Remove specific words in a string












7















Given a string = "test20190906.pdf", how can I get only "test.pdf" such that it removes the date from the string by using string.replace or remove ?



Considering the format will always be filename + date + .extension.










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Consider mentioning the exact format of the date/time in the file name. That will help produce better solutions.

    – Sibgha
    13 hours ago






  • 3





    Is it just the date you want to remove or all numbers?

    – Popeye
    13 hours ago











  • Will extension always be .pdf?

    – Piro
    11 hours ago
















7















Given a string = "test20190906.pdf", how can I get only "test.pdf" such that it removes the date from the string by using string.replace or remove ?



Considering the format will always be filename + date + .extension.










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Consider mentioning the exact format of the date/time in the file name. That will help produce better solutions.

    – Sibgha
    13 hours ago






  • 3





    Is it just the date you want to remove or all numbers?

    – Popeye
    13 hours ago











  • Will extension always be .pdf?

    – Piro
    11 hours ago














7












7








7


1






Given a string = "test20190906.pdf", how can I get only "test.pdf" such that it removes the date from the string by using string.replace or remove ?



Considering the format will always be filename + date + .extension.










share|improve this question
















Given a string = "test20190906.pdf", how can I get only "test.pdf" such that it removes the date from the string by using string.replace or remove ?



Considering the format will always be filename + date + .extension.







java string






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 13 hours ago







Viper629

















asked 13 hours ago









Viper629Viper629

483




483








  • 2





    Consider mentioning the exact format of the date/time in the file name. That will help produce better solutions.

    – Sibgha
    13 hours ago






  • 3





    Is it just the date you want to remove or all numbers?

    – Popeye
    13 hours ago











  • Will extension always be .pdf?

    – Piro
    11 hours ago














  • 2





    Consider mentioning the exact format of the date/time in the file name. That will help produce better solutions.

    – Sibgha
    13 hours ago






  • 3





    Is it just the date you want to remove or all numbers?

    – Popeye
    13 hours ago











  • Will extension always be .pdf?

    – Piro
    11 hours ago








2




2





Consider mentioning the exact format of the date/time in the file name. That will help produce better solutions.

– Sibgha
13 hours ago





Consider mentioning the exact format of the date/time in the file name. That will help produce better solutions.

– Sibgha
13 hours ago




3




3





Is it just the date you want to remove or all numbers?

– Popeye
13 hours ago





Is it just the date you want to remove or all numbers?

– Popeye
13 hours ago













Will extension always be .pdf?

– Piro
11 hours ago





Will extension always be .pdf?

– Piro
11 hours ago












9 Answers
9






active

oldest

votes


















9














You can use a regex to remove consecutive digits that resemble a date in any format provided the filename is appended immediately by the date.



"test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}", "");





share|improve this answer


























  • What if you did something like "test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}\.", ".") because if there is any reason a file may have a number at then end other than the date (ie JavaFinalYear5<date>.txt then you may want to preserve the number 5. This way you can just select the date, and no other numbers.

    – KGlasier
    3 hours ago



















5














I see previous answers and that answers does not work if you got other numbers in file name for example: 01_test20190913.pdf



In that case solution will be



String file = "01_test20190913.pdf";
System.out.println(file.substring(0, file.length() - 12)+".pdf");


here i take the first part of string without last 12 characters and add ".pdf"






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    By reading the question we can suppose the format is filename+date+.pdf, if is not we have to search "2019" and remove it + next 4 characters but it will work only for 2019 dates and it will not work if filename contains "2019"

    – pavelbere
    13 hours ago








  • 1





    Maybe we can or maybe not only , but it's less probably, my answer just approach the question based on my assumptions and maybe can help someone in that particular case

    – pavelbere
    13 hours ago



















3














There are a lot of good answers, but I want present one more. It'll work if filename contains digits not only in date part. I assume that date is always appears before extension and has fixed length.



s.replaceAll("\d{8}.pdf", ".pdf");


And if the file extension varies then you could do some additional work:



public static String removeDate(String s) {
final String extension = s.substring(s.lastIndexOf("."));
final String pattern = "\d{8}" + extension;

return s.replaceAll(pattern, extension);
}

public static void main(String args)
{
System.out.println(removeDate("test20190101.pdf"));
System.out.println(removeDate("123123test20190101.txt"));
System.out.println(removeDate("123te11st20190101.csv"));
}





share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    Should escape the dot too: "\d{8}\.pdf"

    – zwol
    11 hours ago



















1














Assuming the date contains only numbers, you can use regex to replace numbers, e.g.:



String fileNameWithDate = "test20190906.pdf";
String fileName = fileNameWithDate.replaceAll("[0-9]+", ""));
System.out.println(fileName);





share|improve this answer


























  • he want to remove just a date, not all numbers

    – pavelbere
    13 hours ago



















1














If the format of date is "yyyyMMdd" then I suggest go for the simplest solution as also given by @pavelbere. But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.



String file = "test20190906.pdf"; 
String fileName = file.substring(0, file.length() - 12)+".pdf";





share|improve this answer
























  • But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.

    – Sibgha
    13 hours ago





















0














If you want to remove the dates only from the String then you can take a look on the solution (Assuming the date will come just before the .pdf) :



    String fileNameWithDate = "te3st320190906.pdf";

StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(fileNameWithDate).replace(fileNameWithDate.indexOf(".pdf") - 8,
fileNameWithDate.indexOf(".pdf"), "");
System.out.println(sb.toString());


Output:



te3st3.pdf





share|improve this answer


























  • What if the file name is test112019090611.pdf? Also, what is the point of all the StringBuilder etc... when you end up doing .replaceAll("[0-9]+", "") in the end?

    – Nicholas K
    13 hours ago













  • Sorry I forgot to put that I have the assumption that date will come just before the .pdf .

    – Amit Bera
    13 hours ago



















0














string name = "test20190906.pdf"
name.replaceAll("[0-9]","");





share|improve this answer































    0














    My approach would be to remove all numbers which are 8 digits long and are next to the last dot and replace them with a dot using the regex: (d{8})(?!.*d.).



    String filename = "filename12345678.pdf";
    filename = filename.replaceAll("(\d{8})(?!.*\d\.)\.", ".");


    You can see this being used and an explanation of what it does here.



    If the date can be different lengths then replace the {8} with a *, this enables the date to be any length.






    share|improve this answer

































      0














      An answer that doesn't use Regex:
      For filename as the original string:



      l = filename.split('.')
      l[-2] = l[-2][:-8]
      output = '.'.join(l)


      This uses the fact that the last '.' will always precede the extension, so the 8 characters prior to this will be dates. As long as we remove those, and put the '.' back in, we have the filename regardless of extension, regardless of characters preceding it, without using Regular Expressions.






      share|improve this answer























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        9 Answers
        9






        active

        oldest

        votes








        9 Answers
        9






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        9














        You can use a regex to remove consecutive digits that resemble a date in any format provided the filename is appended immediately by the date.



        "test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}", "");





        share|improve this answer


























        • What if you did something like "test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}\.", ".") because if there is any reason a file may have a number at then end other than the date (ie JavaFinalYear5<date>.txt then you may want to preserve the number 5. This way you can just select the date, and no other numbers.

          – KGlasier
          3 hours ago
















        9














        You can use a regex to remove consecutive digits that resemble a date in any format provided the filename is appended immediately by the date.



        "test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}", "");





        share|improve this answer


























        • What if you did something like "test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}\.", ".") because if there is any reason a file may have a number at then end other than the date (ie JavaFinalYear5<date>.txt then you may want to preserve the number 5. This way you can just select the date, and no other numbers.

          – KGlasier
          3 hours ago














        9












        9








        9







        You can use a regex to remove consecutive digits that resemble a date in any format provided the filename is appended immediately by the date.



        "test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}", "");





        share|improve this answer















        You can use a regex to remove consecutive digits that resemble a date in any format provided the filename is appended immediately by the date.



        "test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}", "");






        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 13 hours ago

























        answered 13 hours ago









        Nicholas KNicholas K

        8,03161638




        8,03161638













        • What if you did something like "test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}\.", ".") because if there is any reason a file may have a number at then end other than the date (ie JavaFinalYear5<date>.txt then you may want to preserve the number 5. This way you can just select the date, and no other numbers.

          – KGlasier
          3 hours ago



















        • What if you did something like "test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}\.", ".") because if there is any reason a file may have a number at then end other than the date (ie JavaFinalYear5<date>.txt then you may want to preserve the number 5. This way you can just select the date, and no other numbers.

          – KGlasier
          3 hours ago

















        What if you did something like "test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}\.", ".") because if there is any reason a file may have a number at then end other than the date (ie JavaFinalYear5<date>.txt then you may want to preserve the number 5. This way you can just select the date, and no other numbers.

        – KGlasier
        3 hours ago





        What if you did something like "test20190906.pdf".replaceAll("[0-9]{8}\.", ".") because if there is any reason a file may have a number at then end other than the date (ie JavaFinalYear5<date>.txt then you may want to preserve the number 5. This way you can just select the date, and no other numbers.

        – KGlasier
        3 hours ago













        5














        I see previous answers and that answers does not work if you got other numbers in file name for example: 01_test20190913.pdf



        In that case solution will be



        String file = "01_test20190913.pdf";
        System.out.println(file.substring(0, file.length() - 12)+".pdf");


        here i take the first part of string without last 12 characters and add ".pdf"






        share|improve this answer





















        • 1





          By reading the question we can suppose the format is filename+date+.pdf, if is not we have to search "2019" and remove it + next 4 characters but it will work only for 2019 dates and it will not work if filename contains "2019"

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago








        • 1





          Maybe we can or maybe not only , but it's less probably, my answer just approach the question based on my assumptions and maybe can help someone in that particular case

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago
















        5














        I see previous answers and that answers does not work if you got other numbers in file name for example: 01_test20190913.pdf



        In that case solution will be



        String file = "01_test20190913.pdf";
        System.out.println(file.substring(0, file.length() - 12)+".pdf");


        here i take the first part of string without last 12 characters and add ".pdf"






        share|improve this answer





















        • 1





          By reading the question we can suppose the format is filename+date+.pdf, if is not we have to search "2019" and remove it + next 4 characters but it will work only for 2019 dates and it will not work if filename contains "2019"

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago








        • 1





          Maybe we can or maybe not only , but it's less probably, my answer just approach the question based on my assumptions and maybe can help someone in that particular case

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago














        5












        5








        5







        I see previous answers and that answers does not work if you got other numbers in file name for example: 01_test20190913.pdf



        In that case solution will be



        String file = "01_test20190913.pdf";
        System.out.println(file.substring(0, file.length() - 12)+".pdf");


        here i take the first part of string without last 12 characters and add ".pdf"






        share|improve this answer















        I see previous answers and that answers does not work if you got other numbers in file name for example: 01_test20190913.pdf



        In that case solution will be



        String file = "01_test20190913.pdf";
        System.out.println(file.substring(0, file.length() - 12)+".pdf");


        here i take the first part of string without last 12 characters and add ".pdf"







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 7 hours ago

























        answered 13 hours ago









        pavelberepavelbere

        33119




        33119








        • 1





          By reading the question we can suppose the format is filename+date+.pdf, if is not we have to search "2019" and remove it + next 4 characters but it will work only for 2019 dates and it will not work if filename contains "2019"

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago








        • 1





          Maybe we can or maybe not only , but it's less probably, my answer just approach the question based on my assumptions and maybe can help someone in that particular case

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago














        • 1





          By reading the question we can suppose the format is filename+date+.pdf, if is not we have to search "2019" and remove it + next 4 characters but it will work only for 2019 dates and it will not work if filename contains "2019"

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago








        • 1





          Maybe we can or maybe not only , but it's less probably, my answer just approach the question based on my assumptions and maybe can help someone in that particular case

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago








        1




        1





        By reading the question we can suppose the format is filename+date+.pdf, if is not we have to search "2019" and remove it + next 4 characters but it will work only for 2019 dates and it will not work if filename contains "2019"

        – pavelbere
        13 hours ago







        By reading the question we can suppose the format is filename+date+.pdf, if is not we have to search "2019" and remove it + next 4 characters but it will work only for 2019 dates and it will not work if filename contains "2019"

        – pavelbere
        13 hours ago






        1




        1





        Maybe we can or maybe not only , but it's less probably, my answer just approach the question based on my assumptions and maybe can help someone in that particular case

        – pavelbere
        13 hours ago





        Maybe we can or maybe not only , but it's less probably, my answer just approach the question based on my assumptions and maybe can help someone in that particular case

        – pavelbere
        13 hours ago











        3














        There are a lot of good answers, but I want present one more. It'll work if filename contains digits not only in date part. I assume that date is always appears before extension and has fixed length.



        s.replaceAll("\d{8}.pdf", ".pdf");


        And if the file extension varies then you could do some additional work:



        public static String removeDate(String s) {
        final String extension = s.substring(s.lastIndexOf("."));
        final String pattern = "\d{8}" + extension;

        return s.replaceAll(pattern, extension);
        }

        public static void main(String args)
        {
        System.out.println(removeDate("test20190101.pdf"));
        System.out.println(removeDate("123123test20190101.txt"));
        System.out.println(removeDate("123te11st20190101.csv"));
        }





        share|improve this answer





















        • 1





          Should escape the dot too: "\d{8}\.pdf"

          – zwol
          11 hours ago
















        3














        There are a lot of good answers, but I want present one more. It'll work if filename contains digits not only in date part. I assume that date is always appears before extension and has fixed length.



        s.replaceAll("\d{8}.pdf", ".pdf");


        And if the file extension varies then you could do some additional work:



        public static String removeDate(String s) {
        final String extension = s.substring(s.lastIndexOf("."));
        final String pattern = "\d{8}" + extension;

        return s.replaceAll(pattern, extension);
        }

        public static void main(String args)
        {
        System.out.println(removeDate("test20190101.pdf"));
        System.out.println(removeDate("123123test20190101.txt"));
        System.out.println(removeDate("123te11st20190101.csv"));
        }





        share|improve this answer





















        • 1





          Should escape the dot too: "\d{8}\.pdf"

          – zwol
          11 hours ago














        3












        3








        3







        There are a lot of good answers, but I want present one more. It'll work if filename contains digits not only in date part. I assume that date is always appears before extension and has fixed length.



        s.replaceAll("\d{8}.pdf", ".pdf");


        And if the file extension varies then you could do some additional work:



        public static String removeDate(String s) {
        final String extension = s.substring(s.lastIndexOf("."));
        final String pattern = "\d{8}" + extension;

        return s.replaceAll(pattern, extension);
        }

        public static void main(String args)
        {
        System.out.println(removeDate("test20190101.pdf"));
        System.out.println(removeDate("123123test20190101.txt"));
        System.out.println(removeDate("123te11st20190101.csv"));
        }





        share|improve this answer















        There are a lot of good answers, but I want present one more. It'll work if filename contains digits not only in date part. I assume that date is always appears before extension and has fixed length.



        s.replaceAll("\d{8}.pdf", ".pdf");


        And if the file extension varies then you could do some additional work:



        public static String removeDate(String s) {
        final String extension = s.substring(s.lastIndexOf("."));
        final String pattern = "\d{8}" + extension;

        return s.replaceAll(pattern, extension);
        }

        public static void main(String args)
        {
        System.out.println(removeDate("test20190101.pdf"));
        System.out.println(removeDate("123123test20190101.txt"));
        System.out.println(removeDate("123te11st20190101.csv"));
        }






        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 13 hours ago

























        answered 13 hours ago









        Mikhail IlinykhMikhail Ilinykh

        40829




        40829








        • 1





          Should escape the dot too: "\d{8}\.pdf"

          – zwol
          11 hours ago














        • 1





          Should escape the dot too: "\d{8}\.pdf"

          – zwol
          11 hours ago








        1




        1





        Should escape the dot too: "\d{8}\.pdf"

        – zwol
        11 hours ago





        Should escape the dot too: "\d{8}\.pdf"

        – zwol
        11 hours ago











        1














        Assuming the date contains only numbers, you can use regex to replace numbers, e.g.:



        String fileNameWithDate = "test20190906.pdf";
        String fileName = fileNameWithDate.replaceAll("[0-9]+", ""));
        System.out.println(fileName);





        share|improve this answer


























        • he want to remove just a date, not all numbers

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago
















        1














        Assuming the date contains only numbers, you can use regex to replace numbers, e.g.:



        String fileNameWithDate = "test20190906.pdf";
        String fileName = fileNameWithDate.replaceAll("[0-9]+", ""));
        System.out.println(fileName);





        share|improve this answer


























        • he want to remove just a date, not all numbers

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago














        1












        1








        1







        Assuming the date contains only numbers, you can use regex to replace numbers, e.g.:



        String fileNameWithDate = "test20190906.pdf";
        String fileName = fileNameWithDate.replaceAll("[0-9]+", ""));
        System.out.println(fileName);





        share|improve this answer















        Assuming the date contains only numbers, you can use regex to replace numbers, e.g.:



        String fileNameWithDate = "test20190906.pdf";
        String fileName = fileNameWithDate.replaceAll("[0-9]+", ""));
        System.out.println(fileName);






        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 13 hours ago

























        answered 13 hours ago









        Darshan MehtaDarshan Mehta

        23.4k32954




        23.4k32954













        • he want to remove just a date, not all numbers

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago



















        • he want to remove just a date, not all numbers

          – pavelbere
          13 hours ago

















        he want to remove just a date, not all numbers

        – pavelbere
        13 hours ago





        he want to remove just a date, not all numbers

        – pavelbere
        13 hours ago











        1














        If the format of date is "yyyyMMdd" then I suggest go for the simplest solution as also given by @pavelbere. But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.



        String file = "test20190906.pdf"; 
        String fileName = file.substring(0, file.length() - 12)+".pdf";





        share|improve this answer
























        • But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.

          – Sibgha
          13 hours ago


















        1














        If the format of date is "yyyyMMdd" then I suggest go for the simplest solution as also given by @pavelbere. But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.



        String file = "test20190906.pdf"; 
        String fileName = file.substring(0, file.length() - 12)+".pdf";





        share|improve this answer
























        • But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.

          – Sibgha
          13 hours ago
















        1












        1








        1







        If the format of date is "yyyyMMdd" then I suggest go for the simplest solution as also given by @pavelbere. But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.



        String file = "test20190906.pdf"; 
        String fileName = file.substring(0, file.length() - 12)+".pdf";





        share|improve this answer













        If the format of date is "yyyyMMdd" then I suggest go for the simplest solution as also given by @pavelbere. But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.



        String file = "test20190906.pdf"; 
        String fileName = file.substring(0, file.length() - 12)+".pdf";






        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 13 hours ago









        SibghaSibgha

        1266




        1266













        • But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.

          – Sibgha
          13 hours ago





















        • But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.

          – Sibgha
          13 hours ago



















        But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.

        – Sibgha
        13 hours ago







        But this solution also assumes that the date always appends in the end of the filename.

        – Sibgha
        13 hours ago













        0














        If you want to remove the dates only from the String then you can take a look on the solution (Assuming the date will come just before the .pdf) :



            String fileNameWithDate = "te3st320190906.pdf";

        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(fileNameWithDate).replace(fileNameWithDate.indexOf(".pdf") - 8,
        fileNameWithDate.indexOf(".pdf"), "");
        System.out.println(sb.toString());


        Output:



        te3st3.pdf





        share|improve this answer


























        • What if the file name is test112019090611.pdf? Also, what is the point of all the StringBuilder etc... when you end up doing .replaceAll("[0-9]+", "") in the end?

          – Nicholas K
          13 hours ago













        • Sorry I forgot to put that I have the assumption that date will come just before the .pdf .

          – Amit Bera
          13 hours ago
















        0














        If you want to remove the dates only from the String then you can take a look on the solution (Assuming the date will come just before the .pdf) :



            String fileNameWithDate = "te3st320190906.pdf";

        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(fileNameWithDate).replace(fileNameWithDate.indexOf(".pdf") - 8,
        fileNameWithDate.indexOf(".pdf"), "");
        System.out.println(sb.toString());


        Output:



        te3st3.pdf





        share|improve this answer


























        • What if the file name is test112019090611.pdf? Also, what is the point of all the StringBuilder etc... when you end up doing .replaceAll("[0-9]+", "") in the end?

          – Nicholas K
          13 hours ago













        • Sorry I forgot to put that I have the assumption that date will come just before the .pdf .

          – Amit Bera
          13 hours ago














        0












        0








        0







        If you want to remove the dates only from the String then you can take a look on the solution (Assuming the date will come just before the .pdf) :



            String fileNameWithDate = "te3st320190906.pdf";

        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(fileNameWithDate).replace(fileNameWithDate.indexOf(".pdf") - 8,
        fileNameWithDate.indexOf(".pdf"), "");
        System.out.println(sb.toString());


        Output:



        te3st3.pdf





        share|improve this answer















        If you want to remove the dates only from the String then you can take a look on the solution (Assuming the date will come just before the .pdf) :



            String fileNameWithDate = "te3st320190906.pdf";

        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(fileNameWithDate).replace(fileNameWithDate.indexOf(".pdf") - 8,
        fileNameWithDate.indexOf(".pdf"), "");
        System.out.println(sb.toString());


        Output:



        te3st3.pdf






        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 13 hours ago

























        answered 13 hours ago









        Amit BeraAmit Bera

        4,2061630




        4,2061630













        • What if the file name is test112019090611.pdf? Also, what is the point of all the StringBuilder etc... when you end up doing .replaceAll("[0-9]+", "") in the end?

          – Nicholas K
          13 hours ago













        • Sorry I forgot to put that I have the assumption that date will come just before the .pdf .

          – Amit Bera
          13 hours ago



















        • What if the file name is test112019090611.pdf? Also, what is the point of all the StringBuilder etc... when you end up doing .replaceAll("[0-9]+", "") in the end?

          – Nicholas K
          13 hours ago













        • Sorry I forgot to put that I have the assumption that date will come just before the .pdf .

          – Amit Bera
          13 hours ago

















        What if the file name is test112019090611.pdf? Also, what is the point of all the StringBuilder etc... when you end up doing .replaceAll("[0-9]+", "") in the end?

        – Nicholas K
        13 hours ago







        What if the file name is test112019090611.pdf? Also, what is the point of all the StringBuilder etc... when you end up doing .replaceAll("[0-9]+", "") in the end?

        – Nicholas K
        13 hours ago















        Sorry I forgot to put that I have the assumption that date will come just before the .pdf .

        – Amit Bera
        13 hours ago





        Sorry I forgot to put that I have the assumption that date will come just before the .pdf .

        – Amit Bera
        13 hours ago











        0














        string name = "test20190906.pdf"
        name.replaceAll("[0-9]","");





        share|improve this answer




























          0














          string name = "test20190906.pdf"
          name.replaceAll("[0-9]","");





          share|improve this answer


























            0












            0








            0







            string name = "test20190906.pdf"
            name.replaceAll("[0-9]","");





            share|improve this answer













            string name = "test20190906.pdf"
            name.replaceAll("[0-9]","");






            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 13 hours ago









            pamithapamitha

            3715




            3715























                0














                My approach would be to remove all numbers which are 8 digits long and are next to the last dot and replace them with a dot using the regex: (d{8})(?!.*d.).



                String filename = "filename12345678.pdf";
                filename = filename.replaceAll("(\d{8})(?!.*\d\.)\.", ".");


                You can see this being used and an explanation of what it does here.



                If the date can be different lengths then replace the {8} with a *, this enables the date to be any length.






                share|improve this answer






























                  0














                  My approach would be to remove all numbers which are 8 digits long and are next to the last dot and replace them with a dot using the regex: (d{8})(?!.*d.).



                  String filename = "filename12345678.pdf";
                  filename = filename.replaceAll("(\d{8})(?!.*\d\.)\.", ".");


                  You can see this being used and an explanation of what it does here.



                  If the date can be different lengths then replace the {8} with a *, this enables the date to be any length.






                  share|improve this answer




























                    0












                    0








                    0







                    My approach would be to remove all numbers which are 8 digits long and are next to the last dot and replace them with a dot using the regex: (d{8})(?!.*d.).



                    String filename = "filename12345678.pdf";
                    filename = filename.replaceAll("(\d{8})(?!.*\d\.)\.", ".");


                    You can see this being used and an explanation of what it does here.



                    If the date can be different lengths then replace the {8} with a *, this enables the date to be any length.






                    share|improve this answer















                    My approach would be to remove all numbers which are 8 digits long and are next to the last dot and replace them with a dot using the regex: (d{8})(?!.*d.).



                    String filename = "filename12345678.pdf";
                    filename = filename.replaceAll("(\d{8})(?!.*\d\.)\.", ".");


                    You can see this being used and an explanation of what it does here.



                    If the date can be different lengths then replace the {8} with a *, this enables the date to be any length.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited 12 hours ago

























                    answered 12 hours ago









                    Toby SmithToby Smith

                    4181715




                    4181715























                        0














                        An answer that doesn't use Regex:
                        For filename as the original string:



                        l = filename.split('.')
                        l[-2] = l[-2][:-8]
                        output = '.'.join(l)


                        This uses the fact that the last '.' will always precede the extension, so the 8 characters prior to this will be dates. As long as we remove those, and put the '.' back in, we have the filename regardless of extension, regardless of characters preceding it, without using Regular Expressions.






                        share|improve this answer




























                          0














                          An answer that doesn't use Regex:
                          For filename as the original string:



                          l = filename.split('.')
                          l[-2] = l[-2][:-8]
                          output = '.'.join(l)


                          This uses the fact that the last '.' will always precede the extension, so the 8 characters prior to this will be dates. As long as we remove those, and put the '.' back in, we have the filename regardless of extension, regardless of characters preceding it, without using Regular Expressions.






                          share|improve this answer


























                            0












                            0








                            0







                            An answer that doesn't use Regex:
                            For filename as the original string:



                            l = filename.split('.')
                            l[-2] = l[-2][:-8]
                            output = '.'.join(l)


                            This uses the fact that the last '.' will always precede the extension, so the 8 characters prior to this will be dates. As long as we remove those, and put the '.' back in, we have the filename regardless of extension, regardless of characters preceding it, without using Regular Expressions.






                            share|improve this answer













                            An answer that doesn't use Regex:
                            For filename as the original string:



                            l = filename.split('.')
                            l[-2] = l[-2][:-8]
                            output = '.'.join(l)


                            This uses the fact that the last '.' will always precede the extension, so the 8 characters prior to this will be dates. As long as we remove those, and put the '.' back in, we have the filename regardless of extension, regardless of characters preceding it, without using Regular Expressions.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 9 hours ago









                            Jim EisenbergJim Eisenberg

                            10715




                            10715






























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