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Let's say I have a LazySeq of java.lang.Character like

(\b \ \! \/ \b \ \% \1 \9 \/ \. \i \% \$ \i \space \^@)

How can I convert this to a String? I've tried the obvious

(String. my-char-seq)

but it throws

java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: No matching ctor found for class java.lang.String (NO_SOURCE_FILE:0)
[Thrown class clojure.lang.Compiler$CompilerException]

I think because the String constructor expects a primitive char[] instead of a LazySeq. So then I tried something like

(String. (into-array my-char-seq))

but it throws the same exception. The problem now is that into-array is returning a java.lang.Character[] instead of a primitive char[]. This is frustrating, because I actually generate my character sequence like this

(map #(char (Integer. %)) seq-of-ascii-ints)

Basically I have a seq of ints representing ASCII characters; 65 = A, etc. You can see I explicitly use the primitive type coercion function (char x).

What this means is that my map function is returning a primitive char but the Clojure map function overall is returning the java.lang.Character object.

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2 Answers

vote up 8 vote down check

This works:

(apply str my-char-seq)

Basically, str calls toString() on each of its args and then concatenates them. Here we are using apply to pass the characters in the sequence as args to str.

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vote up 0 vote down

To turn a sequence of chars into a String, the idiom is

(str coll)

If those characters are in the form of Ints or such, you'll want to convert them first, probably best by mapping:

(str (map char coll))

Untested, unfortunately; I don't have a REPL at hand.

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Sorry, your code doesn't work. – Brian Carper Nov 6 at 20:32
Thanks for the heads up. I'm still learning. when in doubt, listen to Siddartha! :) – Carl Smotricz Nov 6 at 20:41

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