Escapes and unescapes Strings for
 Java, Java Script, HTML, XML, and SQL.
 
#ThreadSafe#
Note that this version is a stripped down version from Commons Lang 2.6 with only necessary methods for JSON builder
| Constructor and description | 
|---|
| StringEscapeUtils
                                () | 
| Type Params | Return Type | Name and description | 
|---|---|---|
|  | static String | escapeJava(String str)Escapes the characters in a Stringusing Java String rules. | 
|  | static void | escapeJava(Writer out, String str)Escapes the characters in a Stringusing Java String rules to
 aWriter. | 
|  | static String | escapeJavaScript(String str)Escapes the characters in a Stringusing JavaScript String rules. | 
|  | static void | escapeJavaScript(Writer out, String str)Escapes the characters in a Stringusing JavaScript String rules
 to aWriter. | 
|  | static String | unescapeJava(String str)Unescapes any Java literals found in the String. | 
|  | static void | unescapeJava(Writer out, String str) | 
|  | static String | unescapeJavaScript(String str)Unescapes any JavaScript literals found in the String. | 
|  | static void | unescapeJavaScript(Writer out, String str)Unescapes any JavaScript literals found in the Stringto aWriter. | 
StringEscapeUtils instances should NOT be constructed in
 standard programming.
 
Instead, the class should be used as:
StringEscapeUtils.escapeJava("foo");
 This constructor is public to permit tools that require a JavaBean instance to operate.
 Escapes the characters in a String using Java String rules.
 
Deals correctly with quotes and control-chars (tab, backslash, cr, ff, etc.)
 So a tab becomes the characters '\\' and 't'.
 
The only difference between Java strings and JavaScript strings is that in JavaScript, a single quote must be escaped.
Example:
input string: He didn't say, "Stop!" output string: He didn't say, \"Stop!\"
str -   String to escape values in, may be nullnull if null string input Escapes the characters in a String using Java String rules to
 a Writer.
 
 A null string input has no effect.
nullout -   Writer to write escaped string intostr -   String to escape values in, may be null Escapes the characters in a String using JavaScript String rules.
 
Escapes any values it finds into their JavaScript String form. Deals correctly with quotes and control-chars (tab, backslash, cr, ff, etc.)
 So a tab becomes the characters '\\' and 't'.
 
The only difference between Java strings and JavaScript strings is that in JavaScript, a single quote must be escaped.
Example:
input string: He didn't say, "Stop!" output string: He didn\'t say, \"Stop!\"
str -   String to escape values in, may be nullnull if null string input Escapes the characters in a String using JavaScript String rules
 to a Writer.
 
 A null string input has no effect.
nullout -   Writer to write escaped string intostr -   String to escape values in, may be null Unescapes any Java literals found in the String.
 For example, it will turn a sequence of '\' and
 'n' into a newline character, unless the '\'
 is preceded by another '\'.
     
str -   the String to unescape, may be nullString, null if null string input
Unescapes any Java literals found in the String to a
 Writer.
 
 For example, it will turn a sequence of '\' and
 'n' into a newline character, unless the '\'
 is preceded by another '\'.
 
 A null string input has no effect.
nullout -   the Writer used to output unescaped charactersstr -   the String to unescape, may be null Unescapes any JavaScript literals found in the String.
 
 For example, it will turn a sequence of '\' and 'n'
 into a newline character, unless the '\' is preceded by another
 '\'.
     
str -   the String to unescape, may be nullString, null if null string input Unescapes any JavaScript literals found in the String to a
 Writer.
 
 For example, it will turn a sequence of '\' and 'n'
 into a newline character, unless the '\' is preceded by another
 '\'.
 
 A null string input has no effect.
nullout -   the Writer used to output unescaped charactersstr -   the String to unescape, may be nullCopyright © 2003-2018 The Apache Software Foundation. All rights reserved.