Creating A UUID From A String With No Dashes


Answer :

tl;dr



java.util.UUID.fromString(
"5231b533ba17478798a3f2df37de2aD7"
.replaceFirst(
"(\\p{XDigit}{8})(\\p{XDigit}{4})(\\p{XDigit}{4})(\\p{XDigit}{4})(\\p{XDigit}+)", "$1-$2-$3-$4-$5"
)
).toString()



5231b533-ba17-4787-98a3-f2df37de2ad7




Or parse each half of the hexadecimal string as long integer numbers, and pass to constructor of UUID.



UUID uuid = new UUID ( long1 , long2 ) ; 


Bits, Not Text



A UUID is a 128-bit value. A UUID is not actually made up of letters and digits, it is made up of bits. You can think of it as describing a very, very large number.



We could display those bits as a one hundred and twenty eight 0 & 1 characters.




0111 0100 1101 0010 0101 0001 0101 0110
0110 0000 1110 0110 0100 0100 0100 1100
1010 0001 0111 0111 1010 1001 0110 1110
0110 0111 1110 1100 1111 1100 0101 1111




Humans do not easily read bits, so for convenience we usually represent the 128-bit value as a hexadecimal string made up of letters and digits.




74d25156-60e6-444c-a177-a96e67ecfc5f




Such a hex string is not the UUID itself, only a human-friendly representation. The hyphens are added per the UUID spec as canonical formatting, but are optional.




74d2515660e6444ca177a96e67ecfc5f




By the way, the UUID spec clearly states that lowercase letters must be used when generating the hex string while uppercase should be tolerated as input. Unfortunately, many implementations violate that lowercase-generation rule, including those from Apple, Microsoft, and others. See my blog post.






The following refers to Java, not Clojure.



In Java 7 (and earlier), you may use the java.util.UUID class to instantiate a UUID based on a hex string with hyphens as input. Example:



java.util.UUID uuidFromHyphens = java.util.UUID.fromString("6f34f25e-0b0d-4426-8ece-a8b3f27f4b63");
System.out.println( "UUID from string with hyphens: " + uuidFromHyphens );


However, that UUID class fails with inputting a hex string without hyphens. This failure is unfortunate as the UUID spec does not require the hyphens in a hex string representation. This fails:



java.util.UUID uuidFromNoHyphens = java.util.UUID.fromString("6f34f25e0b0d44268ecea8b3f27f4b63");


Regex



One workaround is to format the hex string to add the canonical hyphens. Here's my attempt at using regex to format the hex string. Beware… This code works, but I'm no regex expert. You should make this code more robust, say checking that the length of the string is 32 characters before formatting and 36 after.



    // -----|  With Hyphens  |----------------------
java.util.UUID uuidFromHyphens = java.util.UUID.fromString( "6f34f25e-0b0d-4426-8ece-a8b3f27f4b63" );
System.out.println( "UUID from string with hyphens: " + uuidFromHyphens );
System.out.println();

// -----| Without Hyphens |----------------------
String hexStringWithoutHyphens = "6f34f25e0b0d44268ecea8b3f27f4b63";
// Use regex to format the hex string by inserting hyphens in the canonical format: 8-4-4-4-12
String hexStringWithInsertedHyphens = hexStringWithoutHyphens.replaceFirst( "([0-9a-fA-F]{8})([0-9a-fA-F]{4})([0-9a-fA-F]{4})([0-9a-fA-F]{4})([0-9a-fA-F]+)", "$1-$2-$3-$4-$5" );
System.out.println( "hexStringWithInsertedHyphens: " + hexStringWithInsertedHyphens );
java.util.UUID myUuid = java.util.UUID.fromString( hexStringWithInsertedHyphens );
System.out.println( "myUuid: " + myUuid );


Posix Notation



You might find this alternative syntax more readable, using Posix notation within the regex where \\p{XDigit} takes the place of [0-9a-fA-F] (see Pattern doc):



String hexStringWithInsertedHyphens =  hexStringWithoutHyphens.replaceFirst( "(\\p{XDigit}{8})(\\p{XDigit}{4})(\\p{XDigit}{4})(\\p{XDigit}{4})(\\p{XDigit}+)", "$1-$2-$3-$4-$5" );


Complete example.



java.util.UUID uuid =
java.util.UUID.fromString (
"5231b533ba17478798a3f2df37de2aD7"
.replaceFirst (
"(\\p{XDigit}{8})(\\p{XDigit}{4})(\\p{XDigit}{4})(\\p{XDigit}{4})(\\p{XDigit}+)",
"$1-$2-$3-$4-$5"
)
);

System.out.println ( "uuid.toString(): " + uuid );



uuid.toString(): 5231b533-ba17-4787-98a3-f2df37de2ad7




Clojure's #uuid tagged literal is a pass-through to java.util.UUID/fromString. And, fromString splits it by the "-" and converts it into two Long values. (The format for UUID is standardized to 8-4-4-4-12 hex digits, but the "-" are really only there for validation and visual identification.)



The straight forward solution is to reinsert the "-" and use java.util.UUID/fromString.



(defn uuid-from-string [data]
(java.util.UUID/fromString
(clojure.string/replace data
#"(\w{8})(\w{4})(\w{4})(\w{4})(\w{12})"
"$1-$2-$3-$4-$5")))


If you want something without regular expressions, you can use a ByteBuffer and DatatypeConverter.



(defn uuid-from-string [data]
(let [buffer (java.nio.ByteBuffer/wrap
(javax.xml.bind.DatatypeConverter/parseHexBinary data))]
(java.util.UUID. (.getLong buffer) (.getLong buffer))))


You could do a goofy regular expression replacement:



String digits = "5231b533ba17478798a3f2df37de2aD7";                         
String uuid = digits.replaceAll(
"(\\w{8})(\\w{4})(\\w{4})(\\w{4})(\\w{12})",
"$1-$2-$3-$4-$5");
System.out.println(uuid); // => 5231b533-ba17-4787-98a3-f2df37de2aD7


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