== Why is this an issue? Java 21 adds new `String.indexOf` methods that accept ranges (`beginIndex`, to `endIndex`) rather than just a start index. A `StringIndexOutOfBounds` can be thrown when indicating an invalid range, namely when: * `beginIndex > endIndex` (eg: `beginIndex` and `endIndex` arguments are mistakenly reversed) * `beginIndex < 0` (eg: because the older `String.indexOf(what, fromIndex)` accepts negative values) == How to fix it - Use `String.indexOf(what, beginIndex, endIndex)` instead of `String.indexOf(what, endIndex, beginIndex)`. - Use `String.indexOf(what, 0, endIndex)` instead of `String.indexOf(what, -1, endIndex)`. === Code examples ==== Noncompliant code example [source,java,diff-id=1,diff-type=noncompliant] ---- String hello = "Hello, world!"; int index = hello.indexOf('o', 11, 7); // Noncompliant, 11..7 is not a valid range ---- ==== Compliant solution [source,java,diff-id=1,diff-type=compliant] ---- String hello = "Hello, world!"; int index = hello.indexOf('o', 7, 11); // Compliant ---- ==== Noncompliant code example [source,java,diff-id=2,diff-type=noncompliant] ---- String hello = "Hello, world!"; int index = hello.indexOf('o', -1, 11); // Noncompliant, because beginIndex is negative ---- ==== Compliant solution [source,java,diff-id=2,diff-type=compliant] ---- String hello = "Hello, world!"; int index = hello.indexOf('o', 0, 11); // Compliant ---- == Resources * Java Documentation - https://docs.oracle.com/en/java/javase/21/docs/api/java.base/java/lang/String.html#indexOf(int,int,int)[String.indexOf(int, int, int)] * Java Documentation - https://docs.oracle.com/en/java/javase/21/docs/api/java.base/java/lang/String.html#indexOf(java.lang.String,int,int)[String.indexOf(java.lang.String,int,int)]