23

How do I change something like this:

CharSequence cs[] = { "foo", "bar" };

to:

CharSequence cs[];

cs.add("foo"); // this is wrong...
cs.add("bar"); // this is wrong...

6 Answers 6

92

Use a List object to manage items and when you have all the elements then convert to a CharSequence. Something like this:

List<String> listItems = new ArrayList<String>();

listItems.add("Item1");
listItems.add("Item2");
listItems.add("Item3");

final CharSequence[] charSequenceItems = listItems.toArray(new CharSequence[listItems.size()]);
2
  • should be listItems.add("Item1");
    – Jehy
    Nov 9, 2012 at 5:00
  • In Kotlin: val listItems: MutableList<String> = ArrayList() listItems.add("Item1") listItems.add("Item2") listItems.add("Item3") val charSequenceItems = listItems.toTypedArray<CharSequence>() Jan 2, 2023 at 12:57
6

You are almost there. You need to allocate space for the entries, which is automatically done for you in the initializing case above.

CharSequence cs[];

cs = new String[2];

cs[0] = "foo"; 
cs[1] = "bar"; 

Actually CharSequence is an Interface and can thus not directly be created, but String as one of its implementations can.

2
  • 1
    This won't compile, Arrays don't have add method.
    – MByD
    Aug 15, 2011 at 10:30
  • Sorry, but, on "cs.add(...)", I get: "Cannot invoke add(String) on the array type CharSequence[]"...
    – MarcoS
    Aug 15, 2011 at 10:37
2

You can also use List, to have a dynamic number of members in the array(list :)):

List<CharSequence>  cs = new ArrayList<CharSequence>();

cs.add("foo"); 
cs.add("bar"); 

If you want to use array, you can do:

CharSequence cs[];

cs = new String[2];

cs[0] = "foo"; 
cs[1] = "bar"; 
0

If you want it to be dynamical, you should think in an another structure and then convert it to a CharSequence when you need. Alternatively, that thread can be useful.

0

You could use ArrayList instead of raw arrays since need to add items dynamically.

0

KOTLIN

First, convert the ArrayList to a regular, mutable list. Then, manually create the Array using the Array constructor. Make sure that your init function generates a data type that fits the Array (ex. don't put an int in a CharSequence arrray).

val exampleArray: ArrayList<String> arrayListOf("test1", "test2", "test3")
val exampleList = exampleArray.toList()
val exampleItems: Array<CharSequence?>? = exampleList?.size?.let { it1 -> Array(it1,{ i -> exampleArray?.get(i) }) }

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