253

So I want to iterate for each character in a string.

So I thought:

for (char c : "xyz")

but I get a compiler error:

MyClass.java:20: foreach not applicable to expression type

How can I do this?

9 Answers 9

437

The easiest way to for-each every char in a String is to use toCharArray():

for (char ch: "xyz".toCharArray()) {
}

This gives you the conciseness of for-each construct, but unfortunately String (which is immutable) must perform a defensive copy to generate the char[] (which is mutable), so there is some cost penalty.

From the documentation:

[toCharArray() returns] a newly allocated character array whose length is the length of this string and whose contents are initialized to contain the character sequence represented by this string.

There are more verbose ways of iterating over characters in an array (regular for loop, CharacterIterator, etc) but if you're willing to pay the cost toCharArray() for-each is the most concise.

7
  • 2
    Will the compiler recognize that a true copy is not needed and apply the appropriate optimizations?
    – Pacerier
    Aug 9, 2014 at 9:31
  • 1
    @Pacerier No, the current Java compilers will never optimize code.
    – randers
    Feb 11, 2016 at 20:16
  • 1
    @RAnders00 So, in this case toCharArray( ) is called 3 times? Aug 26, 2016 at 15:31
  • 3
    With a string length of 211900000, time taken to complete for (char c : str.toCharArray()) { } is ~250ms and time taken to complete for (char c : charArray) { } is <10ms. Of course, these time values will depend on the hardware but the takeaway is that one method is significantly costly than the other. Aug 26, 2016 at 16:12
  • 7
    @RafiduzzamanSonnet: No, the toCharArray() is not inside the loop body; it's only called once, and then the loop iterates over that resulting array. (The for-each loop is different than the general for-loop, which evaluates the stop-condition each iteration.) Sep 5, 2016 at 20:10
65
String s = "xyz";
for(int i = 0; i < s.length(); i++)
{
   char c = s.charAt(i);
}

 

3
  • 11
    OP is expecting inhanced for loop.
    – AmitG
    Apr 3, 2013 at 12:17
  • 5
    Down voted because this is specifically not what OP asked for. While this is a valid solution it is entirely not what is being asked
    – Allison
    Apr 24, 2017 at 3:40
  • 4
    No matter what the OP expected, this has better performance than for-each I guess.
    – Eric
    Dec 8, 2018 at 6:34
12

Another useful solution, you can work with this string as array of String

for (String s : "xyz".split("")) {
    System.out.println(s);
}
1
  • 5
    Elegant, but unfortunately it doesn't work if any elements of the string being split() map to more than one Java character, which is the case for almost all emoticons. For example, this variation of your example will loop four times rather than three: for (String s : "x😁z".split("")) { System.out.println(s); }
    – skomisa
    Dec 24, 2019 at 20:13
12

If you use Java 8, you can use chars() on a String to get a Stream of characters, but you will need to cast the int back to a char as chars() returns an IntStream.

"xyz".chars().forEach(i -> System.out.print((char)i));

If you use Java 8 with Eclipse Collections, you can use the CharAdapter class forEach method with a lambda or method reference to iterate over all of the characters in a String.

Strings.asChars("xyz").forEach(c -> System.out.print(c));

This particular example could also use a method reference.

Strings.asChars("xyz").forEach(System.out::print)

Note: I am a committer for Eclipse Collections.

0
8

You need to convert the String object into an array of char using the toCharArray() method of the String class:

String str = "xyz";
char arr[] = str.toCharArray(); // convert the String object to array of char

// iterate over the array using the for-each loop.       
for(char c: arr){
    System.out.println(c);
}
7

In Java 8 we can solve it as:

String str = "xyz";
str.chars().forEachOrdered(i -> System.out.print((char)i));    

The method chars() returns an IntStream as mentioned in doc:

Returns a stream of int zero-extending the char values from this sequence. Any char which maps to a surrogate code point is passed through uninterpreted. If the sequence is mutated while the stream is being read, the result is undefined.

Why use forEachOrdered and not forEach ?

The behaviour of forEach is explicitly nondeterministic where as the forEachOrdered performs an action for each element of this stream, in the encounter order of the stream if the stream has a defined encounter order. So forEach does not guarantee that the order would be kept. Also check this question for more.

We could also use codePoints() to print, see this answer for more details.

1
  • This creates multiple objects, so this answer isn't complete without the caveat that this may be less efficient than a simple indexed loop.
    – toolforger
    Nov 10, 2018 at 22:20
5

Unfortunately Java does not make String implement Iterable<Character>. This could easily be done. There is StringCharacterIterator but that doesn't even implement Iterator... So make your own:

public class CharSequenceCharacterIterable implements Iterable<Character> {
    private CharSequence cs;

    public CharSequenceCharacterIterable(CharSequence cs) {
        this.cs = cs;
    }

    @Override
    public Iterator<Character> iterator() {
        return new Iterator<Character>() {
            private int index = 0;

            @Override
            public boolean hasNext() {
                return index < cs.length();
            }

            @Override
            public Character next() {
                return cs.charAt(index++);
            }
        };
    }
}

Now you can (somewhat) easily run for (char c : new CharSequenceCharacterIterable("xyz"))...

3

You can also use a lambda in this case.

    String s = "xyz";
    IntStream.range(0, s.length()).forEach(i -> {
        char c = s.charAt(i);
    });
-8

For Travers an String you can also use charAt() with the string.

like :

String str = "xyz"; // given String
char st = str.charAt(0); // for example we take 0 index element 
System.out.println(st); // print the char at 0 index 

charAt() is method of string handling in java which help to Travers the string for specific character.

2
  • 2
    do you know what for (char st: "xyz".toCharArray()) {} is?
    – AmitG
    Apr 3, 2013 at 12:24
  • -1 off-topic (topic: for-each), and use charAt instead of charAT
    – peenut
    Jun 20, 2013 at 12:09

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