We are getting properties (that we can not influence) out of a database and want to access them by a key/value mapping. We are facing the problem that one of the property keys includes a blank character.
foo bar = barefoot
This is - correctly - interpreted as follows
key: foo
value: bar = barefoot
Is ther开发者_JAVA技巧e a way to include the blank in the key so that it's not interpreted as the delimiter? I guess this behaviour is just like intended, but I thought I could give it a try here.
You can escape every thing in properties file with Java Unicode:
\u003d
for=
\u0020
for whitespace
For example:
foo bar = barefoot
must be:
foo\u0020bar\u0020=\u0020barefoot
So will be:
key: "foo bar "
value: " barefoot"
Maybe you can escape the whitespaces: foo\ bar = barefoot
Edit: Oops, I did not see that you can't change the properties.
As it seems the delimiter should be =
, not space.
Hence - keyValuePair.split("=")
should do.
If you are loading this from a java .properties
file, then you can extend java.util.Properties
and override this method
public synchronized void load(InputStream inStream) throws IOException
so that it parses the properties correctly.
I assume by "properties", you mean a Java property file (as written/read by java.util.Properties
).
Then, as you write yourself,
foo bar = barefoot
must indeed be interpreted as
key: foo
value: bar = barefoot
There's no way to configure this using the built-in Properties
class. You must either manipulate your input (escape the whitespace, change it to _ and back...), or write your own parser. Writing your own parser is probably better, as obviously your input isn't really a Java properties file to begin with :-).
keyValuePair = keyValuePair.substring(0,indexOf("=")).replaceAll("\\s+") +
keyValuePair.substring(indexOf("="));
精彩评论