2

Forgive me, I'm new to Java and have an extremely basic question. I have a string and want a substring of it, for example:

String str = "hello";
str.substring(1);
System.out.println(str);

Instead of getting "ello" I get the original "hello", any idea why this is? Thanks.

1
  • you are printing out your original string. you are not assigning the value of the substring to anything.
    – Glenn
    Jun 21, 2012 at 1:32

5 Answers 5

12

Strings in Java are immutable. I believe you want to do this:

String str = "hello";
str = str.substring(1);
System.out.println(str);
8

Strings cannot be changed in Java, so you will need to re-assign the substring as such:

str = str.substring(1)

as opposed to calling the method by itself.

2
  • 2
    Ah I see, calling the method by itself just throws away the result.
    – user1357519
    Jun 21, 2012 at 1:35
  • Well, when you call substring(), it doesn't modify the string, but returns a modified version of the string. Aug 6, 2021 at 0:23
3

You aren't saving the changes done on the string.

str=str.substring(1);
1

You need to save the substring into a new variable (or the old one if you prefer). Something like this should do the trick:

String str = "hello";
String strSub = str.substring(1);
System.out.println(strSub);

For people reading this post, remember that substring(1) means take the substring starting at char 1 and going until the end of the string.

1

You can directly put it in the .println(..)

String str = "hello";
System.out.println(str.substring(1));

but str will remain unchanged.

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