Java Strings
Strings in Java are objects that represent sequences of characters. They are widely used in Java programming and are immutable, meaning that once a string is created, it cannot be changed.
Key Topics
1. Creating Strings
Strings can be created using string literals or by using the new
keyword.
Example
public class CreatingStrings {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// Using string literal
String str1 = "Hello, World!";
// Using new keyword
String str2 = new String("Hello, World!");
System.out.println("str1: " + str1);
System.out.println("str2: " + str2);
}
}
Output:
str1: Hello, World!
str2: Hello, World!
str2: Hello, World!
2. String Methods
Java provides a variety of methods to perform operations on strings. Some commonly used methods are:
length()
: Returns the length of the string.charAt(int index)
: Returns the character at the specified index.substring(int beginIndex, int endIndex)
: Returns a substring from the specified begin index to the end index.toLowerCase()
: Converts all characters in the string to lowercase.toUpperCase()
: Converts all characters in the string to uppercase.trim()
: Removes leading and trailing whitespace.replace(char oldChar, char newChar)
: Replaces all occurrences of the specified old character with the new character.
Example
public class StringMethods {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String str = " Hello, World! ";
System.out.println("Length: " + str.length());
System.out.println("Character at index 1: " + str.charAt(1));
System.out.println("Substring (7, 12): " + str.substring(7, 12));
System.out.println("Lowercase: " + str.toLowerCase());
System.out.println("Uppercase: " + str.toUpperCase());
System.out.println("Trimmed: " + str.trim());
System.out.println("Replaced: " + str.replace('o', '0'));
}
}
Output:
Length: 17
Character at index 1: H
Substring (7, 12): World
Lowercase: hello, world!
Uppercase: HELLO, WORLD!
Trimmed: Hello, World!
Replaced: Hell0, W0rld!
Character at index 1: H
Substring (7, 12): World
Lowercase: hello, world!
Uppercase: HELLO, WORLD!
Trimmed: Hello, World!
Replaced: Hell0, W0rld!
3. String Concatenation
String concatenation is the process of joining two or more strings together. It can be done using the +
operator or the concat()
method.
Example
public class StringConcatenation {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String str1 = "Hello";
String str2 = "World";
// Using + operator
String result1 = str1 + ", " + str2 + "!";
System.out.println("Using + operator: " + result1);
// Using concat() method
String result2 = str1.concat(", ").concat(str2).concat("!");
System.out.println("Using concat() method: " + result2);
}
}
Output:
Using + operator: Hello, World!
Using concat() method: Hello, World!
Using concat() method: Hello, World!
4. String Comparison
Strings can be compared using the equals()
method, equalsIgnoreCase()
method, or the compareTo()
method.
Example
public class StringComparison {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String str1 = "Hello";
String str2 = "hello";
String str3 = "Hello";
// Using equals() method
System.out.println("str1.equals(str2): " + str1.equals(str2));
System.out.println("str1.equals(str3): " + str1.equals(str3));
// Using equalsIgnoreCase() method
System.out.println("str1.equalsIgnoreCase(str2): " + str1.equalsIgnoreCase(str2));
// Using compareTo() method
System.out.println("str1.compareTo(str2): " + str1.compareTo(str2));
System.out.println("str1.compareTo(str3): " + str1.compareTo(str3));
}
}
Output:
str1.equals(str2): false
str1.equals(str3): true
str1.equalsIgnoreCase(str2): true
str1.compareTo(str2): -32
str1.compareTo(str3): 0
str1.equals(str3): true
str1.equalsIgnoreCase(str2): true
str1.compareTo(str2): -32
str1.compareTo(str3): 0
5. String Formatting
String formatting allows you to create formatted strings using the String.format()
method or the printf()
method.
Example
public class StringFormatting {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String name = "John";
int age = 30;
// Using String.format() method
String formattedString1 = String.format("My name is %s and I am %d years old.", name, age);
System.out.println(formattedString1);
// Using printf() method
System.out.printf("My name is %s and I am %d years old.\n", name, age);
}
}
Output:
My name is John and I am 30 years old.
My name is John and I am 30 years old.
My name is John and I am 30 years old.
Key Takeaways
- Strings in Java are immutable objects that represent sequences of characters.
- There are various methods available to manipulate strings, such as length(), charAt(), substring(), toLowerCase(), toUpperCase(), trim(), and replace().
- Strings can be concatenated using the + operator or the concat() method.
- String comparison can be done using equals(), equalsIgnoreCase(), and compareTo() methods.
- String formatting can be performed using the String.format() and printf() methods.