574

I've just had to write a string reverse function in C# 2.0 (i.e. LINQ not available) and came up with this:

public string Reverse(string text)
{
    char[] cArray = text.ToCharArray();
    string reverse = String.Empty;
    for (int i = cArray.Length - 1; i > -1; i--)
    {
        reverse += cArray[i];
    }
    return reverse;
}

Personally I'm not crazy about the function and am convinced that there's a better way to do it. Is there?

5
  • 64
    Surprisingly tricky if you want proper international support. Example: Croatian/Serbian have two-character letters lj, nj etc. Proper reverse of "ljudi" is "idulj", NOT "idujl". I'm sure you'd fare far worse when it comes to Arabic, Thai etc.
    – dbkk
    Nov 14, 2009 at 10:46
  • 2
    I wonder if it's slower to concat a string instead of initializing a temp array and storing the results in that, and then finally converting that to a string? Jun 1, 2013 at 5:29
  • 4
    Much newer related thread: Reverse a string with accent chars? Jul 23, 2013 at 15:15
  • 15
    This question could be improved by defining what you mean by "best". Fastest? Most readable? Most reliable across various edge cases (null checks, multiple languages, etc.)? Most maintainable across versions of C# and .NET?
    – hypehuman
    Apr 15, 2016 at 14:23
  • 5
    Why there is no inbuilt direct way to do this simple task? Aug 15, 2021 at 13:58

53 Answers 53

1
2
2
public static string reverse(string s) 
{
    string r = "";
    for (int i = s.Length; i > 0; i--) r += s[i - 1];
    return r;
}
2

If someone asks about string reverse, the intension could be to find out whether you know any bitwise operation like XOR. In C# you have Array.Reverse function, however, you can do using simple XOR operation in few lines of code(minimal)

    public static string MyReverse(string s)
    {
        char[] charArray = s.ToCharArray();
        int bgn = -1;
        int end = s.Length;
        while(++bgn < --end)
        {
            charArray[bgn] ^= charArray[end];
            charArray[end] ^= charArray[bgn];
            charArray[bgn] ^= charArray[end];
        }
        return new string(charArray);
    }
2

There are a few correct answers where StringInfo.GetTextElementEnumerator() is being used. Kudos to you!

Now, let's find the most efficient way to use this method. First, most answers involve calling Reverse() and ToArray() which is a big no-no on hot paths. For optimal performance, we want to avoid allocating garbage. E.g. temporary strings, allocators, arrays etc.

Optimized reversal of string

using System.Globalization;

public static class StringExtensions
{
    public static string AsReversed(this string s)
    {
        return string.Create(s.Length, s, (chars, state) =>
        {
            int i = 0;
            var enumerator = StringInfo.GetTextElementEnumerator(s);
            while (enumerator.MoveNext())
            {
                var element = enumerator.GetTextElement();
                i += element.Length;
                element.CopyTo(chars[^i..]);
            }
        });
    }
}

Note that the GetTextElementEnumerator() API contains a bug in .NET Core 3.1 and earlier. Make sure to run .NET 5 or later! Finally, make sure to check out issue #19423 where API improvements are being discussed.

1
private static string Reverse(string str)
        {
            string revStr = string.Empty;
            for (int i = str.Length - 1; i >= 0; i--)
            {
                revStr += str[i].ToString();
            }
            return revStr;
        }

Faster than above method

private static string ReverseEx(string str)
        {
            char[] chrArray = str.ToCharArray();
            int len = chrArray.Length - 1;
            char rev = 'n';
            for (int i = 0; i <= len/2; i++)
            {
                rev = chrArray[i];
                chrArray[i] = chrArray[len - i];
                chrArray[len - i] = rev;
            }
            return new string(chrArray);
        }
1
    string original = "Stack Overflow";
    string reversed = new string(original.Reverse().ToArray());
2
  • 7
    This is a duplicate of several of the other answers on this page. Mar 12, 2014 at 19:24
  • simplest, one-liner
    – MadJoRR
    Jul 23, 2023 at 16:28
1

There are various ways to reverse the string, I have shown 3 of them below.

-- Using Array.Reverse function.

 private static string ReverseString1(string text)
    {
        char[] rtext = text.ToCharArray();
        Array.Reverse(rtext);
        return new string(rtext);
    }

-- using string only

  private static string ReverseString2(string text)
    {
        String rtext = "";
        for (int i = text.Length - 1; i >= 0; i--)
        {
            rtext = rtext + text[i];
        }
        return rtext;
    }

-- Using only char array

 public static string ReverseString3(string str)
    {
        char[] chars = str.ToCharArray();
        char[] rchars = new char[chars.Length];
        for (int i = 0, j = str.Length - 1; i < chars.Length; i++, j--)
        {
            rchars[j] = chars[i];
        }
        return new string(rchars);
    }
1

As simple as this:

string x = "your string";       
string x1 = "";
for(int i = x.Length-1 ; i >= 0; i--)
    x1 += x[i];
Console.WriteLine("The reverse of the string is:\n {0}", x1);

See the output.

1
  • 2
    Please be aware, that using this method you're creating x.Length times a new string object x1 as you're not taking into account the inherent immutability of string. Jul 31, 2017 at 10:11
1

here is a unicode safe version of the function, written as an extension that will safely handle unicode. It is close to the marked complete answer, but will not throw exceptions for "Invalid high surrogate character".

public static class StringExtensions
{
    public static string Reverse(this string s)
    {
        var info = new StringInfo(s);
        var charArray = new char[s.Length];
        var teIndices = StringInfo.ParseCombiningCharacters(s).Reverse();

        int j = 0;
        foreach(var i in  teIndices)
        {
            if (char.IsHighSurrogate(s[i]))
            {
                charArray[j] = s[i];
                j++;
                charArray[j] = s[i+1];
            }
            else
            {
                charArray[j] = s[i];
            }
            j++;
        }

        return new string(charArray);

    }
}
1
  • It does not handle combining signs: Reverse("Les Mise\u0301rables") != "selbaresiM seL" Jan 11, 2022 at 8:53
1

How about use Substring

static string ReverseString(string text)
{
    string sub = "";
    int indexCount = text.Length - 1;
    for (int i = indexCount; i > -1; i--)
    {
        sub = sub + text.Substring(i, 1);
    }
    return sub;
}
0
1

Using LINQ's Aggregate function

string s = "Karthik U";
s = s.Aggregate(new StringBuilder(), (o, p) => o.Insert(0, p)).ToString();
1
  • 1
    This is extremely slow for large strings.
    – Hoodlum
    Jan 28, 2020 at 21:33
1

Another option using span reverse in System.Memory.

public static string Reverse(string str)
{
    Span<char> span = stackalloc char[str.Length];
    str.AsSpan().CopyTo(span);
    span.Reverse();
    return new String(span);
}
1

Handles all type of unicode characters

    using System.Globalization;

    public static string ReverseString(this string content) {

        var textElementEnumerator = StringInfo.GetTextElementEnumerator(content);

        var SbBuilder = new StringBuilder(content.Length);

        while (textElementEnumerator.MoveNext()) {
            SbBuilder.Insert(0, textElementEnumerator.GetTextElement());
        }

        return SbBuilder.ToString();
    }
0

I was asked a similar question in interview. This was my response, although it is probably not as fast in performance as other answers. My question was phrased as "Make a class that can have a method to print a string backwards":

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;

namespace BackwardsTest
{
    class PrintBackwards
    {
        public static void print(string param)
        {
            if (param == null || param.Length == 0)
            {
                Console.WriteLine("string is null");
                return;
            }
            List<char> list = new List<char>();
            string returned = null;
            foreach(char d in param)
            {
                list.Add(d);
            }
            for(int i = list.Count(); i > 0; i--)
            {
                returned = returned + list[list.Count - 1];
                list.RemoveAt(list.Count - 1);
            }
            Console.WriteLine(returned);
        }
    }
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            string test = "I want to print backwards";
            PrintBackwards.print(test);
            System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(5000);
        }
    }
}
0
static void Main(string[] args)
{
    string str = "";
    string reverse = "";
    Console.WriteLine("Enter the value to reverse");
    str = Console.ReadLine();
    int length = 0;
    length = str.Length - 1;
    while(length >= 0)
    {
        reverse = reverse + str[length];
        length--;
    }
    Console.Write("Reverse string is {0}", reverse);
    Console.ReadKey();
}
0
0
     using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
    class Program
    {     
        public static string ReverseString(string str)
        {
            int totalLength = str.Length;
            int iCount = 0;
            string strRev = string.Empty;
            iCount = totalLength;
            while (iCount != 0)
            {
                iCount--;
                strRev += str[iCount]; 
            }
            return strRev;
        }
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            string str = "Punit Pandya";
            string strResult = ReverseString(str);
            Console.WriteLine(strResult);
            Console.ReadLine();
        }
    }

  }
0

We can use two pointers one pointing to the start of the string and another to the end of the string. Then swap both ith and jth values each time and increment ith pointer +1 and decrement jth pointer -1.

string s = Console.ReadLine();
Console.WriteLine(s + "\n");
char[] charArray = s.ToCharArray();
int i = 0, j = s.Length - 1;
while (i < j) {
    char temp = charArray[i];
    charArray[i] = charArray[j];
    charArray[j] = temp;
    i++; j--;
}
string ans = new string(charArray);
Console.WriteLine(ans + "\n");
// Input: hello
// Output: olleh
-1
string A = null;
//a now is reversed and you can use it
A = SimulateStrReverse.StrReverse("your string");

public static class SimulateStrReverse
{
    public static string StrReverse(string expression)
    {
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(expression))
            return string.Empty;

        string reversedString = string.Empty;
        for (int charIndex = expression.Length - 1; charIndex >= 0; charIndex--)
        {
            reversedString += expression[charIndex];
        }
        return reversedString;
    }
}
2
  • 1
    plz explain the answer :) Dec 13, 2013 at 10:49
  • 2
    This is horribly inefficient due to lots of string concatenations. Try using StringBuilder instead. Feb 19, 2014 at 12:00
-1

May be using .NET 6.0 or .NET 7.0 it is shortst way

string name = Console.ReadLine();
Console.WriteLine(string.Join("", name.Reverse().ToArray()));
2
  • It is not the shortest way. And why introduce any Console operations when the OP didn't include them? string.Concat(name.Reverse()) is much shorter and cleaner. Jul 5, 2023 at 12:40
  • Using Linq Reverse() extension method on IEnumerable has already been proposed in other answers.
    – Kai Thoma
    Jul 11, 2023 at 7:05
-2

This is the code used for reverse string

public Static void main(){
    string text = "Test Text";
    Console.Writeline(RevestString(text))
}

public Static string RevestString(string text){
    char[] textToChar = text.ToCharArray();
    string result= string.Empty;
    int length = textToChar .Length;
    for (int i = length; i > 0; --i)
    result += textToChar[i - 1];
    return result;
}
2
  • 3
    Please don't post just a code snippet, describe what the code does and why you selected this particular approach. May 14, 2018 at 20:00
  • 1
    Isn't this basically identical to the code that OP said he was looking for a better way of doing?
    – d219
    May 17, 2018 at 14:34
-3

It's very simple

static void Reverse()
    {
        string str = "PankajRawat";
        var arr = str.ToCharArray();
        for (int i = str.Length-1; i >= 0; i--)
        {
            Console.Write(arr[i]);
        }
    }
-4
public string rev(string str)
{
    if (str.Length <= 0)
        return string.Empty;
    else
        return str[str.Length-1]+ rev(str.Substring(0,str.Length-1));
}
1
  • It's does it's job, but it's probably the worst way to reverse a string because of String obj MUCH memory allocations and recursion.
    – Vinigas
    Jan 8, 2019 at 13:47
-5

Reverse a String without even using a new string. Lets say

String input  = "Mark Henry";
//Just to convert into char array. One can simply take input in char array.
Char[] array = input.toCharArray(input);
int a = input.length;

for(int i=0; i<(array.length/2 -1) ; i++)
{
    array[i] = array[i] + array[a];
    array[a] = array[i] - array[a];
    array[i] = array[i] - array[a--];
}
1
  • You've not tested this at all.
    – weston
    Jan 13, 2015 at 14:24
-9

SELECT REVERSE('somestring'); Done.

1
  • 3
    Where did the OP say he was coming from SQL? Or what server type? this isn't ANSI SQL.. Nov 27, 2014 at 12:19
1
2

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