120

Here's what I've got:

private static int countNumChars(String s) {
    for(char c : s.toCharArray()){
        if (Equals(c," "))
    }
}

But that code says it cannot find Symbol for that method. I remember Java having a comparer like this... Any suggestions?

1
  • 2
    empty space - a ' ' with no content? Commented Dec 22, 2010 at 14:40

11 Answers 11

247
if (c == ' ')

char is a primitive data type, so it can be compared with ==.

Also, by using double quotes you create String constant (" "), while with single quotes it's a char constant (' ').

0
91

The code you needs depends on what you mean by "an empty space".

  • If you mean the ASCII / Latin-1 / Unicode space character (0x20) aka SP, then:

    if (ch == ' ') {
        // ...
    }
    
  • If you mean any of the traditional ASCII whitespace characters (SP, HT, VT, CR, NL), then:

    if (ch == ' ' || ch == '\t' || ch == '\r' || ch == '\n' || ch == '\x0b') {
        // ...
    }
    
  • If you mean any Unicode whitespace character, then:

    if (Character.isWhitespace(ch)) {
        // ...
    }
    

Note that there are Unicode whitespace includes additional ASCII control codes, and some other Unicode characters in higher code planes; see the javadoc for Character.isWhitespace(char).


What you wrote was this:

    if (Equals(ch, " ")) {
        // ...
    }

This is wrong on a number of levels. Firstly, the way that the Java compiler tries to interpret that is as a call to a method with a signature of boolean Equals(char, String).

  • This is wrong because no method exists, as the compiler reported in the error message.
  • Equals wouldn't normally be the name of a method anyway. The Java convention is that method names start with a lower case letter.
  • Your code (as written) was trying to compare a character and a String, but char and String are not comparable and cannot be cast to a common base type.

There is such a thing as a Comparator in Java, but it is an interface not a method, and it is declared like this:

    public interface Comparator<T> {
        public int compare(T v1, T v2);
    }

In other words, the method name is compare (not Equals), it returns an integer (not a boolean), and it compares two values that can be promoted to the type given by the type parameter.


Someone (in a deleted Answer!) said they tried this:

    if (c == " ")

That fails for two reasons:

  • " " is a String literal and not a character literal, and Java does not allow direct comparison of String and char values.

  • You should NEVER compare Strings or String literals using ==. The == operator on a reference type compares object identity, not object value. In the case of String it is common to have different objects with different identity and the same value. An == test will often give the wrong answer ... from the perspective of what you are trying to do here.

0
20

You could use

Character.isWhitespace(c)

or any of the other available methods in the Character class.

  if (c == ' ')

also works.

2
  • Well it ultimately depends on if he is checking for spaces only. I mean if it contains a tab, you would get a false positive.
    – user372743
    Commented Dec 22, 2010 at 14:30
  • Updated. He can do what he needs directly from Character, although it is overkill.
    – Corv1nus
    Commented Dec 22, 2010 at 14:33
18

Since char is a primitive type, you can just write c == ' '.
You only need to call equals() for reference types like String or Character.

12

My suggestion would be:

if (c == ' ')
11

To compare character you use the == operator:

if (c == ' ')
7

Character.isSpaceChar(c) || Character.isWhitespace(c) worked for me.

4

In this case, you are thinking of the String comparing function "String".equals("some_text"). Chars do not need to use this function. Instead a standard == comparison operator will suffice.

private static int countNumChars(String s) {
    for(char c : s.toCharArray()){
        if (c == ' ') // your resulting outcome
    }
}
4

You can try:

if(Character.isSpaceChar(ch))
{
    // Do something...
}

Or:

if((int) ch) == 32)
{
    // Do something...
}
3

At first glance, your code will not compile. Since the nested if statement doesn't have any braces, it will consider the next line the code that it should execute. Also, you are comparing a char against a String, " ". Try comparing the values as chars instead. I think the correct syntax would be:

if(c == ' '){
   //do something here
}

But then again, I am not familiar with the "Equal" class

-5

To compare Strings you have to use the equals keyword.

if(c.equals(""))
{
}
2
  • 1) This Question is about comparing characters, not strings. 2) There is no equals keyword in Java. It is an identifier. 3) Since c is a char (primitive type!!), you can't call c.equals(...). 4) Even if you could, there is no char value that maps to "". The latter means a String with "no characters in it". That cannot match a character.
    – Stephen C
    Commented Jul 5, 2017 at 22:47
  • The key to answering this Question is coming up with a meaning for "empty space" that makes some kind of sense in the context.
    – Stephen C
    Commented Jul 6, 2017 at 3:56