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Posted to issues@commons.apache.org by "Gilles (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2019/04/13 09:29:00 UTC

[jira] [Commented] (TEXT-161) Should there be a better implementation of substring that deals with Unicode surrogate pairs correctly?

    [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TEXT-161?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16816883#comment-16816883 ] 

Gilles commented on TEXT-161:
-----------------------------

You should type your example within "code" markers:
{noformat}
{code}
    // Code here...
{code}
{noformat}


> Should there be a better implementation of substring that deals with Unicode surrogate pairs correctly?
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: TEXT-161
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TEXT-161
>             Project: Commons Text
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>    Affects Versions: 1.6
>         Environment: Any
>            Reporter: Sebastiaan
>            Priority: Minor
>              Labels: features
>
> There are some major problems with Java's substring implementation which works using chars. For a brief overview read this blog post: [https://codeahoy.com/2016/05/08/the-char-type-in-java-is-broken/]
>  
> I have some demo code showing the issues and a possible solution here:
>  
> {color:#000080}public class {color}SubstringTest {
>  {color:#000080}public static void {color}main(String[] args) {
>  String stringWithPlus2ByteCodePoints = {color:#008000}"👦👩👪👫"{color};
>  String substring1 = stringWithPlus2ByteCodePoints.substring({color:#0000ff}0{color}, {color:#0000ff}1{color});
>  String substring2 = stringWithPlus2ByteCodePoints.substring({color:#0000ff}0{color}, {color:#0000ff}2{color});
>  String substring3 = stringWithPlus2ByteCodePoints.substring({color:#0000ff}1{color}, {color:#0000ff}3{color});
>  System.{color:#660e7a}out{color}.println(stringWithPlus2ByteCodePoints);
>  System.{color:#660e7a}out{color}.println({color:#008000}"invalid sub: " {color}+ substring1);
>  System.{color:#660e7a}out{color}.println({color:#008000}"invalid sub: " {color}+ substring2);
>  System.{color:#660e7a}out{color}.println({color:#008000}"invalid sub: " {color}+ substring3);
>  String realSub1 = getRealSubstring(stringWithPlus2ByteCodePoints, {color:#0000ff}0{color}, {color:#0000ff}1{color});
>  String realSub2 = getRealSubstring(stringWithPlus2ByteCodePoints, {color:#0000ff}0{color}, {color:#0000ff}2{color});
>  String realSub3 = getRealSubstring(stringWithPlus2ByteCodePoints, {color:#0000ff}1{color}, {color:#0000ff}3{color});
>  System.{color:#660e7a}out{color}.println({color:#008000}"real sub: " {color}+ realSub1);
>  System.{color:#660e7a}out{color}.println({color:#008000}"real sub: " {color}+ realSub2);
>  System.{color:#660e7a}out{color}.println({color:#008000}"real sub: " {color}+ realSub3);
>  }
>  {color:#000080}private static {color}String getRealSubstring(String string, {color:#000080}int {color}beginIndex, {color:#000080}int {color}endIndex) {
>  {color:#000080}if {color}(string == {color:#000080}null{color})
>  {color:#000080}throw new {color}IllegalArgumentException({color:#008000}"String should not be null"{color});
>  {color:#000080}int {color}length = string.length();
>  {color:#000080}if {color}(endIndex < {color:#0000ff}0 {color}|| beginIndex > endIndex || beginIndex > length || endIndex > length)
>  {color:#000080}throw new {color}IllegalArgumentException({color:#008000}"Invalid indices"{color});
>  {color:#000080}int {color}realBeginIndex = string.offsetByCodePoints({color:#0000ff}0{color}, beginIndex);
>  {color:#000080}int {color}realEndIndex = string.offsetByCodePoints({color:#0000ff}0{color}, endIndex);
>  {color:#000080}return {color}string.substring(realBeginIndex, realEndIndex);
>  }
> }
>  
> The same issues appear in Apache Commons Text's substring method.
> Should Apache Commons Text use this code or something similar in the substring implementation, rather than the flawed Java substring method? Or at least offer an additional utility method that does take a string with unicode codepoints that require surrogate pairs and substrings it correctly?
>  



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