You can use
org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils.containsIgnoreCase(CharSequence str,
CharSequence searchStr);
Checks if CharSequence contains a search CharSequence irrespective of
case, handling null. Case-insensitivity is defined as by
String.equalsIgnoreCase(String).A null CharSequence will return false.
This one will be better than regex as regex is always expensive in terms of performance.
For official doc, refer to : StringUtils.containsIgnoreCase
Update :
If you are among the ones who
- don’t want to use Apache commons library
- don’t want to go with the expensive
regex/Pattern
based solutions, - don’t want to create additional string object by using
toLowerCase
,
you can implement your own custom containsIgnoreCase
using java.lang.String.regionMatches
public boolean regionMatches(boolean ignoreCase,
int toffset,
String other,
int ooffset,
int len)
ignoreCase
: if true, ignores case when comparing characters.
public static boolean containsIgnoreCase(String str, String searchStr) {
if(str == null || searchStr == null) return false;
final int length = searchStr.length();
if (length == 0)
return true;
for (int i = str.length() - length; i >= 0; i--) {
if (str.regionMatches(true, i, searchStr, 0, length))
return true;
}
return false;
}