I'm trying to convert a string to an array of integers so I could then perform math operations on them. I'm having trouble with the following bit of code:
String raw = "1233983543587325318";
char[] list = new char[raw.length()];
list = raw.toCharArray();
int[] num = new int[raw.length()];
for (int i = 0; i < raw.length(); i++){
num[i] = (int[])list[i];
}
System.out.println(num);
This is giving me an "inconvertible types" error, required: int[] found: char I have also tried some other ways like Character.getNumericValue and just assigning it directly, without any modification. In those situations, it always outputs the same garbage "[I@41ed8741", no matter what method of conversion I use or (!) what the value of the string actually is. Does it have something to do with unicode conversion?
char[] list = new char[raw.length()];
allocates a new array and assigns it to the list variable, but the next line assigns another array to the same variable. The first line is thus unnecessary, and allocates memory for nothing. You should just usechar[] list = raw.toCharArray();
System.out.println(num);
will not print anything of much interest :)num[i]
be1
or be49
? Because just castingchar
toint
the way you are trying to do it, will result in49
which is a ascii-code of1
.println(num)
prints simply tells you that you printed an array at a certain address, regardless of the array's content. Useprintln(Arrays.toString(num))
instead.