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String variable contains a file name, C:\Hello\AnotherFolder\The File Name.PDF. How do I only get the file name The File Name.PDF as a String?

I planned to split the string, but that is not the optimal solution.

Andrew Thompson
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Sharon Watinsan
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13 Answers13

341

just use File.getName()

File f = new File("C:\\Hello\\AnotherFolder\\The File Name.PDF");
System.out.println(f.getName());

using String methods:

  File f = new File("C:\\Hello\\AnotherFolder\\The File Name.PDF");  
System.out.println(f.getAbsolutePath().substring(f.getAbsolutePath().lastIndexOf("\\")+1));
PermGenError
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324

Alternative using Path (Java 7+):

Path p = Paths.get("C:\\Hello\\AnotherFolder\\The File Name.PDF");
String file = p.getFileName().toString();

Note that splitting the string on \\ is platform dependent as the file separator might vary. Path#getName takes care of that issue for you.

assylias
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    Has anyone done a performance comparison on the various methods in this question? – crush Sep 26 '13 at 02:12
  • @crush I don't think that `Paths.get` accesses the file system so wouldn't expect the performance to be materially different from a substring/indexOf. – assylias Sep 26 '13 at 07:15
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    How come it doesn't exist on Android? weird. – android developer Sep 09 '14 at 22:13
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    Yes, Path copes with the platform dependent problem of slash/backslash, but only if the file path is from the same machine (or platform). Consider this: you upload file from `Internet Explorer` and it has the path `"C:\\Hello\\AnotherFolder\\The File Name.PDF"` but your code is working on a Unix/Linux machine then `p.getFileName()` will return the whole path, not just `The File Name.PDF`. – nyxz Dec 29 '14 at 11:34
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    Calling `toString()` is so awkward. – Peter Oct 03 '18 at 04:37
86

Using FilenameUtils in Apache Commons IO :

String name1 = FilenameUtils.getName("/ab/cd/xyz.txt");
String name2 = FilenameUtils.getName("c:\\ab\\cd\\xyz.txt");
Binoy Babu
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36

Considering the String you're asking about is

C:\Hello\AnotherFolder\The File Name.PDF

we need to extract everything after the last separator, ie. \. That is what we are interested in.

You can do

String fullPath = "C:\\Hello\\AnotherFolder\\The File Name.PDF";
int index = fullPath.lastIndexOf("\\");
String fileName = fullPath.substring(index + 1);

This will retrieve the index of the last \ in your String and extract everything that comes after it into fileName.

If you have a String with a different separator, adjust the lastIndexOf to use that separator. (There's even an overload that accepts an entire String as a separator.)

I've omitted it in the example above, but if you're unsure where the String comes from or what it might contain, you'll want to validate that the lastIndexOf returns a non-negative value because the Javadoc states it'll return

-1 if there is no such occurrence

Sotirios Delimanolis
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  • Actually -1 return value can be used. Assuming the path is not empty and relative path are possible, If '\\' is not found then index +1 is 0 which is the position of the file name in that case. – Emmanuel May 19 '22 at 12:04
31

Since 1.7

    Path p = Paths.get("c:\\temp\\1.txt");
    String fileName = p.getFileName().toString();
    String directory = p.getParent().toString();
max3d
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11

you can use path = C:\Hello\AnotherFolder\TheFileName.PDF

String strPath = path.substring(path.lastIndexOf("\\")+1, path.length());
Rakesh
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11

The other answers didn't quite work for my specific scenario, where I am reading paths that have originated from an OS different to my current one. To elaborate I am saving email attachments saved from a Windows platform on a Linux server. The filename returned from the JavaMail API is something like 'C:\temp\hello.xls'

The solution I ended up with:

String filenameWithPath = "C:\\temp\\hello.xls";
String[] tokens = filenameWithPath.split("[\\\\|/]");
String filename = tokens[tokens.length - 1];
javaPhobic
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4

getFileName() method of java.nio.file.Path used to return the name of the file or directory pointed by this path object.

Path getFileName()

For reference:

https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/path-getfilename-method-in-java-with-examples/

Stone
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3

Considere the case that Java is Multiplatform:

int lastPath = fileName.lastIndexOf(File.separator);
if (lastPath!=-1){
    fileName = fileName.substring(lastPath+1);
}
1

A method without any dependency and takes care of .. , . and duplicate separators.

public static String getFileName(String filePath) {
    if( filePath==null || filePath.length()==0 )
        return "";
    filePath = filePath.replaceAll("[/\\\\]+", "/");
    int len = filePath.length(),
        upCount = 0;
    while( len>0 ) {
        //remove trailing separator
        if( filePath.charAt(len-1)=='/' ) {
            len--;
            if( len==0 )
                return "";
        }
        int lastInd = filePath.lastIndexOf('/', len-1);
        String fileName = filePath.substring(lastInd+1, len);
        if( fileName.equals(".") ) {
            len--;
        }
        else if( fileName.equals("..") ) {
            len -= 2;
            upCount++;
        }
        else {
            if( upCount==0 )
                return fileName;
            upCount--;
            len -= fileName.length();
        }
    }
    return "";
}

Test case:

@Test
public void testGetFileName() {
    assertEquals("", getFileName("/"));
    assertEquals("", getFileName("////"));
    assertEquals("", getFileName("//C//.//../"));
    assertEquals("", getFileName("C//.//../"));
    assertEquals("C", getFileName("C"));
    assertEquals("C", getFileName("/C"));
    assertEquals("C", getFileName("/C/"));
    assertEquals("C", getFileName("//C//"));
    assertEquals("C", getFileName("/A/B/C/"));
    assertEquals("C", getFileName("/A/B/C"));
    assertEquals("C", getFileName("/C/./B/../"));
    assertEquals("C", getFileName("//C//./B//..///"));
    assertEquals("user", getFileName("/user/java/.."));
    assertEquals("C:", getFileName("C:"));
    assertEquals("C:", getFileName("/C:"));
    assertEquals("java", getFileName("C:\\Program Files (x86)\\java\\bin\\.."));
    assertEquals("C.ext", getFileName("/A/B/C.ext"));
    assertEquals("C.ext", getFileName("C.ext"));
}

Maybe getFileName is a bit confusing, because it returns directory names also. It returns the name of file or last directory in a path.

yavuzkavus
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0

extract file name using java regex *.

public String extractFileName(String fullPathFile){
        try {
            Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("([^\\\\/:*?\"<>|\r\n]+$)");
            Matcher regexMatcher = regex.matcher(fullPathFile);
            if (regexMatcher.find()){
                return regexMatcher.group(1);
            }
        } catch (PatternSyntaxException ex) {
            LOG.info("extractFileName::pattern problem <"+fullPathFile+">",ex);
        }
        return fullPathFile;
    }
HJK
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0

You can use FileInfo object to get all information of your file.

    FileInfo f = new FileInfo(@"C:\Hello\AnotherFolder\The File Name.PDF");
    MessageBox.Show(f.Name);
    MessageBox.Show(f.FullName);
    MessageBox.Show(f.Extension );
    MessageBox.Show(f.DirectoryName);
Blue Phoenix
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-4

This answer works for me in c#:

using System.IO;
string fileName = Path.GetFileName("C:\Hello\AnotherFolder\The File Name.PDF");
cgalindo
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