137

I am looking for a method to combine an array of strings into a delimited String. An opposite to split().

Wanted to ask the forum before I try writing my own (since the JDK has everything)

5

16 Answers 16

97

There's no method in the JDK for this that I'm aware of. Apache Commons Lang has various overloaded join() methods in the StringUtils class that do what you want.

1
  • 6
    For future readers: Java 8 has a String.join() method. Jun 26, 2018 at 21:48
57

There has been an open feature request since at least 2009. The long and short of it is that it will part of the functionality of JDK 8's java.util.StringJoiner class. http://download.java.net/lambda/b81/docs/api/java/util/StringJoiner.html

Here is the Oracle issue if you are interested. https://bugs.java.com/bugdatabase/view_bug?bug_id=5015163

Here is an example of the new JDK 8 StringJoiner on an array of String

String[] a = new String[]{"first","second","third"};
StringJoiner sj = new StringJoiner(",");
for(String s:a) sj.add(s);
System.out.println(sj); //first,second,third

A utility method in String makes this even simpler:

String s = String.join(",", stringArray);
0
25

You can sneak this functionality out of the Arrays utility package.

import java.util.Arrays;
...
    String delim = ":",
            csv_record = "Field0:Field1:Field2",
            fields[] = csv_record.split(delim);

    String rebuilt_record = Arrays.toString(fields)
            .replace(", ", delim)
            .replaceAll("[\\[\\]]", "");
1
  • 12
    A bit late, but that sounds like a generally bad idea, unless you know with absolute certainty that there can never be a ', ' in your strings. And then it's probably far from efficient. Jun 8, 2013 at 22:03
16

I got the following example here

/*
7) Join Strings using separator >>>AB$#$CD$#$EF

 */

import org.apache.commons.lang.StringUtils;

public class StringUtilsTrial {
  public static void main(String[] args) {

    // Join all Strings in the Array into a Single String, separated by $#$
    System.out.println("7) Join Strings using separator >>>"
        + StringUtils.join(new String[] { "AB", "CD", "EF" }, "$#$"));
  }
}
12

Google also provides a joiner class in their Google Collections library:

Joiner API

Google Collections

1
  • I always prefer google apis to apache.commons. Thanks Jan 16, 2015 at 14:04
10

There are several examples on DZone Snippets if you want to roll your own that works with a Collection. For example:

public static String join(AbstractCollection<String> s, String delimiter) {
    if (s == null || s.isEmpty()) return "";
    Iterator<String> iter = s.iterator();
    StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder(iter.next());
    while( iter.hasNext() )
    {
        builder.append(delimiter).append(iter.next());
    }
    return builder.toString();
}
6
  • I would be inclined to leave out the empty check, because the behavior will be the same and why complicate the code with special cases? On the other hand, a null check might be in order. Apr 27, 2009 at 16:43
  • @Carl: I completely agree with you on the null check and added that. Checking for an empty Collection allows the function to skip needlessly creating an Iterator and a StringBuffer, so I left it in. Apr 27, 2009 at 16:50
  • 1
    You should use StringBuilder instead of StringBuffer as StringBuffer has the added overhead of being synchronized. You don't need synchronization for method variables (since only one thread will be using it).
    – Steve Kuo
    Apr 27, 2009 at 16:55
  • 1
    Your join method should accept Collection, not AbstractCollection. Better yet, it could accept Iterable, which allows it to be more generic.
    – Steve Kuo
    Apr 27, 2009 at 17:26
  • @Steve: Either of those would be acceptable. You can make it as abstract or specific as you need. There's a later example on the page I linked to that accepts Iterable. Apr 27, 2009 at 18:09
7

If you have an int[], Arrays.toString() is the easiest way.

1
  • 1
    Actually this works for String[] too, using Arrays.toString(Object[]) This has been available since Java 1.5 which was released in 2004 eons before the question was posted. This is the correct answer, if you don't mind the prefix "[" and suffix "]".
    – earcam
    Feb 6, 2013 at 11:40
4

Based on all the previous answers:

public static String join(Iterable<? extends Object> elements, CharSequence separator) 
{
    StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();

    if (elements != null)
    {
        Iterator<? extends Object> iter = elements.iterator();
        if(iter.hasNext())
        {
            builder.append( String.valueOf( iter.next() ) );
            while(iter.hasNext())
            {
                builder
                    .append( separator )
                    .append( String.valueOf( iter.next() ) );
            }
        }
    }

    return builder.toString();
}
2
  • I think this is the better way to do it, simple and efficient. Also to be mentioned is that apache use a simple for with a if inside and openjdk8 do something like yours but in separated methods.
    – PhoneixS
    Feb 19, 2015 at 13:07
  • You'll be pleased to know that Java 8 lets you do this with the built-in String.join() method now.
    – Brad Turek
    Jan 6, 2021 at 20:22
3

For Android: in android.text.TextUtils there are methods:

public static String join (CharSequence delimiter, Iterable tokens)
public static String join (CharSequence delimiter, Object[] tokens)

Returns a string containing the tokens joined by delimiters.

tokens -- an array objects to be joined. Strings will be formed from the objects by calling object.toString().

3

Since JDK8 I love Streams and Lambdas a lot, so I would suggest:

public static String join( String delimiter, String[] array )
{
    return Arrays.asList( array ).stream().collect( Collectors.joining( delimiter ) );
}
2

For the sake of completeness, I'd like to add that you cannot reverse String#split in general, as it accepts a regular expression.

"hello__world".split("_+"); Yields ["hello", "world"].
"hello_world".split("_+"); Yields ["hello", "world"].

These yield identical results from a different starting point. splitting is not a one-to-one operation, and is thus non-reversible.

This all being said, if you assume your parameter to be a fixed string, not regex, then you can certainly do this using one of the many posted answers.

1

This one is not bad too :

public static String join(String delimitor,String ... subkeys) {
    String result = null;
    if(null!=subkeys && subkeys.length>0) {
        StringBuffer joinBuffer = new StringBuffer(subkeys[0]);
        for(int idx=1;idx<subkeys.length;idx++) {
            joinBuffer.append(delimitor).append(subkeys[idx]);
        }
        result = joinBuffer.toString();
    }
    return result;
}
2
  • 1
    @allyourcode I think StringBuffer usage avoids the Schlemiel problem link Mar 27, 2013 at 3:38
  • +1 for pointing to Schlemiel algorithm!
    – bobbel
    Feb 19, 2014 at 11:43
1

I wrote this one:

public static String join(Collection<String> col, String delim) {
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
    Iterator<String> iter = col.iterator();
    if (iter.hasNext())
        sb.append(iter.next());
    while (iter.hasNext()) {
        sb.append(delim);
        sb.append(iter.next());
    }
    return sb.toString();
}

Collection isn't supported by JSP, so for TLD I wrote:

public static String join(List<?> list, String delim) {
    int len = list.size();
    if (len == 0)
        return "";
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(list.get(0).toString());
    for (int i = 1; i < len; i++) {
        sb.append(delim);
        sb.append(list.get(i).toString());
    }
    return sb.toString();
}

and put to .tld file:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<taglib version="2.1" xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee"
    <function>
        <name>join</name>
        <function-class>com.core.util.ReportUtil</function-class>
        <function-signature>java.lang.String join(java.util.List, java.lang.String)</function-signature>
    </function>
</taglib>

and use it in JSP files as:

<%@taglib prefix="funnyFmt" uri="tag:com.core.util,2013:funnyFmt"%>
${funnyFmt:join(books, ", ")}
1

Below code gives a basic idea. This is not best solution though.

public static String splitJoin(String sourceStr, String delim,boolean trim,boolean ignoreEmpty){
    return join(Arrays.asList(sourceStr.split(delim)), delim, ignoreEmpty);
}


public static String join(List<?> list, String delim, boolean ignoreEmpty) {
    int len = list.size();
    if (len == 0)
        return "";
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(list.get(0).toString());
    for (int i = 1; i < len; i++) {
        if (ignoreEmpty && !StringUtils.isBlank(list.get(i).toString())) {
            sb.append(delim);
            sb.append(list.get(i).toString().trim());
        }
    }
    return sb.toString();
}
1

If you use jdk8 see @Nathaniel Johnson's answer as that is better.

I think that many of the answer here are complex or not easily read. With branch prediction so efficient why you simply not use a if statement?

public static String join(List<String> fooList){

    if (fooList.isEmpty()) return "";

    StringBuilder sb = null;

    for (String element : fooList) {

        if (sb == null) {
            sb = new StringBuilder();
        } else {
            sb.append(", ");
        }

        sb.append(element);
    }
    return sb.toString();
}

Something that should be mentioned is that Apache uses a simple for loop with an if statement inside it like this (it uses an array as its index to know the first element), and openjdk 8 does the same but in separated methods calls instead of a simple loop.

0
0

I like this better:

public String join(Collection<String> strCollection, String delimiter) {
    String joined = "";
    int noOfItems = 0;
    for (String item : strCollection) {
        joined += item;
        if (++noOfItems < strCollection.size())
            joined += delimiter;
    }
    return joined;
}

It is the neatest solution I have found so far. (Don't worry about the use of raw String objects instead of StringBuilder. Modern Java compilers use StringBuilder anyway, but this code is more readable).

3

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.