/* * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more * contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with * the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ /** *
* Provides highly reusable static utility methods, chiefly concerned with * adding value to the {@link java.lang} classes. Most of these classes are * immutable and thus thread-safe. However * {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.CharSet} is not currently guaranteed * thread-safe under all circumstances. *
* ** The top level package contains various Utils classes, whilst there are * various subpackages including {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.math}, * {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.concurrent} and * {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.builder}. Using the Utils classes is * generally simplicity itself. They are the equivalent of global functions in * another language, a collection of stand-alone, thread-safe, static methods. * In contrast, subpackages may contain interfaces which may have to be * implemented or classes which may need to be extended to get the full * functionality from the code. They may, however, contain more global-like * functions. *
* ** Lang 3.0 requires JDK 1.5+, since Lang 3.2 it requires JDK 6+; The legacy * release 2.6 requires JDK 1.2+. In both cases you can find features of later * JDKs being maintained by us and likely to be removed or modified in favour of * the JDK in the next major version. Note that Lang 3.0 uses a different * package than its predecessors, allowing it to be used at the same time as an * earlier version. *
* ** You will find deprecated methods as you stroll through the Lang * documentation. These are removed in the next major version. *
* ** All util classes contain empty public constructors with warnings not to use. * This may seem an odd thing to do, but it allows tools like Velocity to access * the class as if it were a bean. In other words, yes we know about private * constructors and have chosen not to use them. *
* ** Lang has a series of String utilities. The first is * {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils}, oodles and oodles of functions * which tweak, transform, squeeze and cuddle {@link java.lang.String * java.lang.Strings}. In addition to StringUtils, there are a series of other * String manipulating classes; * {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.RandomStringUtils} and * {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.StringEscapeUtils StringEscapeUtils}. * RandomStringUtils speaks for itself. It's provides ways in which to generate * pieces of text, such as might be used for default passwords. * StringEscapeUtils contains methods to escape and unescape Java, JavaScript, * JSON, HTML and XML. *
* ** These are ideal classes to start using if you're looking to get into Lang. * StringUtils' {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils#capitalize(String)}, * {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils#substringBetween(String, String)}/{@link org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils#substringBefore(String, String) * Before}/{@link org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils#substringAfter(String, String) * After}, {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils#split(String)} and * {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils#join(Object[])} are good methods * to begin with. *
* ** In addition to dealing with Strings, it's also important to deal with chars * and Characters. {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.CharUtils} exists for this * purpose, while {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.CharSetUtils} exists for * set-manipulation of Strings. Be careful, although CharSetUtils takes an * argument of type String, it is only as a set of characters. For example, * {@code CharSetUtils.delete("testtest", "tr")} will remove all t's and all r's * from the String, not just the String "tr". *
* ** {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.CharRange} and * {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.CharSet} are both used internally by * CharSetUtils, and will probably rarely be used. *
* *
* SystemUtils is a simple little class which makes it easy to find out
* information about which platform you are on. For some, this is a necessary
* evil. It was never something I expected to use myself until I was trying to
* ensure that Commons Lang itself compiled under JDK 1.2. Having pushed out a
* few JDK 1.3 bits that had slipped in ({@code Collections.EMPTY_MAP} is a
* classic offender), I then found that one of the Unit Tests was dying
* mysteriously under JDK 1.2, but ran fine under JDK 1.3. There was no obvious
* solution and I needed to move onwards, so the simple solution was to wrap
* that particular test in a
* if (SystemUtils.isJavaVersionAtLeast(1.3f)) {
, make a note and
* move on.
*
* The {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.CharEncoding} class is also used to * interact with the Java environment and may be used to see which character * encodings are supported in a particular environment. *
* ** Serialization doesn't have to be that hard! A simple util class can take away * the pain, plus it provides a method to clone an object by unserializing and * reserializing, an old Java trick. *
* ** Would you believe it, {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.ObjectUtils} contains * handy functions for Objects, mainly null-safe implementations of the methods * on {@link java.lang.Object}. *
* ** {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.ClassUtils} is largely a set of helper * methods for reflection. Of special note are the comparators hidden away in * ClassUtils, useful for sorting Class and Package objects by name; however * they merely sort alphabetically and don't understand the common habit of * sorting {@code java} and {@code javax} first. *
* ** Next up, {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.ArrayUtils}. This is a big one with * many methods and many overloads of these methods so it is probably worth an * in depth look here. Before we begin, assume that every method mentioned is * overloaded for all the primitives and for Object. Also, the short-hand 'xxx' * implies a generic primitive type, but usually also includes Object. *
* ** Lastly, {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.ArrayUtils#toMap(Object[])} is worthy * of special note. It is not a heavily overloaded method for working with * arrays, but a simple way to create Maps from literals. *
* *
*
* Map colorMap = ArrayUtils.toMap(new String[][] {{
* {"RED", "#FF0000"},
* {"GREEN", "#00FF00"},
* {"BLUE", "#0000FF"}
* });
*
*
*
* * Our final util class is {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.BooleanUtils}. It * contains various Boolean acting methods, probably of most interest is the * {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.BooleanUtils#toBoolean(String)} method which * turns various positive/negative Strings into a Boolean object, and not just * true/false as with Boolean.valueOf. *
* ** On reaching the end of our package, we are left with a couple of classes that * haven't fit any of the topics so far. *
** The {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.BitField} class provides a wrapper class * around the classic bitmask integer, whilst the * {@link org.apache.commons.lang3.Validate} class may be used for assertions * (remember, we support Java 1.2). *
* * @since 1.0 */ package org.apache.commons.lang3;