What is more efficient to use for appending data to string
String a= string.format("xx %s xx",yyy);
or
String b =xx+yyy+xxx;
?
Appending using operators is generally more efficient. Format has to take the string and find "%"'s and so, and replace them with corresponding values. Appending is simpler, and shorter to type!
Imagine you are the compiler.
Go through the string to find the %s symbol. Replace it with the value there. Then concatenate.
Concatenate.
String s = "a" + "b"
and StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder("a"); sb.append("b")
. One could think that the second is more efficient, but the compiler actually generates the same bytecode for both (if I'm correct)
String a= string.format("xx %s xx",yyy);
It will replace yyy
to %s
for that it require pare whole string and then create new string object. so less efficient then concatenation xx+yyy+xxx;
.
format
is not a simple replacement, it is also a type/format check (%d, %f
) and some exceptions may be thrown, so there definitely are additional computations. My bad !
String.format
works like so: 1. It parses the format string, exploding into a list of format chunks 2. It iterates the format chunks, rendering into a StringBuilder
, which is basically an array that resizes itself as necessary, by copying into a new array. this is necessary because we don't yet know how large to allocate the final String.
3. StringBuilder.toString()
copies his internal buffer into a new String So, It is not efficient then simple concatenation
Dec 29, 2014 at 18:22
format
is definitely less efficient.format
needs to scan through the format string, find where there are placeholders and replace them.var prematureOptimization = Math.sqrt(Evil.all())
String.format
in most of the cases