420
votes

I'm trying to split text in a JTextArea using a regex to split the String by \n However, this does not work and I also tried by \r\n|\r|n and many other combination of regexes. Code:

public void insertUpdate(DocumentEvent e) {
    String split[], docStr = null;
    Document textAreaDoc = (Document)e.getDocument();

    try {
        docStr = textAreaDoc.getText(textAreaDoc.getStartPosition().getOffset(), textAreaDoc.getEndPosition().getOffset());
    } catch (BadLocationException e1) {
        // TODO Auto-generated catch block
        e1.printStackTrace();
    }

    split = docStr.split("\\n");
}
20
what is the error that you get? Dont say "does not work", that doesnt mean anything. Tell us the error/result you get. That is the first step in debugging code - figure out what the wrong result is, and how your program got to that. - Chii
What do you realy want to do? - break lines as they are entered in the JTextArea? - finding where the JTextArea is doing line wraps? - ??? - user85421

20 Answers

798
votes

This should cover you:

String lines[] = string.split("\\r?\\n");

There's only really two newlines (UNIX and Windows) that you need to worry about.

158
votes

String#split​(String regex) method is using regex (regular expressions). Since Java 8 regex supports \R which represents (from documentation of Pattern class):

Linebreak matcher
\R         Any Unicode linebreak sequence, is equivalent to \u000D\u000A|[\u000A\u000B\u000C\u000D\u0085\u2028\u2029]

So we can use it to match:

As you see \r\n is placed at start of regex which ensures that regex will try to match this pair first, and only if that match fails it will try to match single character line separators.


So if you want to split on line separator use split("\\R").

If you don't want to remove from resulting array trailing empty strings "" use split(regex, limit) with negative limit parameter like split("\\R", -1).

If you want to treat one or more continues empty lines as single delimiter use split("\\R+").

136
votes

If you don’t want empty lines:

String.split("[\\r\\n]+")
53
votes
String.split(System.getProperty("line.separator"));

This should be system independent

21
votes

A new method lines has been introduced to String class in , which returns Stream<String>

Returns a stream of substrings extracted from this string partitioned by line terminators.

Line terminators recognized are line feed "\n" (U+000A), carriage return "\r" (U+000D) and a carriage return followed immediately by a line feed "\r\n" (U+000D U+000A).

Here are a few examples:

jshell> "lorem \n ipusm \n sit".lines().forEach(System.out::println)
lorem
 ipusm
 sit

jshell> "lorem \n ipusm \r  sit".lines().forEach(System.out::println)
lorem
 ipusm
  sit

jshell> "lorem \n ipusm \r\n  sit".lines().forEach(System.out::println)
lorem
 ipusm
  sit

String#lines()

13
votes

In JDK11 the String class has a lines() method:

Returning a stream of lines extracted from this string, separated by line terminators.

Further, the documentation goes on to say:

A line terminator is one of the following: a line feed character "\n" (U+000A), a carriage return character "\r" (U+000D), or a carriage return followed immediately by a line feed "\r\n" (U+000D U+000A). A line is either a sequence of zero or more characters followed by a line terminator, or it is a sequence of one or more characters followed by the end of the string. A line does not include the line terminator.

With this one can simply do:

Stream<String> stream = str.lines();

then if you want an array:

String[] array = str.lines().toArray(String[]::new);

Given this method returns a Stream it upon up a lot of options for you as it enables one to write concise and declarative expression of possibly-parallel operations.

12
votes

You don't have to double escape characters in character groups.

For all non empty lines use:

String.split("[\r\n]+")
10
votes

All answers given here actually do not respect Javas definition of new lines as given in e.g. BufferedReader#readline. Java is accepting \n, \r and \r\n as new line. Some of the answers match multiple empty lines or malformed files. E..g. <sometext>\n\r\n<someothertext> when using [\r\n]+would result in two lines.

String lines[] = string.split("(\r\n|\r|\n)", -1);

In contrast, the answer above has the following properties:

  • it complies with Javas definition of a new line such as e.g. the BufferedReader is using it
  • it does not match multiple new lines
  • it does not remove trailing empty lines
8
votes

If, for some reason, you don't want to use String.split (for example, because of regular expressions) and you want to use functional programming on Java 8 or newer:

List<String> lines = new BufferedReader(new StringReader(string))
        .lines()
        .collect(Collectors.toList());
7
votes

Maybe this would work:

Remove the double backslashes from the parameter of the split method:

split = docStr.split("\n");
4
votes

For preserving empty lines from getting squashed use:

String lines[] = String.split("\\r?\\n", -1);
3
votes

The above code doesnt actually do anything visible - it just calcualtes then dumps the calculation. Is it the code you used, or just an example for this question?

try doing textAreaDoc.insertString(int, String, AttributeSet) at the end?

2
votes

As an alternative to the previous answers, guava's Splitter API can be used if other operations are to be applied to the resulting lines, like trimming lines or filtering empty lines :

import com.google.common.base.Splitter;

Iterable<String> split = Splitter.onPattern("\r?\n").trimResults().omitEmptyStrings().split(docStr);

Note that the result is an Iterable and not an array.

2
votes

The above answers did not help me on Android, thanks to the Pshemo response that worked for me on Android. I will leave some of Pshemo's answer here :

split("\\\\n")
1
votes

String lines[] =String.split( System.lineSeparator())

1
votes

After failed attempts on the basis of all given solutions. I replace \n with some special word and then split. For me following did the trick:

article = "Alice phoned\n bob.";
article = article.replace("\\n", " NEWLINE ");
String sen [] = article.split(" NEWLINE ");

I couldn't replicate the example given in the question. But, I guess this logic can be applied.

1
votes

There is new boy in the town, so you need not to deal with all above complexities. From JDK 11 onward, just need to write as single line of code, it will split lines and returns you Stream of String.

public class MyClass {
public static void main(String args[]) {
   Stream<String> lines="foo \n bar \n baz".lines();
   //Do whatever you want to do with lines
}}

Some references. https://docs.oracle.com/en/java/javase/11/docs/api/java.base/java/lang/String.html#lines() https://www.azul.com/90-new-features-and-apis-in-jdk-11/

I hope this will be helpful to someone. Happy coding.

0
votes
  • try this hope it was helpful for you

 String split[], docStr = null;
Document textAreaDoc = (Document)e.getDocument();

try {
    docStr = textAreaDoc.getText(textAreaDoc.getStartPosition().getOffset(), textAreaDoc.getEndPosition().getOffset());
} catch (BadLocationException e1) {
    // TODO Auto-generated catch block
    e1.printStackTrace();
}

split = docStr.split("\n");
0
votes

There are three different conventions (it could be said that those are de facto standards) to set and display a line break:

  • carriage return + line feed
  • line feed
  • carriage return

In some text editors, it is possible to exchange one for the other:

Notepad++

The simplest thing is to normalize to line feedand then split.

final String[] lines = contents.replace("\r\n", "\n")
                               .replace("\r", "\n")
                               .split("\n", -1);
-1
votes
package in.javadomain;

public class JavaSplit {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String input = "chennai\nvellore\ncoimbatore\nbangalore\narcot";
        System.out.println("Before split:\n");
        System.out.println(input);

        String[] inputSplitNewLine = input.split("\\n");
        System.out.println("\n After split:\n");
        for(int i=0; i<inputSplitNewLine.length; i++){
            System.out.println(inputSplitNewLine[i]);
        }
    }

}