Trim a string based on the string length
s = s.substring(0, Math.min(s.length(), 10));
Using Math.min
like this avoids an exception in the case where the string is already shorter than 10
.
Notes:
-
The above does simple trimming. If you actually want to replace the last characters with three dots if the string is too long, use Apache Commons
StringUtils.abbreviate
; see @H6's solution. If you want to use the Unicode horizontal ellipsis character, see @Basil's solution. -
For typical implementations of
String
,s.substring(0, s.length())
will returns
rather than allocating a newString
. -
This may behave incorrectly1 if your String contains Unicode codepoints outside of the BMP; e.g. Emojis. For a (more complicated) solution that works correctly for all Unicode code-points, see @sibnick's solution.
1 - A Unicode codepoint that is not on plane 0 (the BMP) is represented as a "surrogate pair" (i.e. two char
values) in the String
. By ignoring this, we might trim the string to fewer than 10 code points, or (worse) truncate it in the middle of a surrogate pair. On the other hand, String.length()
is not a good measure of Unicode text length, so trimming based on that property may be the wrong thing to do.
StringUtils.abbreviate
from Apache Commons Lang library could be your friend:
StringUtils.abbreviate("abcdefg", 6) = "abc..."
StringUtils.abbreviate("abcdefg", 7) = "abcdefg"
StringUtils.abbreviate("abcdefg", 8) = "abcdefg"
StringUtils.abbreviate("abcdefg", 4) = "a..."
Commons Lang3 even allow to set a custom String as replacement marker. With this you can for example set a single character ellipsis.
StringUtils.abbreviate("abcdefg", "\u2026", 6) = "abcde…"