NumberFormatException error (parseInt)

2019-02-17 15:34发布

问题:

Hopefully a very simple query, but it's left me scratching my head.

I have a string, which is just a single integer, and I'm trying to then get that integer out as an int. This on the face of it shouldn't be a problem.

// this is how I create the string (it's the playload from a UDP datagram packet, 
// thought I don't think the origins hugely important - it's juts a test run so the
// stringMessage is always 1 (created by a seperate client process)

  ...
  recvSoc.receive(pac);
  String stringMessage = new String(pac.getData());
  port = pac.getPort();
  System.out.println("RECEIVED: " + stringMessage + " on port:  " + port);
  processMessage(stringMessage);
  ...

// Then in processMessage

public void processMessage(String data) {
  int message;
  message = Integer.parseInt(data);
  ...

This always crashes with a NumberFormatException error. I cannot for the life of me figure out what's causing this, any ideas greatly appreciated. I haven't coded much in Java (recently) so might simply be forgetting something critical or what not.

Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NumberFormatException: For input string: "1"
at java.lang.NumberFormatException.forInputString(NumberFormatException.java:65)
at java.lang.Integer.parseInt(Integer.java:481)
at java.lang.Integer.parseInt(Integer.java:514)
at udp.UDPServer.processMessage(UDPServer.java:85)
at udp.UDPServer.run(UDPServer.java:52)
at udp.UDPServer.main(UDPServer.java:156)

回答1:

Note that DatagramPackate.getData() returns the whole buffer!

The data you received is only a part of it:

The data received or the data to be sent starts from the offset in the buffer, and runs for length long.

So to convert the data to a String you should use this constructor:

String message = new String(pac.getData(), pac.getOffset(), pac.getLength(), "UTF-8");

Note that I specify the UTF-8 encoding here, as not specifying an encoding would result in the platform default encoding to be used, which is generally not what you want.



回答2:

If the string is really 1, the exception can't happen. So I would say the string is not actually 1.

do a data.toCharArray() and print each character's code (cast to int). It may turn out that there is a hidden character before the digit, for example. (edit: it appears iluxa mentioned this option in a comment while I was writing the answer)

Try data = data.trim() before passing it to parseInt(..)