if (Character.isLetter(ch)) ... if (Character.isDigit(ch)) ... if (Character.isSpaceChar(ch))Charactermethods rely upon the Unicode Standard for determining the properties of a character. Unicode is a 16-bit character encoding that supports the world's major languages. In the Java programming language,
charvalues represent Unicode characters. If you check the properties of acharwith the appropriateCharactermethod, your code will work with all major languages. For example, theCharacter.isLettermethod returnstrueif the character is a letter in Chinese, German, Arabic, or some other language.The following list gives some of the most useful the
Charactercomparison methods. TheCharacterAPI documentation fully specifies the methods.
isDigitisLetterisLetterOrDigitisLowerCaseisUpperCaseisSpaceCharisDefinedIf you want to restrict your digit characters to the ISO-Latin-1 characters 0 - 9, then you should not use the
Character.isDigitmethod. TheisDigitmethod returnstruefor characters that represent numbers in many languages. For example, it returnstruefor Tamil digits, which are in the Unicode range\0BE7-\u0BEF. To verify that a character is an ISO-Latin-1 digit, check it like this:if (ch >= '0' && ch <= '9') // ch is an ISO-Latin-1 digitThe
Character.getTypemethod returns the Unicode category of a character. Each category corresponds to a constant defined in theCharacterclass. For instance,getTypereturns theCharacter.UPPERCASE_LETTERconstant for the character 'A'. For a complete list of the category constants returned bygetType, see theCharacterAPI documentation. The following example shows how to usegetTypeand theCharactercategory constants. All of the expressions in theseifstatements aretrue:if (Character.getType('a') == Character.LOWERCASE_LETTER) ... if (Character.getType('R') == Character.UPPERCASE_LETTER) ... if (Character.getType('>') == Character.MATH_SYMBOL) ... if (Character.getType('_') == Character.CONNECTOR_PUNCTUATION)
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Working with Text |