This is just example imitating real question/answers with same level of difficulty:
Question:
In Java, how can I replace one or more continues dots with only one dot like "f.o.o....bar." -> "f.o.o.bar."?
I tried with
myString.replace(".+",".")
but it doesn't change anything.
Answer1:
replace
method accepts literals, not regex. You wan to usereplaceAll
.
Also you need to escape.
since it is regex metacharacter (you can use"\\."
for that).
Last thing is that Strings in Java are immutable so invokingmyString.replaceAll
doesn't change string frommyString
reference, but it creates (and returns) new one with replaced values, so you should store it somewhere like inmyString
reference. In short, your code can look like:
yourString = yourString.replaceAll("\\.+",".");
Answer2 (posted 10 minutes after Answer1):
Based on suggestion from Answer1 you can run below code and see that it solves your problem (thanks @Answer1Author):
public class TestX {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String myString = "f.o.o...bar.";
myString = myString.replaceAll("\\.+", ".");
System.out.println(myString);
}
}
As you see there is some general question and answer which explains the problem fully and with simple solution.
Now ten minutes after correct answer new one appears which contains only runnable example showing that Answer1 was correct.
Is this new answer OK, or not? I am asking since few weeks ago I flagged such answer with description
It is basically duplicate of already posted answer [link]. It just wraps solution in runnable method
and till this day my flag is active so I am not sure if mods are too busy or maybe this behaviour is not so bad as I think it is.
While I agree that this technically may not be plagiarism, I still see such answers as duplicates so I left a comment(s) under it explaining why such behaviour is (at least IMO) not correct, and down-voted it. Can I do something more about it (except posting link to this answer on meta, I don't want to cause lynch which could discourage this user from farther participating in SO - I didn't see any other answers of this type in his/her profile so it seems to be one time mistake)?
yourString.replaceAll("\\.+",".")
is considered plagiarsim, then every programmer has committed plagiarism millions of times.System.out.println("Hello world");
. Of course, concerning the role as an answer here, it may not have been necessary, and arguing about whether a MCVE in this case adds value to an answer is probably nitpicking (although I don't think so in this case...)<?...?>
and as separate answer while including link to original answer?main
method along with class name containing it (if this class doesn't include other methods used in example) and imports to standard classes. In case of your linked answer it seems that main solution was code placed inside your method, so method signature was something extra, but not needed (method name is correct but irrelevant, returned type is same as expected in question, method doesn't use any arguments which type could be important), so I would agree with this edit.