So, In Java, you know how you can declare integers like this:
int hex = 0x00ff00; I thought that you should be able to reverse that process. I have this code:
Integer.valueOf(primary.getFullHex()); where primary is an object of a custom Color class. It's constructor takes an Integer for opacity (0-99) and a hex String (e.g. 00ff00).
This is the getFullHex method:
public String getFullHex() { return ("0x" + hex); } When I call this method it gives my this NumberFormatException:
java.lang.NumberFormatException: For input string: "0xff0000" I can't understand what's going on. Can someone please explain?
Will this help?
Integer.parseInt("00ff00", 16) 16 means that you should interpret the string as 16-based (hexadecimal). By using 2 you can parse binary number, 8 stands for octal. 10 is default and parses decimal numbers.
In your case Integer.parseInt(primary.getFullHex(), 16) won't work due to 0x prefix prepended by getFullHex() - get rid of and you'll be fine.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With