Copyif (myString != null && !myString.isEmpty()) {
// doSomething
}
As further comment, you should be aware of this term in the equals contract:
From Object.equals(Object):
For any non-null reference value
x,x.equals(null)shouldreturn false.
The way to compare with null is to use x == null and x != null.
Moreover, x.field and x.method() throws NullPointerException if x == null.
Copyif (myString != null && !myString.isEmpty()) {
// doSomething
}
As further comment, you should be aware of this term in the equals contract:
From Object.equals(Object):
For any non-null reference value
x,x.equals(null)shouldreturn false.
The way to compare with null is to use x == null and x != null.
Moreover, x.field and x.method() throws NullPointerException if x == null.
If myString is null, then calling myString.equals(null) or myString.equals("") will fail with a NullPointerException. You cannot call any instance methods on a null variable.
Check for null first like this:
Copyif (myString != null && !myString.equals("")) {
//do something
}
This makes use of short-circuit evaluation to not attempt the .equals if myString fails the null check.
Videos
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
string == null compares if the object is null. string.equals("foo") compares the value inside of that object. string == "foo" doesn't always work, because you're trying to see if the objects are the same, not the values they represent.
Longer answer:
If you try this, it won't work, as you've found:
String foo = null;
if (foo.equals(null)) {
// That fails every time.
}
The reason is that foo is null, so it doesn't know what .equals is; there's no object there for .equals to be called from.
What you probably wanted was:
String foo = null;
if (foo == null) {
// That will work.
}
The typical way to guard yourself against a null when dealing with Strings is:
String foo = null;
String bar = "Some string";
...
if (foo != null && foo.equals(bar)) {
// Do something here.
}
That way, if foo was null, it doesn't evaluate the second half of the conditional, and things are all right.
The easy way, if you're using a String literal (instead of a variable), is:
String foo = null;
...
if ("some String".equals(foo)) {
// Do something here.
}
If you want to work around that, Apache Commons has a class - StringUtils - that provides null-safe String operations.
if (StringUtils.equals(foo, bar)) {
// Do something here.
}
Another response was joking, and said you should do this:
boolean isNull = false;
try {
stringname.equalsIgnoreCase(null);
} catch (NullPointerException npe) {
isNull = true;
}
Please don't do that. You should only throw exceptions for errors that are exceptional; if you're expecting a null, you should check for it ahead of time, and not let it throw the exception.
In my head, there are two reasons for this. First, exceptions are slow; checking against null is fast, but when the JVM throws an exception, it takes a lot of time. Second, the code is much easier to read and maintain if you just check for the null pointer ahead of time.
s == null
won't work?
What about isEmpty() ?
if(str != null && !str.isEmpty())
Be sure to use the parts of && in this order, because java will not proceed to evaluate the second part if the first part of && fails, thus ensuring you will not get a null pointer exception from str.isEmpty() if str is null.
Beware, it's only available since Java SE 1.6. You have to check str.length() == 0 on previous versions.
To ignore whitespace as well:
if(str != null && !str.trim().isEmpty())
(since Java 11 str.trim().isEmpty() can be reduced to str.isBlank() which will also test for other Unicode white spaces)
Wrapped in a handy function:
public static boolean empty( final String s ) {
// Null-safe, short-circuit evaluation.
return s == null || s.trim().isEmpty();
}
Becomes:
if( !empty( str ) )
Use org.apache.commons.lang.StringUtils
I like to use Apache commons-lang for these kinds of things, and especially the StringUtils utility class:
import org.apache.commons.lang.StringUtils;
if (StringUtils.isNotBlank(str)) {
...
}
if (StringUtils.isBlank(str)) {
...
}