2dea449949
This commit removes the method Strings#splitStringToArray and replaces the call sites with invocations to String#split. There are only two explanations for the existence of this method. The first is that String#split is slightly tricky in that it accepts a regular expression rather than a character to split on. This means that if s is a string, s.split(".") does not split on the character '.', but rather splits on the regular expression '.' which splits on every character (of course, this is easily fixed by invoking s.split("\\.") instead). The second possible explanation is that (again) String#split accepts a regular expression. This means that there could be a performance concern compared to just splitting on a single character. However, it turns out that String#split has a fast path for the case of splitting on a single character and microbenchmarks show that String#split has 1.5x--2x the throughput of Strings#splitStringToArray. There is a slight behavior difference between Strings#splitStringToArray and String#split: namely, the former would return an empty array in cases when the input string was null or empty but String#split will just NPE at the call site on null and return a one-element array containing the empty string when the input string is empty. There was only one place relying on this behavior and the call site has been modified accordingly. |
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