StringUtils.isBlank() checks that each character of the string is a whitespace character (or that the string is empty or that it's null). This is totally different than just checking if the string is empty.
From the linked documentation:
Checks if a String is whitespace, empty ("") or null.
StringUtils.isBlank(null) = true StringUtils.isBlank("") = true StringUtils.isBlank(" ") = true StringUtils.isBlank("bob") = false StringUtils.isBlank(" bob ") = false
For comparison StringUtils.isEmpty:
StringUtils.isEmpty(null) = true
StringUtils.isEmpty("") = true
StringUtils.isEmpty(" ") = false
StringUtils.isEmpty("bob") = false
StringUtils.isEmpty(" bob ") = false
Warning: In java.lang.String.isBlank() and java.lang.String.isEmpty() work the same except they don't return true for null.
java.lang.String.isBlank() (since Java 11)
java.lang.String.isEmpty()
StringUtils.isBlank() checks that each character of the string is a whitespace character (or that the string is empty or that it's null). This is totally different than just checking if the string is empty.
From the linked documentation:
Checks if a String is whitespace, empty ("") or null.
StringUtils.isBlank(null) = true StringUtils.isBlank("") = true StringUtils.isBlank(" ") = true StringUtils.isBlank("bob") = false StringUtils.isBlank(" bob ") = false
For comparison StringUtils.isEmpty:
StringUtils.isEmpty(null) = true
StringUtils.isEmpty("") = true
StringUtils.isEmpty(" ") = false
StringUtils.isEmpty("bob") = false
StringUtils.isEmpty(" bob ") = false
Warning: In java.lang.String.isBlank() and java.lang.String.isEmpty() work the same except they don't return true for null.
java.lang.String.isBlank() (since Java 11)
java.lang.String.isEmpty()
The accepted answer from @arshajii is totally correct. However just being more explicit by saying below,
StringUtils.isBlank()
StringUtils.isBlank(null) = true
StringUtils.isBlank("") = true
StringUtils.isBlank(" ") = true
StringUtils.isBlank("bob") = false
StringUtils.isBlank(" bob ") = false
StringUtils.isEmpty
StringUtils.isEmpty(null) = true
StringUtils.isEmpty("") = true
StringUtils.isEmpty(" ") = false
StringUtils.isEmpty("bob") = false
StringUtils.isEmpty(" bob ") = false
No, absolutely not - because if acct is null, it won't even get to isEmpty... it will immediately throw a NullPointerException.
Your test should be:
if (acct != null && !acct.isEmpty())
Note the use of && here, rather than your || in the previous code; also note how in your previous code, your conditions were wrong anyway - even with && you would only have entered the if body if acct was an empty string.
Alternatively, using Guava:
if (!Strings.isNullOrEmpty(acct))
Use StringUtils.isEmpty instead, it will also check for null.
Examples are:
StringUtils.isEmpty(null) = true
StringUtils.isEmpty("") = true
StringUtils.isEmpty(" ") = false
StringUtils.isEmpty("bob") = false
StringUtils.isEmpty(" bob ") = false
See more on official Documentation on String Utils.
Of course not. Do you really think "" is not clear enough ?
Constants have essentially 3 use cases:
- Document the meaning of a value (with constant name + javadoc)
- Synchronize clients on a common value.
- Provide a shortcut to a special value to avoid some init costs
None apply here.
I use StringUtils.EMPTY, for hiding the literal and also to express that return StringUtils.EMPTY was fully expected and there should return an empty string, "" can lead to the assumption that "" can be easily changed into something else and that this was maybe only a mistake. I think the EMPTY is more expressive.
Correct way to check for null or empty or string containing only spaces is like this:
if(str != null && !str.trim().isEmpty()) { /* do your stuffs here */ }
You can leverage Apache Commons StringUtils.isEmpty(str), which checks for empty strings and handles null gracefully.
Example:
System.out.println(StringUtils.isEmpty("")); // true
System.out.println(StringUtils.isEmpty(null)); // true
Google Guava also provides a similar, probably easier-to-read method: Strings.isNullOrEmpty(str).
Example:
System.out.println(Strings.isNullOrEmpty("")); // true
System.out.println(Strings.isNullOrEmpty(null)); // true