I have a char array:
char[] a = {'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o', ' ', 'w', 'o', 'r', 'l', 'd'};
My current solution is to do
String b = new String(a);
But surely there is a better way of doing this?
I have a char array:
char[] a = {'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o', ' ', 'w', 'o', 'r', 'l', 'd'};
My current solution is to do
String b = new String(a);
But surely there is a better way of doing this?
No, that solution is absolutely correct and very minimal.
Note however, that this is a very unusual situation: Because String
is handled specially in Java, even "foo"
is actually a String
. So the need for splitting a String into individual char
s and join them back is not required in normal code.
Compare this to C/C++ where "foo"
you have a bundle of char
s terminated by a zero byte on one side and string
on the other side and many conversions between them due do legacy methods.
String text = String.copyValueOf(data);
or
String text = String.valueOf(data);
is arguably better (encapsulates the new String
call).
String(char[])
or a variant of that. And the copy part is done inside String(char[])
. This leaves no benefit to a direct call besides symmetry with the other valueOf
methods.
String
will be changed and/or enhanced in an incompatible way or several competing implementations can be chosen at runtime, then a static factory method makes sense. This will not happen with such a low level thing as String
. Therefore my premise is: Use the smallest hammer suitable, not the largest one available.
CharSequence
interface shows how flawed your "wont happen with low level stuff like string" is - they don't change what goes on in string because they tied themselves to it early on, and now they wish they wouldn't have.
This will convert char array back to string:
char[] charArray = {'a', 'b', 'c'};
String str = String.valueOf(charArray);
String str = "wwwwww3333dfevvv";
char[] c = str.toCharArray();
Now to convert character array into String , there are two ways.
Arrays.toString(c);
Returns the string [w, w, w, w, w, w, 3, 3, 3, 3, d, f, e, v, v, v]
.
And:
String.valueOf(c)
Returns the string wwwwww3333dfevvv
.
In Summary: pay attention to Arrays.toString(c)
, because you'll get "[w, w, w, w, w, w, 3, 3, 3, 3, d, f, e, v, v, v]"
instead of "wwwwww3333dfevvv"
.
A String in java is merely an object around an array of chars. Hence a
char[]
is identical to an unboxed String with the same characters. By creating a new String from your array of characters
new String(char[])
you are essentially telling the compiler to autobox a String object around your array of characters.
Just use String.value of like below;
private static void h() {
String helloWorld = "helloWorld";
System.out.println(helloWorld);
char [] charArr = helloWorld.toCharArray();
System.out.println(String.valueOf(charArr));
}
package naresh.java;
public class TestDoubleString {
public static void main(String args[]){
String str="abbcccddef";
char charArray[]=str.toCharArray();
int len=charArray.length;
for(int i=0;i<len;i++){
//if i th one and i+1 th character are same then update the charArray
try{
if(charArray[i]==charArray[i+1]){
charArray[i]='0';
}}
catch(Exception e){
System.out.println("Exception");
}
}//finally printing final character string
for(int k=0;k<charArray.length;k++){
if(charArray[k]!='0'){
System.out.println(charArray[k]);
} }
}
}
//Given Character Array
char[] a = {'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o', ' ', 'w', 'o', 'r', 'l', 'd'};
//Converting Character Array to String using String funtion
System.out.println(String.valueOf(a));
//OUTPUT : hello world
Converting any given Array type to String using Java 8 Stream function
String stringValue =
Arrays.stream(new char[][]{a}).map(String::valueOf).collect(Collectors.joining());
Try to use java.util.Arrays
. This module has a variety of useful methods that could be used related to Arrays.
Arrays.toString(your_array_here[]);
Try this
Arrays.toString(array)
Arrays.toString(new char[] {'a', 'b', 'c'})
returns "[a, b, c]"; not "abc".
Nov 28, 2020 at 8:52
String output = new String(charArray);
Where charArray is the character array and output is your character array converted to the string.
Try this:
CharSequence[] charArray = {"a","b","c"};
for (int i = 0; i < charArray.length; i++){
String str = charArray.toString().join("", charArray[i]);
System.out.print(str);
}
You can also use StringBuilder class
String b = new StringBuilder(a).toString();
Use of String or StringBuilder varies with your method requirements.
1 alternate way is to do:
String b = a + "";
toString
works correctly on char[]
. It might work on some specific vendors and versions of the JVM.
a
and creation of another String object that concatenates with a.toString()
and ""