Operations on {@link java.lang.String} that are
* null safe.
Finds the first index within a String, handling null.
* This method uses {@link String#indexOf(String, int)}.
A null String will return -1.
* A negative start position is treated as zero.
* An empty ("") search String always matches.
* A start position greater than the string length only matches
* an empty search String.
* StringUtils.indexOf(null, *, *) = -1
* StringUtils.indexOf(*, null, *) = -1
* StringUtils.indexOf("", "", 0) = 0
* StringUtils.indexOf("aabaabaa", "a", 0) = 0
* StringUtils.indexOf("aabaabaa", "b", 0) = 2
* StringUtils.indexOf("aabaabaa", "ab", 0) = 1
* StringUtils.indexOf("aabaabaa", "b", 3) = 5
* StringUtils.indexOf("aabaabaa", "b", 9) = -1
* StringUtils.indexOf("aabaabaa", "b", -1) = 2
* StringUtils.indexOf("aabaabaa", "", 2) = 2
* StringUtils.indexOf("abc", "", 9) = 3
*
*
* @param str the String to check, may be null
* @param searchStr the String to find, may be null
* @param startPos the start position, negative treated as zero
* @return the first index of the search String,
* -1 if no match or null string input
* @since 2.0
*/
public static int indexOf(String str, String searchStr, int startPos) {
if (str == null || searchStr == null) {
return -1;
}
// JDK1.2/JDK1.3 have a bug, when startPos > str.length for "", hence
if (searchStr.length() == 0 && startPos >= str.length()) {
return str.length();
}
return str.indexOf(searchStr, startPos);
}
}