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Sorting the characters in a utf-16 string in java
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tl;dr
Java uses 2 chars to represent UTF-16. Using Arrays.sort (unstable sort), messes with char sequencing. Should I convert char[] to int[] or is there a better way?
Details
Java represents Character as UTF-16. But Character class itself wraps char(16 bit). For UTF-16, it will be array of 2 char(32 bit).
Sorting String of UTF-16 chars using inbuilt sort messes with data.
(Arrays.sort uses Dual Pivot Quick sort and Collections.sort uses Arrays.sort to do heavy lifting.)
To be specific, do you convert char[] to int[] or is there a better way to sort?
import java.util.Arrays;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
int[] utfCodes = {128513, 128531, 128557};
String emojis = new String(utfCodes, 0, 3);
System.out.println("Initial String: " + emojis);
char[] chars = emojis.toCharArray();
Arrays.sort(chars);
System.out.println("Sorted String: " + new String(chars));
}
}
Output:
Initial String: 😁😓😭
Sorted String: ??😁??
java string sorting utf-16
New contributor
add a comment |
tl;dr
Java uses 2 chars to represent UTF-16. Using Arrays.sort (unstable sort), messes with char sequencing. Should I convert char[] to int[] or is there a better way?
Details
Java represents Character as UTF-16. But Character class itself wraps char(16 bit). For UTF-16, it will be array of 2 char(32 bit).
Sorting String of UTF-16 chars using inbuilt sort messes with data.
(Arrays.sort uses Dual Pivot Quick sort and Collections.sort uses Arrays.sort to do heavy lifting.)
To be specific, do you convert char[] to int[] or is there a better way to sort?
import java.util.Arrays;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
int[] utfCodes = {128513, 128531, 128557};
String emojis = new String(utfCodes, 0, 3);
System.out.println("Initial String: " + emojis);
char[] chars = emojis.toCharArray();
Arrays.sort(chars);
System.out.println("Sorted String: " + new String(chars));
}
}
Output:
Initial String: 😁😓😭
Sorted String: ??😁??
java string sorting utf-16
New contributor
This is what we call a "Collation". You should use a library for this because there are many collations to choose from.
– Guillaume F.
2 hours ago
add a comment |
tl;dr
Java uses 2 chars to represent UTF-16. Using Arrays.sort (unstable sort), messes with char sequencing. Should I convert char[] to int[] or is there a better way?
Details
Java represents Character as UTF-16. But Character class itself wraps char(16 bit). For UTF-16, it will be array of 2 char(32 bit).
Sorting String of UTF-16 chars using inbuilt sort messes with data.
(Arrays.sort uses Dual Pivot Quick sort and Collections.sort uses Arrays.sort to do heavy lifting.)
To be specific, do you convert char[] to int[] or is there a better way to sort?
import java.util.Arrays;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
int[] utfCodes = {128513, 128531, 128557};
String emojis = new String(utfCodes, 0, 3);
System.out.println("Initial String: " + emojis);
char[] chars = emojis.toCharArray();
Arrays.sort(chars);
System.out.println("Sorted String: " + new String(chars));
}
}
Output:
Initial String: 😁😓😭
Sorted String: ??😁??
java string sorting utf-16
New contributor
tl;dr
Java uses 2 chars to represent UTF-16. Using Arrays.sort (unstable sort), messes with char sequencing. Should I convert char[] to int[] or is there a better way?
Details
Java represents Character as UTF-16. But Character class itself wraps char(16 bit). For UTF-16, it will be array of 2 char(32 bit).
Sorting String of UTF-16 chars using inbuilt sort messes with data.
(Arrays.sort uses Dual Pivot Quick sort and Collections.sort uses Arrays.sort to do heavy lifting.)
To be specific, do you convert char[] to int[] or is there a better way to sort?
import java.util.Arrays;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
int[] utfCodes = {128513, 128531, 128557};
String emojis = new String(utfCodes, 0, 3);
System.out.println("Initial String: " + emojis);
char[] chars = emojis.toCharArray();
Arrays.sort(chars);
System.out.println("Sorted String: " + new String(chars));
}
}
Output:
Initial String: 😁😓😭
Sorted String: ??😁??
java string sorting utf-16
java string sorting utf-16
New contributor
New contributor
edited 2 hours ago
jtahlborn
47.6k56198
47.6k56198
New contributor
asked 2 hours ago
dingydingy
413
413
New contributor
New contributor
This is what we call a "Collation". You should use a library for this because there are many collations to choose from.
– Guillaume F.
2 hours ago
add a comment |
This is what we call a "Collation". You should use a library for this because there are many collations to choose from.
– Guillaume F.
2 hours ago
This is what we call a "Collation". You should use a library for this because there are many collations to choose from.
– Guillaume F.
2 hours ago
This is what we call a "Collation". You should use a library for this because there are many collations to choose from.
– Guillaume F.
2 hours ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
I looked around for a bit and couldn't find any clean ways to sort an array by groupings of two elements without the use of a library.
Luckily, the codePoints
of the String
are what you used to create the String
itself in this example, so you can simply sort those and create a new String
with the result.
public static void main(String[] args) {
int[] utfCodes = {128531, 128557, 128513};
String emojis = new String(utfCodes, 0, 3);
System.out.println("Initial String: " + emojis);
int[] codePoints = emojis.codePoints().sorted().toArray();
System.out.println("Sorted String: " + new String(codePoints, 0, 3));
}
Initial String: 😓😭😁
Sorted String: 😁😓😭
I switched the order of the characters in your example because they were already sorted.
add a comment |
We can't use char for Unicode, because Java's Unicode char handling is broken.
In the early days of Java, Unicode code points were always 16-bits (fixed size at exactly one char). However, the Unicode specification changed to allow supplemental characters. That meant Unicode characters are now variable widths, and can be longer than one char. Unfortunately, it was too late to change Java's char implementation without breaking a ton of production code.
So the best way to manipulate Unicode characters is by using code points directly, e.g., using String.codePointAt(index)
or the String.codePoints()
stream on JDK 1.8 and above.
New contributor
add a comment |
If you are using Java 8 or later, then this is a simple way to sort the characters in a string while respecting (not breaking) multi-char codepoints:
int[] codepoints = someString.codePoints().sort().toArray();
String sorted = new String(codepoints, 0, codepoints.length);
Prior to Java 8, I think you either need to use a loop to iterate the code points in the original string, or use a 3rd-party library method.
Fortunately, sorting the codepoints in a String is uncommon enough that the clunkyness and inefficiency of the solutions above are rarely a concern.
(When was the last time you tested for anagrams of emojis?)
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I looked around for a bit and couldn't find any clean ways to sort an array by groupings of two elements without the use of a library.
Luckily, the codePoints
of the String
are what you used to create the String
itself in this example, so you can simply sort those and create a new String
with the result.
public static void main(String[] args) {
int[] utfCodes = {128531, 128557, 128513};
String emojis = new String(utfCodes, 0, 3);
System.out.println("Initial String: " + emojis);
int[] codePoints = emojis.codePoints().sorted().toArray();
System.out.println("Sorted String: " + new String(codePoints, 0, 3));
}
Initial String: 😓😭😁
Sorted String: 😁😓😭
I switched the order of the characters in your example because they were already sorted.
add a comment |
I looked around for a bit and couldn't find any clean ways to sort an array by groupings of two elements without the use of a library.
Luckily, the codePoints
of the String
are what you used to create the String
itself in this example, so you can simply sort those and create a new String
with the result.
public static void main(String[] args) {
int[] utfCodes = {128531, 128557, 128513};
String emojis = new String(utfCodes, 0, 3);
System.out.println("Initial String: " + emojis);
int[] codePoints = emojis.codePoints().sorted().toArray();
System.out.println("Sorted String: " + new String(codePoints, 0, 3));
}
Initial String: 😓😭😁
Sorted String: 😁😓😭
I switched the order of the characters in your example because they were already sorted.
add a comment |
I looked around for a bit and couldn't find any clean ways to sort an array by groupings of two elements without the use of a library.
Luckily, the codePoints
of the String
are what you used to create the String
itself in this example, so you can simply sort those and create a new String
with the result.
public static void main(String[] args) {
int[] utfCodes = {128531, 128557, 128513};
String emojis = new String(utfCodes, 0, 3);
System.out.println("Initial String: " + emojis);
int[] codePoints = emojis.codePoints().sorted().toArray();
System.out.println("Sorted String: " + new String(codePoints, 0, 3));
}
Initial String: 😓😭😁
Sorted String: 😁😓😭
I switched the order of the characters in your example because they were already sorted.
I looked around for a bit and couldn't find any clean ways to sort an array by groupings of two elements without the use of a library.
Luckily, the codePoints
of the String
are what you used to create the String
itself in this example, so you can simply sort those and create a new String
with the result.
public static void main(String[] args) {
int[] utfCodes = {128531, 128557, 128513};
String emojis = new String(utfCodes, 0, 3);
System.out.println("Initial String: " + emojis);
int[] codePoints = emojis.codePoints().sorted().toArray();
System.out.println("Sorted String: " + new String(codePoints, 0, 3));
}
Initial String: 😓😭😁
Sorted String: 😁😓😭
I switched the order of the characters in your example because they were already sorted.
edited 1 hour ago
answered 1 hour ago
Jacob G.Jacob G.
16.9k52466
16.9k52466
add a comment |
add a comment |
We can't use char for Unicode, because Java's Unicode char handling is broken.
In the early days of Java, Unicode code points were always 16-bits (fixed size at exactly one char). However, the Unicode specification changed to allow supplemental characters. That meant Unicode characters are now variable widths, and can be longer than one char. Unfortunately, it was too late to change Java's char implementation without breaking a ton of production code.
So the best way to manipulate Unicode characters is by using code points directly, e.g., using String.codePointAt(index)
or the String.codePoints()
stream on JDK 1.8 and above.
New contributor
add a comment |
We can't use char for Unicode, because Java's Unicode char handling is broken.
In the early days of Java, Unicode code points were always 16-bits (fixed size at exactly one char). However, the Unicode specification changed to allow supplemental characters. That meant Unicode characters are now variable widths, and can be longer than one char. Unfortunately, it was too late to change Java's char implementation without breaking a ton of production code.
So the best way to manipulate Unicode characters is by using code points directly, e.g., using String.codePointAt(index)
or the String.codePoints()
stream on JDK 1.8 and above.
New contributor
add a comment |
We can't use char for Unicode, because Java's Unicode char handling is broken.
In the early days of Java, Unicode code points were always 16-bits (fixed size at exactly one char). However, the Unicode specification changed to allow supplemental characters. That meant Unicode characters are now variable widths, and can be longer than one char. Unfortunately, it was too late to change Java's char implementation without breaking a ton of production code.
So the best way to manipulate Unicode characters is by using code points directly, e.g., using String.codePointAt(index)
or the String.codePoints()
stream on JDK 1.8 and above.
New contributor
We can't use char for Unicode, because Java's Unicode char handling is broken.
In the early days of Java, Unicode code points were always 16-bits (fixed size at exactly one char). However, the Unicode specification changed to allow supplemental characters. That meant Unicode characters are now variable widths, and can be longer than one char. Unfortunately, it was too late to change Java's char implementation without breaking a ton of production code.
So the best way to manipulate Unicode characters is by using code points directly, e.g., using String.codePointAt(index)
or the String.codePoints()
stream on JDK 1.8 and above.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 1 hour ago
peekaypeekay
1963
1963
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
If you are using Java 8 or later, then this is a simple way to sort the characters in a string while respecting (not breaking) multi-char codepoints:
int[] codepoints = someString.codePoints().sort().toArray();
String sorted = new String(codepoints, 0, codepoints.length);
Prior to Java 8, I think you either need to use a loop to iterate the code points in the original string, or use a 3rd-party library method.
Fortunately, sorting the codepoints in a String is uncommon enough that the clunkyness and inefficiency of the solutions above are rarely a concern.
(When was the last time you tested for anagrams of emojis?)
add a comment |
If you are using Java 8 or later, then this is a simple way to sort the characters in a string while respecting (not breaking) multi-char codepoints:
int[] codepoints = someString.codePoints().sort().toArray();
String sorted = new String(codepoints, 0, codepoints.length);
Prior to Java 8, I think you either need to use a loop to iterate the code points in the original string, or use a 3rd-party library method.
Fortunately, sorting the codepoints in a String is uncommon enough that the clunkyness and inefficiency of the solutions above are rarely a concern.
(When was the last time you tested for anagrams of emojis?)
add a comment |
If you are using Java 8 or later, then this is a simple way to sort the characters in a string while respecting (not breaking) multi-char codepoints:
int[] codepoints = someString.codePoints().sort().toArray();
String sorted = new String(codepoints, 0, codepoints.length);
Prior to Java 8, I think you either need to use a loop to iterate the code points in the original string, or use a 3rd-party library method.
Fortunately, sorting the codepoints in a String is uncommon enough that the clunkyness and inefficiency of the solutions above are rarely a concern.
(When was the last time you tested for anagrams of emojis?)
If you are using Java 8 or later, then this is a simple way to sort the characters in a string while respecting (not breaking) multi-char codepoints:
int[] codepoints = someString.codePoints().sort().toArray();
String sorted = new String(codepoints, 0, codepoints.length);
Prior to Java 8, I think you either need to use a loop to iterate the code points in the original string, or use a 3rd-party library method.
Fortunately, sorting the codepoints in a String is uncommon enough that the clunkyness and inefficiency of the solutions above are rarely a concern.
(When was the last time you tested for anagrams of emojis?)
edited 14 mins ago
answered 1 hour ago
Stephen CStephen C
528k72590946
528k72590946
add a comment |
add a comment |
dingy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
dingy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
dingy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
dingy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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This is what we call a "Collation". You should use a library for this because there are many collations to choose from.
– Guillaume F.
2 hours ago