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Home/ Questions/Q 947003
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T23:00:44+00:00 2026-05-15T23:00:44+00:00

How can i find different characters in the strings at same positions? Ex: String

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How can i find different characters in the strings at same positions? Ex:

String string1 = "Anand has 2 bags and 4 apples";
String n = /* ??? */;
String n2 = /* ??? */;
String string2 = "Anand has " + n + " bags and " + n2 + " apples";

I want n = "2" and n1 = "4".

Please let me know how we can do this? (Space added between words only for clarity purpose . But i can not use Space as delimiter)

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T23:00:44+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 11:00 pm

    You can use the StringTemplate class that i developed (I’d developed a URITemplate class to match restlike uris but have modified it to use strings as well)

      // Licensed Apache2 (http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.txt) 
      import java.util.List;
    
      import java.net.URL;
      import java.net.URLConnection;
    
      import java.util.Map;
      import java.util.ArrayList;
      import java.util.LinkedHashMap;
      import java.util.regex.Matcher;
      import java.util.regex.Pattern;
    
      /**
       * <pre>
       *    StringTemplate t = new StringTemplate("/catalog/{categoryId}/products/{productId}/summary");
       *    t.matches("/catalog/23/products/12375/summary"); // returns true
       *    t.match("/catalog/23/products/12375/summary");   // returns a map {categoryId=23, productId=12375}
       * </pre>
       * 
       * @author anaik
       */
      public class StringTemplate {
         /** The meta pattern for  template to match sequence such as: {someVar} */
         private static final Pattern patternPattern = Pattern.compile("\\{([^\\{\\}]+)\\}");
         /** The  pattern string */
         private String stringPattern;
         /** The generated pattern when the stringPattern is parsed */
         private Pattern thisStringPattern;
         /** Variable names found in this pattern in that order */
         private List<String> vars = new ArrayList<String>();
    
         /**
          * Creates a new StringTemplate from the specified pattern
          * @param Pattern
          */
         private StringTemplate(String stringPattern)  {
            this.stringPattern = stringPattern;
            initialize();
         }
    
         /**
          * Gets the names of variables - those defined in {variable-name} constructs - in this StringTemplate
          * in the order they were specified
          * @return a list of variables or an empty list if no variables were found
          */
         public List<String> getVars() {
            return vars;
         }
    
         /**
          * Determine whether the specified <tt>actualString</code> matches with this StringTemplate
          * @param actualString The actual  to match
          * @return true iff successfull match
          */
         public boolean matches(String actualString)  {
            return thisStringPattern.matcher(actualString).matches();
         }
    
         /**
          * Matches the <tt>actualString</tt> with this StringTemplate and extracts values for all the variables
          * in this template and returns them as an ordered map (keys defined in the same order as that of
          * the StringTemplate. If the match was unsuccessfull, an empty map is returned. Note that this method
          * should be ideally be called after {@link #matches(java.lang.String) } to check whether the 
          * specified actually matches the template
          */
         public Map<String, String> match(String actualString) {
            Matcher m = thisStringPattern.matcher(actualString);
            Map<String, String> map = new LinkedHashMap<String, String>();
            if(m.matches())   {
               int gc = m.groupCount();
               for(int i = 0; i < gc; i++)   {
                  int g = i + 1;
                  map.put(vars.get(i), actualString.substring(m.start(g), m.end(g)));
               }
            }
            return map;
         }
    
         private void initialize()  {
            Matcher m = patternPattern.matcher(stringPattern);
            StringBuffer builder = new StringBuffer();
    
            while(m.find())   {
               String var = m.group(1);
               vars.add(var);
               m.appendReplacement(builder, "(.*)");
            }
            m.appendTail(builder);
            String genPattern = builder.toString();
            thisStringPattern = Pattern.compile(genPattern);
         }
    
         public static void main(String[] args) throws Throwable  {
            StringTemplate t = new StringTemplate(args[0]);
            System.out.println("Matches with actual Class Identifier: java.lang.String: " + t.matches(args[1]));
            System.out.println("Var values: " + t.match(args[1]));
         }
      }
    

    Compile this and test as follows:

    tmp$ java StringTemplate "Anand has {n} bags and {n1} apples" "Anand has 23 bags and 500 apples"
    

    This is the output

     Matches with actual URI: true
     Var values: {n=23, n1=500}
    

    The matches(String) returns the map containing the template variable names and values.
    This class can be used for matching any string with any number of vars. Its liscensed apache2

    If your input string contains regex characters, you will have to escape them:

      input = input.replaceAll("\\$", "\\\\\\$");
      input = input.replaceAll("\\(", "\\\\(");
      input = input.replaceAll("\\)", "\\\\)");
      StringTemplate st = new StringTemplate(input);
    

    Note that you need more accurate regexps for conditions where input string already has characters like “\$”

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