StringUtils isNumeric returns true when input is "???", why? [duplicate]
Asked Answered
T

2

6

I was reading the commons.apache.org isNumeric method definition and it states:

StringUtils.isNumeric("???") = true;

I am not sure why "???" is considered to be numeric. My guesses are:

  • A "?" is considered a unicode digit
  • It is some kind of regex pattern

isNumeric Method Definition

Trautman answered 25/7, 2016 at 21:8 Comment(0)
T
10

I was able to find the answer to this question by looking at the StringUtils source code for the isNumeric method. In the source code that line appears as:

StringUtils.isNumeric("\u0967\u0968\u0969")  = true

Where u0967, u0968, u0969 are Devangari Digits one, two, and three respectively. This may be a browser issue causing the characters to not be rendered correctly in the API.

Trautman answered 25/7, 2016 at 21:10 Comment(1)
And for what it's worth, my browser displays presumably-correct glyphs for those digits, rather than subbing in question marks.Charade
K
3

Looking at the code, the example is

StringUtils.isNumeric("\u0967\u0968\u0969")  = true

\u0967 is , which is "Devanagari Digit One"

\u0967 is , which is "Devanagari Digit Two"

So they are digits!

Klump answered 25/7, 2016 at 21:14 Comment(0)

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