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I'm looking for a simple commons method or operator that allows me to repeat some string n times. I know I could write this using a for loop, but I wish to avoid for loops whenever necessary and a simple direct method should exist somewhere.

String str = "abc";
String repeated = str.repeat(3);

repeated.equals("abcabcabc");

Related to:

repeat string javascript Create NSString by repeating another string a given number of times

Edited

I try to avoid for loops when they are not completely necessary because:

  1. They add to the number of lines of code even if they are tucked away in another function.

  2. Someone reading my code has to figure out what I am doing in that for loop. Even if it is commented and has meaningful variables names, they still have to make sure it is not doing anything "clever".

  3. Programmers love to put clever things in for loops, even if I write it to "only do what it is intended to do", that does not preclude someone coming along and adding some additional clever "fix".

  4. They are very often easy to get wrong. For loops involving indexes tend to generate off by one bugs.

  5. For loops often reuse the same variables, increasing the chance of really hard to find scoping bugs.

  6. For loops increase the number of places a bug hunter has to look.

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  • 48
    I understand that for loops can cause some real issues. But you shouldn't try to avoid for loops "at all costs" because if it costs you readability, maintainability, and speed, you're being counterproductive. This is one of those cases.
    – Imagist
    Aug 5, 2009 at 21:39
  • 10
    "They add to the number of lines of code even if they are tucked away in another function"...wow, just wow. Big-O, not LoC Aug 5, 2009 at 23:40
  • 8
    @imagist I'm avoiding for loops in situations where it costs me readability, and maintainability. I consider speed as the least important issue here (a non-issue in fact). I think for loops are overused and I am trying to learn to only use for loops when they are necessary and not as a default solution. Aug 6, 2009 at 0:29
  • 4
    @Pyrolistical I'm not claiming performance or asymptotic benefits. Rather saying that by writing less code, and using library functions rather than reinventing the wheel I reduce the bug surface area(Lines of Code) while increasing readability. Both good things I'm sure you'll agree. Aug 6, 2009 at 0:51
  • 4
    @e5;sorry for posting years later.I find this question so appropriate. If inserted in a method, arguments should be tested (times>=0), errors thrown etc.This adds robustness but also lines of code to read. Repeating a string is something unambiguous.Who reads the code knows exactly what a string.repeat does, even without a line of comment or javadoc.If we use a stable library, is reasonable to think that a so-simple function has no bugs,YET introduces some form of "robustness" check that we even need to worry about.If i could ask 10 improvements, this (kind of) things would be one.
    – AgostinoX
    Sep 21, 2011 at 21:01

33 Answers 33

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Consolidated for quick reference:

public class StringRepeat {

// Java 11 has built-in method - str.repeat(3);
// Apache - StringUtils.repeat(3);
// Google - Strings.repeat("",n);
// System.arraycopy

static String repeat_StringBuilderAppend(String str, int n) {

    if (str == null || str.isEmpty())
        return str;

    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
    for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) {
        sb.append(str);
    }
    return sb.toString();
}

static String repeat_ArraysFill(String str, int n) {
    String[] strs = new String[n];
    Arrays.fill(strs, str);
    return Arrays.toString(strs).replaceAll("\\[|\\]|,| ", "");
}

static String repeat_Recursion(String str, int n) {
    if (n <= 0)
        return "";
    else
        return str + repeat_Recursion(str, n - 1);
}

static String repeat_format1(String str, int n) {
    return String.format(String.format("%%%ds", n), " ").replace(" ", str);
}

static String repeat_format2(String str, int n) {
    return new String(new char[n]).replace("\0", str);
}

static String repeat_format3(String str, int n) {
    return String.format("%0" + n + "d", 0).replace("0", str);
}

static String repeat_join(String str, int n) {
    return String.join("", Collections.nCopies(n, str));
}

static String repeat_stream(String str, int n) {
    return Stream.generate(() -> str).limit(n).collect(Collectors.joining());
}

public static void main(String[] args) {
    System.out.println(repeat_StringBuilderAppend("Mani", 3));
    System.out.println(repeat_ArraysFill("Mani", 3));
    System.out.println(repeat_Recursion("Mani", 3));
    System.out.println(repeat_format1("Mani", 3));
    System.out.println(repeat_format2("Mani", 3));
    System.out.println(repeat_format3("Mani", 3));
    System.out.println(repeat_join("Mani", 3));
    System.out.println(repeat_stream("Mani", 3));

}

}

-1
public static String rep(int a,String k)

       {
           if(a<=0)
                return "";
           else 
           {a--;
               return k+rep(a,k);
       }

You can use this recursive method for you desired goal.

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-3
repeated = str + str + str;

Sometimes simple is best. Everyone reading the code can see what's happening.

And the compiler will do the fancy stuff with StringBuilder behind the scenes for you.

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  • 2
    Thats stupid for many repeats. I think nobody wants write "str +" hundred times. And the question asks for a function/method to repeat string automatically.
    – Radon8472
    Apr 7, 2016 at 9:15
  • 1
    That only works when n is an author-time constant. Jul 20, 2017 at 15:09
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