4

I am working on a program that will count words that is typed or pasted in the text area. It counts the words correctly if it doesn't have a double space. I use the split method for this and uses the for loop for objects to count the words.

here is the simplest form of the part of the code that got some problem...


 public static void main(String[] args) {
    String string = "Java  C++ C#";
    String[] str;
    int c=0;
    str = string.split(" ");
    for(String s:str){
        if(s.equals(" "))
            System.out.println("skipped space");
        else{
            System.out.println("--"+s);
            c++;
        }
    }
    System.out.println("words; " + c);
}

im trying to check if the string contained in the object s is a space but how I do it didn't work.

I want it to output like this

--Java
skipped space
--C++
--C#

words; 3

but the result is

--Java
--
--C++
--C#
words; 4

Any Suggestions on how can i solve this? or which part i got a problem? thanks in advance.

3 Answers 3

7

split expects a regular expression. Use it's power.

str = string.split(" +");

//more sophisticated
str = string.split("\\s+");
  • \s matches any whitespace (not just space, but tabs. newline etc.)
  • + means "one or more of them"
  • The first backslash is needed to escape the second to remove the special meaning inside the string
2
  • Thanks it worked. Can i ask you what does the + do in "\\s+" if you don't mind.
    – Katherine
    Sep 30, 2012 at 9:28
  • Seems like you found it. I don't know if that's the actual name. Maybe just vote count.
    – Prinzhorn
    Sep 30, 2012 at 10:03
2

You need to change the line if(s.equals(" ")) to if(s.equals("")) (with no space). The reason is that split gives you an array of what thare is between the spaces, and there is nothing between the two spaces.

1

As you're getting an empty string back from String.split, you could use String.equals to check the string content in the return array:

if (s.equals("")) {
...

Output:

--Java
skipped space
--C++
--C#
1
  • It works on the individual Strings themselves. String.split always produces a String array.
    – Reimeus
    Sep 30, 2012 at 9:50

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