Strings, which are widely used in Java programming, are a sequence of characters. In the Java programming language, strings are objects.
The Java platform provides the String class to
create and manipulate strings.
The most direct way to create a string is to write:
String greeting = "welcome";
Whenever it encounters a string literal in your
code, the compiler creates a String object with its value in this case,
"welcome”.
As with any other object, you can create String
objects by using the new keyword and a constructor. The String class has eleven
constructors that allow you to provide the initial value of the string using
different sources, such as an array of characters.
public class StringDemo{
public
static void main(String args[]){
char[]
hiArray = { 'h', ‘i’, '.'};
String
hiString = new String(hiArray);
System.out.println( hiString );
}
}
This would produce the following result:
hi.
Note: The String class is immutable, so that once it
is created a String object cannot be changed. If there is a necessity to make a
lot of modifications to Strings of characters, then you should use String
Buffer & String Builder Classes.
String Length:
Methods used to obtain information about an object
are known as accessor methods. One accessor method that you can use with
strings is the length() method, which returns the number of characters
contained in the string object.
After the following two lines of code have been
executed, len equals 17:
public class StringDemo {
public
static void main(String args[]) {
String
palindrome = "how are you doing";
int len
= palindrome.length();
System.out.println( "String Length is : " + len );
}
}
This would produce the following result:
String Length is : 17
Concatenating Strings:
The String class includes a method for concatenating
two strings:
string1.concat(string2);
This returns a new string that is string1 with
string2 added to it at the end. You can also use the concat() method with
string literals, as in:
"My name is ".concat("soiya");
Strings are more commonly concatenated with the +
operator, as in:
"Hello," + " world" +
"!"
which results in:
"Hello, world!"
Let us look at the following example:
public class StringDemo {
public
static void main(String args[]) {
String
string1 = " are you ";
System.out.println("how " + string1 + "doing");
}
}
This would produce the following result:
How are you doing.
Creating Format Strings:
You have printf() and format() methods to print
output with formatted numbers. The String class has an equivalent class method,
format(), that returns a String object rather than a PrintStream object.
Using String's static format() method allows you to
create a formatted string that you can reuse, as opposed to a one-time print
statement. For example, instead of:
System.out.printf("The value of the float
variable is " +
"%f, while the value of the integer " +
"variable is %d, and the string " +
"is %s", floatVar, intVar,
stringVar);
you can write:
String fs;
fs = String.format("The value of the float
variable is " +
"%f, while the value of the integer " +
"variable is %d, and the string " +
"is %s", floatVar, intVar,
stringVar);
System.out.println(fs);
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