626

I have the string

a.b.c.d

I want to count the occurrences of '.' in an idiomatic way, preferably a one-liner.

(Previously I had expressed this constraint as "without a loop", in case you're wondering why everyone's trying to answer without using a loop).

7
  • 1
    Homework? Because otherwise I don't see the requirement to avoid the loop.
    – PhiLho
    Nov 9, 2008 at 16:13
  • 26
    Not averse to a loop so much as looking for an idiomatic one-liner.
    – Bart
    Nov 17, 2008 at 14:28
  • 2
    Loops were made for a problem like this, write the loop in a common Utility class then call your freshly minted one liner.
    – che javara
    Sep 1, 2015 at 21:31
  • Similar question for strings: stackoverflow.com/questions/767759/…
    – koppor
    Apr 16, 2017 at 19:41
  • Just to point out--I appreciate finding the one-liners, it's fun and (as a true advantage) often easy to remember, but I'd like to point out that a separate method and a loop is better in just about every way--readability and even performance. Most of the "Elegant" solutions below are not going to perform very well because they involve reforming strings/copying memory, whereas a loop that just scanned the string and counted occurrences would be fast and simple. Not that performance should generally be a factor, but don't look at the one-line over a loop and assume it will perform better.
    – Bill K
    May 4, 2017 at 17:41

48 Answers 48

1125

How about this. It doesn't use regexp underneath so should be faster than some of the other solutions and won't use a loop.

int count = line.length() - line.replace(".", "").length();
17
  • 130
    Easiest way. Clever one. And it works on Android, where there is no StringUtils class
    – Jose_GD
    Nov 6, 2012 at 13:12
  • 47
    This is the best answer. The reason it is the best is because you don't have to import another library. Jul 9, 2013 at 20:03
  • 32
    Very practical but ugly as hell. I don't recommend it as it leads to confusing code.
    – Daniel San
    Mar 25, 2014 at 22:54
  • 37
    Ugly code can be minimized by making it a method in your own "StringUtils" class. Then the ugly code is in exactly one spot, and everywhere else is nicely readable.
    – RonR
    Jun 5, 2014 at 16:54
  • 34
    The loop method is much faster than this. Especially when wanting to count a char instead of a String (since there is no String.replace(char, char) method). On a 15 character string, I get a difference of 6049 ns vs 26,739 ns (averaged over 100runs). Raw numbers are huge difference, but percetage wise...it adds up. Avoid the memory allocations - use a loop!
    – Ben
    Nov 18, 2014 at 15:41
784

My 'idiomatic one-liner' for this is:

int count = StringUtils.countMatches("a.b.c.d", ".");

Why write it yourself when it's already in commons lang?

Spring Framework's oneliner for this is:

int occurance = StringUtils.countOccurrencesOf("a.b.c.d", ".");
7
  • 44
    Guava equivalent: int count = CharMatcher.is('.').countIn("a.b.c.d"); ...As answered by dogbane in a duplicate question.
    – Jonik
    Aug 12, 2013 at 17:00
  • 29
    Although i will not downvote this, it is (a) requiring 3rd party libs and (b) expensive. Jan 23, 2014 at 21:24
  • This only work with spring frame work have to import. Sep 29, 2015 at 10:45
  • 1
    if someone needs it: grepcode.com/file/repo1.maven.org/maven2/commons-lang/…
    – cV2
    Nov 27, 2015 at 12:54
  • 25
    What's been expensive, at every company at which I've worked, is having lots of poorly-written and poorly-maintained "*Utils" classes. Part of your job is to know what's available in Apache Commons.
    – AbuNassar
    Oct 5, 2016 at 14:58
335

Summarize other answer and what I know all ways to do this using a one-liner:

   String testString = "a.b.c.d";

1) Using Apache Commons

int apache = StringUtils.countMatches(testString, ".");
System.out.println("apache = " + apache);

2) Using Spring Framework's

int spring = org.springframework.util.StringUtils.countOccurrencesOf(testString, ".");
System.out.println("spring = " + spring);

3) Using replace

int replace = testString.length() - testString.replace(".", "").length();
System.out.println("replace = " + replace);

4) Using replaceAll (case 1)

int replaceAll = testString.replaceAll("[^.]", "").length();
System.out.println("replaceAll = " + replaceAll);

5) Using replaceAll (case 2)

int replaceAllCase2 = testString.length() - testString.replaceAll("\\.", "").length();
System.out.println("replaceAll (second case) = " + replaceAllCase2);

6) Using split

int split = testString.split("\\.",-1).length-1;
System.out.println("split = " + split);

7) Using Java8 (case 1)

long java8 = testString.chars().filter(ch -> ch =='.').count();
System.out.println("java8 = " + java8);

8) Using Java8 (case 2), may be better for unicode than case 1

long java8Case2 = testString.codePoints().filter(ch -> ch =='.').count();
System.out.println("java8 (second case) = " + java8Case2);

9) Using StringTokenizer

int stringTokenizer = new StringTokenizer(" " +testString + " ", ".").countTokens()-1;
System.out.println("stringTokenizer = " + stringTokenizer);

From comment: Be carefull for the StringTokenizer, for a.b.c.d it will work but for a...b.c....d or ...a.b.c.d or a....b......c.....d... or etc. it will not work. It just will count for . between characters just once

More info in github

Perfomance test (using JMH, mode = AverageTime, score 0.010 better then 0.351):

Benchmark              Mode  Cnt  Score    Error  Units
1. countMatches        avgt    5  0.010 ±  0.001  us/op
2. countOccurrencesOf  avgt    5  0.010 ±  0.001  us/op
3. stringTokenizer     avgt    5  0.028 ±  0.002  us/op
4. java8_1             avgt    5  0.077 ±  0.005  us/op
5. java8_2             avgt    5  0.078 ±  0.003  us/op
6. split               avgt    5  0.137 ±  0.009  us/op
7. replaceAll_2        avgt    5  0.302 ±  0.047  us/op
8. replace             avgt    5  0.303 ±  0.034  us/op
9. replaceAll_1        avgt    5  0.351 ±  0.045  us/op
3
184

Sooner or later, something has to loop. It's far simpler for you to write the (very simple) loop than to use something like split which is much more powerful than you need.

By all means encapsulate the loop in a separate method, e.g.

public static int countOccurrences(String haystack, char needle)
{
    int count = 0;
    for (int i=0; i < haystack.length(); i++)
    {
        if (haystack.charAt(i) == needle)
        {
             count++;
        }
    }
    return count;
}

Then you don't need have the loop in your main code - but the loop has to be there somewhere.

11
  • 6
    for (int i=0,l=haystack.length(); i < l; i++) be kind to your stack
    – Chris
    Nov 29, 2009 at 13:43
  • 12
    (I'm not even sure where the "stack" bit of the comment comes from. It's not like this answer is my recursive one, which is indeed nasty to the stack.)
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 29, 2009 at 14:51
  • 3
    not only that but this is possibly an anti optimization without taking a look at what the jit does. If you did the above on an array for loop for example you might make things worse.
    – ShuggyCoUk
    Nov 30, 2009 at 11:15
  • 5
    @sulai: Chris's concern is baseless, IMO, in the face of a trivial JIT optimization. Is there any reason that comment drew your attention at the moment, over three years later? Just interested.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jun 12, 2014 at 13:39
  • 1
    Probably @sulai just came across the question as I did (while wondering if Java had a built-in method for this) and didn't notice the dates. However, I'm curious how moving the length() call outside of the loop could make performance worse, as mentioned by @ShuggyCoUk a few comments up.
    – JKillian
    Jul 30, 2014 at 2:19
62

I had an idea similar to Mladen, but the opposite...

String s = "a.b.c.d";
int charCount = s.replaceAll("[^.]", "").length();
println(charCount);
8
  • Correct. ReplaceAll(".") would replace any character, not just dot. ReplaceAll("\\.") would have worked. Your solution is more straightforward.
    – VonC
    Nov 9, 2008 at 16:20
  • jjnguy had actually suggested a replaceAll("[^.]") first, upon seeing my "a.b.c.d".split("\\.").length-1 solution. But after being hit 5 times, I deleted my answer (and his comment).
    – VonC
    Nov 9, 2008 at 16:24
  • "...now you have two problems" (oblig.) Anyway, I'd bet that there are tens of loops executing in replaceAll() and length(). Well, if it's not visible, it doesn't exist ;o) Aug 25, 2010 at 11:22
  • 2
    i don't think it's a good idea to use regex and create a new string for the counting. i would just create a static method that loop every character in the string to count the number.
    – mingfai
    Apr 23, 2011 at 23:14
  • 1
    @mingfai: indeed, but the original question is about making a one-liner, and even, without a loop (you can do a loop in one line, but it will be ugly!). Question the question, not the answer... :-)
    – PhiLho
    Apr 26, 2011 at 17:25
39
String s = "a.b.c.d";
int charCount = s.length() - s.replaceAll("\\.", "").length();

ReplaceAll(".") would replace all characters.

PhiLho's solution uses ReplaceAll("[^.]",""), which does not need to be escaped, since [.] represents the character 'dot', not 'any character'.

2
  • I like this one. There's still a loop there, of course, as there has to be. Nov 9, 2008 at 15:13
  • NB that you'd need to divide this number if you wanted to look for substrings of length > 1
    – rogerdpack
    Apr 3, 2012 at 23:11
35
String s = "a.b.c.d";
long result = s.chars().filter(ch -> ch == '.').count();
0
32

My 'idiomatic one-liner' solution:

int count = "a.b.c.d".length() - "a.b.c.d".replace(".", "").length();

Have no idea why a solution that uses StringUtils is accepted.

3
  • 5
    There is an older solution similar to this one in this post.
    – JCalcines
    Feb 5, 2014 at 9:24
  • 8
    Because this solution is really inefficient
    – András
    May 14, 2015 at 9:41
  • This creates an extra string just to produce a count. No idea why anyone would prefer this over StringUtils if StringUtils is an option. If it's not an option, they should just create a simple for loop in a utility class.
    – crush
    May 28, 2016 at 20:15
27

A shorter example is

String text = "a.b.c.d";
int count = text.split("\\.",-1).length-1;
1
  • 4
    This one seems to have a relatively large overhead, be warned that it may create a lot of small strings. Normally that does not matter much but use with care. Aug 30, 2014 at 16:51
18

here is a solution without a loop:

public static int countOccurrences(String haystack, char needle, int i){
    return ((i=haystack.indexOf(needle, i)) == -1)?0:1+countOccurrences(haystack, needle, i+1);}


System.out.println("num of dots is "+countOccurrences("a.b.c.d",'.',0));

well, there is a loop, but it is invisible :-)

-- Yonatan

5
  • 3
    Unless your string is so long you get an OutOfMemoryError. Nov 9, 2008 at 15:50
  • The problem sounds contrived enough to be homework, and if so, this recursion is probably the answer you're being asked to find.
    – erickson
    Nov 9, 2008 at 17:43
  • That uses indexOf, which will loop... but a nice idea. Posting a truly "just recursive" solution in a minute...
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 9, 2008 at 18:03
  • 1
    If it has more occurrences that your available stack slots, you will have a stack overflow exception ;)
    – Luca C.
    Jun 2, 2014 at 16:19
  • 1
    Loop is not dangerous. Recursion of uncontrolled depth is really dangerous.
    – Hardest
    Sep 17, 2020 at 14:54
16

I don't like the idea of allocating a new string for this purpose. And as the string already has a char array in the back where it stores it's value, String.charAt() is practically free.

for(int i=0;i<s.length();num+=(s.charAt(i++)==delim?1:0))

does the trick, without additional allocations that need collection, in 1 line or less, with only J2SE.

2
  • Giving some love for this one because it is the only one doing a single pass over the string. I DO care about performance . Jan 22, 2014 at 20:19
  • 2
    charAt iterates through 16 bit code points not characters! A char in Java is not a character. So this answer implies that there must be no Unicode symbol with a high surrogate being equal to the code point of delim. I am not sure if it is correct for the dot, but in general it might be not correct.
    – ceving
    Jul 22, 2014 at 17:25
16

Okay, inspired by Yonatan's solution, here's one which is purely recursive - the only library methods used are length() and charAt(), neither of which do any looping:

public static int countOccurrences(String haystack, char needle)
{
    return countOccurrences(haystack, needle, 0);
}

private static int countOccurrences(String haystack, char needle, int index)
{
    if (index >= haystack.length())
    {
        return 0;
    }

    int contribution = haystack.charAt(index) == needle ? 1 : 0;
    return contribution + countOccurrences(haystack, needle, index+1);
}

Whether recursion counts as looping depends on which exact definition you use, but it's probably as close as you'll get.

I don't know whether most JVMs do tail-recursion these days... if not you'll get the eponymous stack overflow for suitably long strings, of course.

2
  • No, tail recursion will probably be in Java 7, but it's not widespread yet. This simple, direct tail recursion could be translated to a loop at compile time, but the Java 7 stuff is actually built-in to the JVM to handle chaining through different methods.
    – erickson
    Nov 10, 2008 at 20:11
  • 3
    You'd be more likely to get tail recursion if your method returned a call to itself (including a running total parameter), rather than returning the result of performing an addition. Mar 20, 2009 at 10:56
12

Not sure about the efficiency of this, but it's the shortest code I could write without bringing in 3rd party libs:

public static int numberOf(String target, String content)
{
    return (content.split(target).length - 1);
}
1
  • 5
    To also count occurences at the end of the string you will have to call split with a negative limit argument like this: return (content.split(target, -1).length - 1);. By default occurences at the end of the string are omitted in the Array resulting from split(). See the Doku
    – vlz
    May 4, 2014 at 12:08
12

Inspired by Jon Skeet, a non-loop version that wont blow your stack. Also useful starting point if you want to use the fork-join framework.

public static int countOccurrences(CharSequeunce haystack, char needle) {
    return countOccurrences(haystack, needle, 0, haystack.length);
}

// Alternatively String.substring/subsequence use to be relatively efficient
//   on most Java library implementations, but isn't any more [2013].
private static int countOccurrences(
    CharSequence haystack, char needle, int start, int end
) {
    if (start == end) {
        return 0;
    } else if (start+1 == end) {
        return haystack.charAt(start) == needle ? 1 : 0;
    } else {
        int mid = (end+start)>>>1; // Watch for integer overflow...
        return
            countOccurrences(haystack, needle, start, mid) +
            countOccurrences(haystack, needle, mid, end);
    }
}

(Disclaimer: Not tested, not compiled, not sensible.)

Perhaps the best (single-threaded, no surrogate-pair support) way to write it:

public static int countOccurrences(String haystack, char needle) {
    int count = 0;
    for (char c : haystack.toCharArray()) {
        if (c == needle) {
           ++count;
        }
    }
    return count;
}
0
11

With you could also use streams to achieve this. Obviously there is an iteration behind the scenes, but you don't have to write it explicitly!

public static long countOccurences(String s, char c){
    return s.chars().filter(ch -> ch == c).count();
}

countOccurences("a.b.c.d", '.'); //3
countOccurences("hello world", 'l'); //3
1
  • Using .codePoints() instead of .chars() would then support any Unicode value (including those requiring surrogate pairs) Aug 14, 2014 at 14:40
10

Also possible to use reduce in Java 8 to solve this problem:

int res = "abdsd3$asda$asasdd$sadas".chars().reduce(0, (a, c) -> a + (c == '$' ? 1 : 0));
System.out.println(res);

Output:

3
9

The simplest way to get the answer is as follow:

public static void main(String[] args) {
    String string = "a.b.c.d";
    String []splitArray = string.split("\\.",-1);
    System.out.println("No of . chars is : " + (splitArray.length-1));
}
2
  • 3
    This snippet does not return the correct amount of dots for a given input "a.b.c."
    – dekaru
    Nov 6, 2018 at 23:09
  • @dekaru Could you please paste your sting in the comment so that we can take a look.
    – Amar Magar
    Nov 14, 2018 at 7:19
8

Complete sample:

public class CharacterCounter
{

  public static int countOccurrences(String find, String string)
  {
    int count = 0;
    int indexOf = 0;

    while (indexOf > -1)
    {
      indexOf = string.indexOf(find, indexOf + 1);
      if (indexOf > -1)
        count++;
    }

    return count;
  }
}

Call:

int occurrences = CharacterCounter.countOccurrences("l", "Hello World.");
System.out.println(occurrences); // 3
2
  • wrong code its not working when i try int occurrences = CharacterCounter.countOccurrences("1", "101"); System.out.println(occurrences); // 1
    – jayesh
    Jan 20, 2014 at 6:32
  • I commit a fix for the code that works with the same logic
    – MaanooAk
    Jul 27, 2017 at 7:06
5

In case you're using Spring framework, you might also use "StringUtils" class. The method would be "countOccurrencesOf".

5

You can use the split() function in just one line code

int noOccurence=string.split("#",-1).length-1;
3
  • Split really creates the array of strings, which consumes much time.
    – Palec
    May 19, 2016 at 17:03
  • You're right, that's a true concern. In another way it avoids bringing a third-party lib in your project (if not yet done). It depends on what you want to do and what is the performance expectation.
    – Benj
    Jun 14, 2016 at 7:23
  • 3
    This solution will NOT include the trailing empty hits, because the argument limit is set to zero in this overloaded split method call. An example: "1##2#3#####".split("#") will only yield an array of size 4 ([0:"1";1:""; 2:"2"; 3:"3"]) instead size 9 ([0:"1"; 1:""; 2:"2"; 3:"3"; 4:""; 5:""; 6:""; 7:""; 8:""]).
    – klaar
    Aug 31, 2016 at 15:05
5

A much easier solution would be to just the split the string based on the character you're matching it with.

For instance,

int getOccurences(String characters, String string) { String[] words = string.split(characters); return words.length - 1; }

This will return 4 in the case of: getOccurences("o", "something about a quick brown fox");

1
  • The problem here is that an array has to be allocated, which is terribly slow.
    – Palec
    Jan 7, 2020 at 6:23
4
public static int countOccurrences(String container, String content){
    int lastIndex, currIndex = 0, occurrences = 0;
    while(true) {
        lastIndex = container.indexOf(content, currIndex);
        if(lastIndex == -1) {
            break;
        }
        currIndex = lastIndex + content.length();
        occurrences++;
    }
    return occurrences;
}
3

While methods can hide it, there is no way to count without a loop (or recursion). You want to use a char[] for performance reasons though.

public static int count( final String s, final char c ) {
  final char[] chars = s.toCharArray();
  int count = 0;
  for(int i=0; i<chars.length; i++) {
    if (chars[i] == c) {
      count++;
    }
  }
  return count;
}

Using replaceAll (that is RE) does not sound like the best way to go.

2
  • I think this is the most elegant solution. Why did you use toCharArray and not charAt directly?
    – Panayotis
    May 31, 2017 at 8:29
  • Looping with charAt at least used to be slower. Might depend on the platform, too. The only way to really find out would be to measure the difference.
    – tcurdt
    May 31, 2017 at 14:00
3
import java.util.Scanner;

class apples {

    public static void main(String args[]) {    
        Scanner bucky = new Scanner(System.in);
        String hello = bucky.nextLine();
        int charCount = hello.length() - hello.replaceAll("e", "").length();
        System.out.println(charCount);
    }
}//      COUNTS NUMBER OF "e" CHAR´s within any string input
0
3

Well, with a quite similar task I stumbled upon this Thread. I did not see any programming language restriction and since groovy runs on a java vm: Here is how I was able to solve my Problem using Groovy.

"a.b.c.".count(".")

done.

3

Using Eclipse Collections

int count = Strings.asChars("a.b.c.d").count(c -> c == '.');

If you have more than one character to count, you can use a CharBag as follows:

CharBag bag = Strings.asChars("a.b.c.d").toBag();
int count = bag.occurrencesOf('.');

Note: I am a committer for Eclipse Collections.

3

This is what I use to count the occurrences of a string.

Hope someone finds it helpful.

    private long countOccurrences(String occurrences, char findChar){
        return  occurrences.chars().filter( x -> {
            return x == findChar;
        }).count();
    }
2

Somewhere in the code, something has to loop. The only way around this is a complete unrolling of the loop:

int numDots = 0;
if (s.charAt(0) == '.') {
    numDots++;
}

if (s.charAt(1) == '.') {
    numDots++;
}


if (s.charAt(2) == '.') {
    numDots++;
}

...etc, but then you're the one doing the loop, manually, in the source editor - instead of the computer that will run it. See the pseudocode:

create a project
position = 0
while (not end of string) {
    write check for character at position "position" (see above)
}
write code to output variable "numDots"
compile program
hand in homework
do not think of the loop that your "if"s may have been optimized and compiled to
2

Here is a slightly different style recursion solution:

public static int countOccurrences(String haystack, char needle)
{
    return countOccurrences(haystack, needle, 0);
}

private static int countOccurrences(String haystack, char needle, int accumulator)
{
    if (haystack.length() == 0) return accumulator;
    return countOccurrences(haystack.substring(1), needle, haystack.charAt(0) == needle ? accumulator + 1 : accumulator);
}
2

Why not just split on the character and then get the length of the resulting array. array length will always be number of instances + 1. Right?

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