4

I have the code

String txt = "<p style=\"margin-top: 0\">";
txt.replace("style=\"margin-top: 0\"","class=\"style_" + i + "\"");

In a for loop (which is what the i is for), but when I run this, nothing gets replaced. Am I using this wrong?

3 Answers 3

8

It should look like this:

String txt = "<p style=\"margin-top: 0\">";
txt = txt.replace("style=\"margin-top: 0\"","class=\"style_" + i + "\"");

"String" is an immutable type, which means that methods on a String do not change the String itself. More info here - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immutable_object.

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  • 1
    Oh wow. I can't believe I missed this. I think I need to take a break. Thanks.
    – Samsquanch
    Nov 24, 2010 at 4:58
2

The replace method does not modify the string on which it is called but instead returns the reference to the modified string.

If you want txt to refer to the modified string you can do:

txt = txt.replace("style=\"margin-top: 0\"","class=\"style_" + i + "\"");

If you want txt to continue to refer to the original string and want a different reference to refer to the changed string you can do:

String new_txt = txt.replace("style=\"margin-top: 0\"","class=\"style_" + i + "\"");
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String is a immutable class, which means instance methods of a String object don't alter the string itself. You have to gather the return value of those instance methods.

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