java.lang.Object
edu.internet2.middleware.grouperClientExt.org.apache.commons.lang3.CharSet
All Implemented Interfaces:
Serializable

public class CharSet extends Object implements Serializable

A set of characters.

Instances are immutable, but instances of subclasses may not be.

#ThreadSafe#

Since:
1.0
See Also:
  • Field Summary

    Fields
    Modifier and Type
    Field
    Description
    static final CharSet
    A CharSet defining ASCII alphabetic characters "a-zA-Z".
    static final CharSet
    A CharSet defining ASCII alphabetic characters "a-z".
    static final CharSet
    A CharSet defining ASCII alphabetic characters "A-Z".
    static final CharSet
    A CharSet defining ASCII alphabetic characters "0-9".
    protected static final Map<String,CharSet>
    A Map of the common cases used in the factory.
    static final CharSet
    A CharSet defining no characters.
  • Constructor Summary

    Constructors
    Modifier
    Constructor
    Description
    protected
    CharSet(String... set)
    Constructs a new CharSet using the set syntax.
  • Method Summary

    Modifier and Type
    Method
    Description
    protected void
    add(String str)
    Add a set definition string to the CharSet.
    boolean
    contains(char ch)
    Does the CharSet contain the specified character ch.
    boolean
    Compares two CharSet objects, returning true if they represent exactly the same set of characters defined in the same way.
    static CharSet
    getInstance(String... setStrs)
    Factory method to create a new CharSet using a special syntax.
    int
    Gets a hash code compatible with the equals method.
    Gets a string representation of the set.

    Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object

    clone, finalize, getClass, notify, notifyAll, wait, wait, wait
  • Field Details

    • EMPTY

      public static final CharSet EMPTY
      A CharSet defining no characters.
      Since:
      2.0
    • ASCII_ALPHA

      public static final CharSet ASCII_ALPHA
      A CharSet defining ASCII alphabetic characters "a-zA-Z".
      Since:
      2.0
    • ASCII_ALPHA_LOWER

      public static final CharSet ASCII_ALPHA_LOWER
      A CharSet defining ASCII alphabetic characters "a-z".
      Since:
      2.0
    • ASCII_ALPHA_UPPER

      public static final CharSet ASCII_ALPHA_UPPER
      A CharSet defining ASCII alphabetic characters "A-Z".
      Since:
      2.0
    • ASCII_NUMERIC

      public static final CharSet ASCII_NUMERIC
      A CharSet defining ASCII alphabetic characters "0-9".
      Since:
      2.0
    • COMMON

      protected static final Map<String,CharSet> COMMON
      A Map of the common cases used in the factory. Subclasses can add more common patterns if desired
      Since:
      2.0
  • Constructor Details

    • CharSet

      protected CharSet(String... set)

      Constructs a new CharSet using the set syntax. Each string is merged in with the set.

      Parameters:
      set - Strings to merge into the initial set
      Throws:
      NullPointerException - if set is null
  • Method Details

    • getInstance

      public static CharSet getInstance(String... setStrs)

      Factory method to create a new CharSet using a special syntax.

      • null or empty string ("") - set containing no characters
      • Single character, such as "a" - set containing just that character
      • Multi character, such as "a-e" - set containing characters from one character to the other
      • Negated, such as "^a" or "^a-e" - set containing all characters except those defined
      • Combinations, such as "abe-g" - set containing all the characters from the individual sets

      The matching order is:

      1. Negated multi character range, such as "^a-e"
      2. Ordinary multi character range, such as "a-e"
      3. Negated single character, such as "^a"
      4. Ordinary single character, such as "a"

      Matching works left to right. Once a match is found the search starts again from the next character.

      If the same range is defined twice using the same syntax, only one range will be kept. Thus, "a-ca-c" creates only one range of "a-c".

      If the start and end of a range are in the wrong order, they are reversed. Thus "a-e" is the same as "e-a". As a result, "a-ee-a" would create only one range, as the "a-e" and "e-a" are the same.

      The set of characters represented is the union of the specified ranges.

      There are two ways to add a literal negation character (^):

      • As the last character in a string, e.g. CharSet.getInstance("a-z^")
      • As a separate element, e.g. CharSet.getInstance("^", "a-z")

      Examples using the negation character:

           CharSet.getInstance("^a-c").contains('a') = false
           CharSet.getInstance("^a-c").contains('d') = true
           CharSet.getInstance("^^a-c").contains('a') = true // (only '^' is negated)
           CharSet.getInstance("^^a-c").contains('^') = false
           CharSet.getInstance("^a-cd-f").contains('d') = true
           CharSet.getInstance("a-c^").contains('^') = true
           CharSet.getInstance("^", "a-c").contains('^') = true
       

      All CharSet objects returned by this method will be immutable.

      Parameters:
      setStrs - Strings to merge into the set, may be null
      Returns:
      a CharSet instance
      Since:
      2.4
    • add

      protected void add(String str)

      Add a set definition string to the CharSet.

      Parameters:
      str - set definition string
    • contains

      public boolean contains(char ch)

      Does the CharSet contain the specified character ch.

      Parameters:
      ch - the character to check for
      Returns:
      true if the set contains the characters
    • equals

      public boolean equals(Object obj)

      Compares two CharSet objects, returning true if they represent exactly the same set of characters defined in the same way.

      The two sets abc and a-c are not equal according to this method.

      Overrides:
      equals in class Object
      Parameters:
      obj - the object to compare to
      Returns:
      true if equal
      Since:
      2.0
    • hashCode

      public int hashCode()

      Gets a hash code compatible with the equals method.

      Overrides:
      hashCode in class Object
      Returns:
      a suitable hash code
      Since:
      2.0
    • toString

      public String toString()

      Gets a string representation of the set.

      Overrides:
      toString in class Object
      Returns:
      string representation of the set