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Java generating Strings with placeholders

I'm looking for something to achieve the following:

String s = "hello {}!";
s = generate(s, new Object[]{ "world" });
assertEquals(s, "hello world!"); // should be true

I could write it myself, but It seems to me that I saw a library once which did this, probably it was the slf4j logger, but I don't want to write log messages. I just want to generate strings.

Do you know about a library which does this?

See String.format method.

String s = "hello %s!";
s = String.format(s, "world");
assertEquals(s, "hello world!"); // should be true

StrSubstitutor from Apache Commons Lang may be used for string formatting with named placeholders:

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.apache.commons</groupId>
    <artifactId>commons-text</artifactId>
    <version>1.1</version>
</dependency>

https://commons.apache.org/proper/commons-lang/javadocs/api-3.4/org/apache/commons/lang3/text/StrSubstitutor.html :

Substitutes variables within a string by values.

This class takes a piece of text and substitutes all the variables within it. The default definition of a variable is ${variableName}. The prefix and suffix can be changed via constructors and set methods.

Variable values are typically resolved from a map, but could also be resolved from system properties, or by supplying a custom variable resolver.

Example:

String template = "Hi ${name}! Your number is ${number}";

Map<String, String> data = new HashMap<String, String>();
data.put("name", "John");
data.put("number", "1");

String formattedString = StrSubstitutor.replace(template, data);

This can be done in a single line without the use of library. Please check java.text.MessageFormat class.

Example

String stringWithPlaceHolder = "test String with placeholders {0} {1} {2} {3}";
String formattedStrin = java.text.MessageFormat.format(stringWithPlaceHolder, "place-holder-1", "place-holder-2", "place-holder-3", "place-holder-4");

Output will be

test String with placeholders place-holder-1 place-holder-2 place-holder-3 place-holder-4

If you can change the format of your placeholder, you could use String.format() . If not, you could also replace it as pre-processing.

String.format("hello %s!", "world");

More information in this other thread .

There are two solutions:

Formatter is more recent even though it takes over printf() which is 40 years old...

Your placeholder as you currently define it is one MessageFormat can use, but why use an antique technique? ;) Use Formatter .

There is all the more reason to use Formatter that you don't need to escape single quotes! MessageFormat requires you to do so. Also, Formatter has a shortcut via String.format() to generate strings, and PrintWriter s have .printf() (that includes System.out and System.err which are both PrintWriter s by default)

You won't need a library; if you are using a recent version of Java, have a look at String.format :

String.format("Hello %s!", "world");

If you can tolerate a different kind of placeholder (ie %s in place of {} ) you can use String.format method for that:

String s = "hello %s!";
s = String.format(s, "world" );
assertEquals(s, "hello world!"); // true

if you are user spring you can like this:

String template = "hello #{#param}";
    EvaluationContext context = new StandardEvaluationContext();
    context.setVariable("param", "world");
    String value = new SpelExpressionParser().parseExpression(template, new TemplateParserContext()).getValue(context, String.class);
    System.out.println(value);

out put:

hello world

Justas answer is outdated so I'm posting up to date answer with apache text commons.

StringSubstitutor from Apache Commons Text may be used for string formatting with named placeholders: https://commons.apache.org/proper/commons-text/javadocs/api-release/org/apache/commons/text/StringSubstitutor.html

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.apache.commons</groupId>
    <artifactId>commons-text</artifactId>
    <version>1.9</version>
</dependency>

This class takes a piece of text and substitutes all the variables within it. The default definition of a variable is ${variableName}. The prefix and suffix can be changed via constructors and set methods. Variable values are typically resolved from a map, but could also be resolved from system properties, or by supplying a custom variable resolver.

Example:

 // Build map
 Map<String, String> valuesMap = new HashMap<>();
 valuesMap.put("animal", "quick brown fox");
 valuesMap.put("target", "lazy dog");
 String templateString = "The ${animal} jumped over the ${target}.";

 // Build StringSubstitutor
 StringSubstitutor sub = new StringSubstitutor(valuesMap);

 // Replace
 String resolvedString = sub.replace(templateString);

The suggestion by https://stackoverflow.com/users/4290127/himanshu-chaudhary works quite well: String str = "Hello this is {} string {}";
str = MessageFormatter.format(str, "hello", "world").getMessage();

<!-- https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/org.slf4j/slf4j-api -->
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.slf4j</groupId>
    <artifactId>slf4j-api</artifactId>
    <version>1.8.0-beta4</version>
</dependency>


     

如果你想对不同的占位符使用一些字符串,你可以使用这样的指针:

String.format("%1$s %2$s %1$s", "startAndEndText", "middleText");

Java is most likely going to have string templates (probably from version 21 ).

See the string templates proposal (JEP 430) here .

It will be something along the lines of this:

String name = "World";
String info = STR."Hello \{name}!";
System.out.println(info); // Hello World!

PS Kotlin is 100% interoperable with Java. It supports cleaner string templates out of the box:

val name = "World"
val info = "I am $name!"
println(info) // Hello World!

Combined with extension functions , you can achieve the same thing the Java template processors (eg STR ) will do.

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