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How to check if String value is Boolean type in Java?

I did a little search on this but couldn't find anything useful开发者_如何学C.

The point being that if String value is either "true" or "false" the return value should be true. In every other value it should be false.

I tried these:

String value = "false";
System.out.println("test1: " + Boolean.parseBoolean(value));
System.out.println("test2: " + Boolean.valueOf(value));
System.out.println("test3: " + Boolean.getBoolean(value));

All functions returned false :(


  • parseBoolean(String) returns true if the String is (case-insensitive) "true", otherwise false
  • valueOf(String) ditto, returns the canonical Boolean Objects
  • getBoolean(String) is a red herring; it fetches the System property of the given name and compares that to "true"

There exists no method to test whether a String encodes a Boolean; for all practical effects, any non-"true"-String is "false".


return "true".equals(value) || "false".equals(value);


Apache commons-lang3 has BooleanUtils with a method toBooleanObject:

BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject(String str)

// where: 

BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject(null)    = null
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("true")  = Boolean.TRUE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("false") = Boolean.FALSE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("on")    = Boolean.TRUE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("ON")    = Boolean.TRUE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("off")   = Boolean.FALSE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("oFf")   = Boolean.FALSE
BooleanUtils.toBooleanObject("blue")  = null


if ("true".equals(value) || "false".equals(value)) {
  // do something
} else {
  // do something else
}


Here's a method you can use to check if a value is a boolean:

boolean isBoolean(String value) {
    return value != null && Arrays.stream(new String[]{"true", "false", "1", "0"})
            .anyMatch(b -> b.equalsIgnoreCase(value));
}

Examples of using it:

System.out.println(isBoolean(null)); //false
System.out.println(isBoolean("")); //false
System.out.println(isBoolean("true")); //true
System.out.println(isBoolean("fALsE")); //true
System.out.println(isBoolean("asdf")); //false
System.out.println(isBoolean("01truefalse")); //false


The methods you're calling on the Boolean class don't check whether the string contains a valid boolean value, but they return the boolean value that represents the contents of the string: put "true" in string, they return true, put "false" in string, they return false.

You can surely use these methods, however, to check for valid boolean values, as I'd expect them to throw an exception if the string contains "hello" or something not boolean.

Wrap that in a Method ContainsBoolString and you're go.

EDIT
By the way, in C# there are methods like bool Int32.TryParse(string x, out int i) that perform the check whether the content can be parsed and then return the parsed result.

int i;
if (Int32.TryParse("Hello", out i))
  // Hello is an int and its value is in i
else
  // Hello is not an int

Benchmarks indicate they are way faster than the following:

int i;
try
{
   i = Int32.Parse("Hello");
   // Hello is an int and its value is in i
}
catch
{
   // Hello is not an int
}

Maybe there are similar methods in Java? It's been a while since I've used Java...


Actually, checking for a Boolean type in a String (which is a type) is impossible. Basically you're asking how to do a 'string compare'.

Like others stated. You need to define when you want to return "true" or "false" (under what conditions). Do you want it to be case(in)sensitive? What if the value is null?

I think Boolean.valueOf() is your friend, javadoc says:

Returns a Boolean with a value represented by the specified String. The Boolean returned represents the value true if the string argument is not null and is equal, ignoring case, to the string "true".

Example: Boolean.valueOf("True") returns true.
Example: Boolean.valueOf("yes") returns false.


Can also do it by regex:

Pattern queryLangPattern = Pattern.compile("true|false", Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE);
Matcher matcher = queryLangPattern.matcher(booleanParam);
return matcher.matches();


Yes, but, didn't you parse "false"? If you parse "true", then they return true.

Maybe there's a misunderstanding: the methods don't test, if the String content represents a boolean value, they evaluate the String content to boolean.


String value = "True";
boolean result = value.equalsIgnoreCase("true") ? true : false;


Well for this, also have a look at org.apache.commons.lang.BooleanUtils#toBoolean(java.lang.String), along with many other useful functions.


return value.equals("false") || value.equals("true");


Something you should also take into consideration is character casing...

Instead of:

return value.equals("false") || value.equals("true");

Do this:

return value.equalsIgnoreCase("false") || value.equalsIgnoreCase("true");


I suggest that you take a look at the Java docs for these methods. It appears that you are using them incorrectly. These methods will not tell you if the string is a valid boolean value, but instead they return a boolean, set to true or false, based on the string that you pass in, "true" or "false".

http://www.j2ee.me/javase/6/docs/api/java/lang/Boolean.html


See oracle docs

public static boolean parseBoolean(String s) {
        return ((s != null) && s.equalsIgnoreCase("true"));
    }


  function isBooleanString(val) {
    if (val === "true" || val === "false"){
      return true
    } else {
      return false
    }
  }
isBooleanString("true") // true
isBooleanString("false") // true

isBooleanString("blabla") // false
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