Please make yourself some kind of pen & paper test which should look somethin like this:
init result = "m";
| i | j | d | c | comparison | result |
|---|---|---|---|------------|--------|
| 1 | 0 | a | m | a != m | ma |
| 1 | 1 | a | a | a != a | ma |
| 2 | 0 | m | m | m != m | ma |
| 2 | 1 | m | a | m != a | mam |
| 2 | 2 | m | m | m != m | mam |
| 3 | 0 | a | m | a != m | mama |
| 3 | 1 | a | a | a != a | mama |
| 3 | 2 | a | m | a != m | mamaa |
| 3 | 3 | a | a | a != a | mamaa |
and/or use a debugger which is standard in allmost any Java Editor (NetBeans, IntelliJ, Eclipse, ...) and step through your application to learn why things go wrong.
What you basically do is add the currently processed character if it does not match a character in your result string. For every non-matching character contained in the current result string a new character of d
is added to the end of the result string.
Instead you should only add the character if it is not yet available in the result string. This can be done by keeping a boolean flag found
(initialized with false) in the outer loop that indicates if a match was found or not and in the inner loop set only this flag to true if a match was found and keep iterating over the inner loop and after the inner loop is done check the found
flag and only add the character currently stored in d
if found equals false.
The more direct solution would be to check if the current result string simply contains a certain character and only add the character if it does not. This would make the inner loop completely redundant.