I have a string like
"I am a boy".
I would like to print it this way
"I
am
a
boy".
Can anybody help me?
System.out.println("I\nam\na\nboy");
System.out.println("I am a boy".replaceAll("\\s+","\n"));
System.out.println("I am a boy".replaceAll("\\s+",System.getProperty("line.separator"))); // portable way
You can also use System.lineSeparator()
:
String x = "Hello," + System.lineSeparator() + "there";
System.getProperty("line.separator")
.
Feb 29, 2016 at 10:08
String x = "Hello, %n there";
. Added spaces around %n
just for the sake of readability.
Jun 1, 2018 at 20:06
System.out.printf("I %n am %n a %n boy");
I
am
a
boy
It's better to use %n
as an OS independent new-line character instead of \n
and it's easier than using System.lineSeparator()
Why to use %n
, because on each OS, new line refers to a different set of character(s);
Unix and modern Mac's : LF (\n)
Windows : CR LF (\r\n)
Older Macintosh Systems : CR (\r)
LF is the acronym of Line Feed and CR is the acronym of Carriage Return. The escape characters are written inside the parenthesis. So on each OS, new line stands for something specific to the system. %n
is OS agnostic, it is portable. It stands for \n
on Unix systems or \r\n
on Windows systems and so on. Thus, Do not use \n
, instead use %n
.
It can be done several ways. I am mentioning 2 simple ways.
Very simple way as below:
System.out.println("I\nam\na\nboy");
It can also be done with concatenation as below:
System.out.println("I" + '\n' + "am" + '\n' + "a" + '\n' + "boy");
To make the code portable to any system, I would use:
public static String newline = System.getProperty("line.separator");
This is important because different OSs use different notations for newline: Windows uses "\r\n", Classic Mac uses "\r", and Mac and Linux both use "\n".
Commentors - please correct me if I'm wrong on this...
\n
is used for making separate line;
Example:
System.out.print("I" +'\n'+ "am" +'\n'+ "a" +'\n'+ "boy");
Result:
I
am
a
boy
Platform-Independent Line Breaks:
finalString = "physical" + System.lineSeparator() + "distancing";
System.out.println(finalString);
Output:
physical
distancing
Notes:
System.getProperty("line.separator")
System.lineSeparator()
If you simply want to print a newline in the console you can use \n
for newlines.
If you want to break text in Swing components you can use HTML and its <br>
:
String str = "<html>first line<br>second line</html>";
If you want to have your code os-unspecific you should use println for each word
System.out.println("I");
System.out.println("am");
System.out.println("a");
System.out.println("boy");
because Windows uses "\r\n" as newline and unixoid systems use just "\n"
println always uses the correct one
println()
adds a newline character at the end of the string (not the beginning).
May 16, 2014 at 5:51
System.lineSeparator()
or System.getProperty("line.separator")
can used to make code system independent.
Feb 1, 2017 at 6:08
What about %n
using a formatter like String.format()
?:
String s = String.format("I%nam%na%nboy");
As this answer says, its available from java 1.5 and is another way to System.getProperty("line.separator")
or System.lineSeparator()
and, like this two, is OS independent.
Full program example, with a fun twist:
Open a new blank document and save it as %yourJavaDirectory%/iAmABoy/iAmABoy.java
. "iAmABoy" is the class name.
Paste the following code in and read through it. Remember, I'm a beginner, so I appreciate all feedback!
//The class name should be the same as your Java-file and directory name.
class iAmABoy {
//Create a variable number of String-type arguments, "strs"; this is a useful line of code worth memorizing.
public static void nlSeparated(String... strs) {
//Each argument is an str that is printed.
for (String str : strs) {
System.out.println(str);
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
//This loop uses 'args' . 'Args' can be accessed at runtime. The method declaration (above) uses 'str', but the method instances (as seen below) can take variables of any name in the place of 'str'.
for (String arg : args) {
nlSeparated(arg);
}
//This is a signature. ^^
System.out.print("\nThanks, Wolfpack08!");
}
}
Now, in terminal/cmd, browse to %yourJavaDirectory%/iAmABoy
and type:
javac iAmABoy.java
java iAmABoy I am a boy
You can replace the args I am a boy
with anything!
args
directly to nlSeparated()
or make nlSeparated()
take a scalar String
instead of an array. First option is probably better. Also, print your signature with println
instead of print
.
Dec 9, 2014 at 22:32
main
, replace for (String arg : args) { nlSeparated(arg); }
with just nlSeparated(args);
. nlSeparated
already accepts a list of String
s. For a better explanation, see here: stackoverflow.com/a/12534579/2988730
Nov 10, 2016 at 16:38
Go for a split.
String string = "I am a boy";
for (String part : string.split(" ")) {
System.out.println(part);
}
I use this code String result = args[0].replace("\\n", "\n");
public class HelloWorld {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String result = args[0].replace("\\n", "\n");
System.out.println(result);
}
}
with terminal I can use arg I\\nam\\na\\boy
to make System.out.println
print out
I
am
a
boy
Here it is!! NewLine is known as CRLF(Carriage Return and Line Feed).
Sample:
System.out.println("I\r\nam\r\na\r\nboy");
It worked for me.
you can use <br>
tag in your string for show in html pages
Here I am using the split function. I braked String from spaces. then I used println function and printed the value.
public class HelloWorld{
public static void main(String []args){
String input = "I am a boy";
String[] opuput = input.split(" ");
for (int i = 0; i < opuput.length; i++)
System.out.println(opuput[i]);
}
}
input
is not defined. That's not an issue when you're just providing some exemplary code, but this code block gives the impression of being a full runnable example (since it has a public static void main
, however it doesn't compile. So either make it a short 3-line sample that references "invisible" variables or make it an actually runnable sample, this mixture is just confusing.
May 25, 2021 at 11:43