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Chapter 9 Strings and Text I/O

Chapter 9 Strings and Text I/O. Objectives. To use the String class to process fixed strings. To use the Character class to process a single character. To use the StringBuilder / StringBuffer class to process flexible strings.

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Chapter 9 Strings and Text I/O

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  1. Chapter 9 Strings and Text I/O

  2. Objectives • To use the String class to process fixed strings. • To use the Character class to process a single character. • To use the StringBuilder/StringBuffer class to process flexible strings. • To know the differences between the String, StringBuilder, and StringBuffer classes. • To learn how to pass strings to the main method from the command line. • (Optional) To use the regular expressions to represent patterns for matching, replacing, and splitting strings. • To discover file properties, delete and rename files using the File class . • To write data to a file using the PrintWriter class. • To read data from a file using the Scanner class. • (Optional GUI) To add components to a frame.

  3. The String Class • Constructing a String: • String message = "Welcome to Java“; • String message = new String("Welcome to Java“); • String s = new String(); • Obtaining String length and Retrieving Individual Characters in a string • String Concatenation (concat) • Substrings (substring(index), substring(start, end)) • Comparisons (equals, compareTo) • String Conversions • Finding a Character or a Substring in a String • Conversions between Strings and Arrays • Converting Characters and Numeric Values to Strings

  4. Constructing Strings String newString = new String(stringLiteral); String message = new String("Welcome to Java"); • A String variable holds a reference to a String object that stores a string value. • Since strings are used frequently, Java provides a shorthand initializer for creating a string: String message = "Welcome to Java";

  5. Strings Are Immutable A String object is immutable; its contents cannot be changed. Does the following code change the contents of the string? String s = "Java"; s = "HTML";

  6. animation Trace Code String s = "Java"; s = "HTML";

  7. animation Trace Code String s = "Java"; s = "HTML";

  8. Interned Strings Since strings are immutable and are frequently used, to improve efficiency and save memory, the JVM uses a unique instance for string literals with the same character sequence. Such an instance is called interned. You can also use a String object’s intern method to return an interned string. For example, the following statements:

  9. Examples display s1 == s is false s2 == s is true s == s3 is true A new object is created if you use the new operator. If you use the string initializer, no new object is created if the interned object is already created.

  10. animation Trace Code

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  14. Finding String Length Finding string length using the length() method: message = "Welcome"; message.length() (returns 7)

  15. Retrieving Individual Characters in a String • Do not use message[0] • Use message.charAt(index) • Index starts from 0

  16. String Concatenation String s3 = s1.concat(s2); String s3 = s1 + s2; s1 + s2 + s3 + s4 + s5 same as (((s1.concat(s2)).concat(s3)).concat(s4)).concat(s5);

  17. Extracting Substrings You can extract a single character from a string using the charAt method. You can also extract a substring from a string using the substring method in the String class. String s1 = "Welcome to Java"; String s2 = s1.substring(0, 11) + "HTML";

  18. String Comparisons • equals String s1 = new String("Welcome“); String s2 = "welcome"; if (s1.equals(s2)){ // s1 and s2 have the same contents } if (s1 == s2) { // s1 and s2 have the same reference }

  19. String Comparisons, cont. • compareTo(Object object) String s1 = new String("Welcome“); String s2 = "welcome"; if (s1.compareTo(s2) > 0) { // s1 is greater than s2 } else if (s1.compareTo(s2) == 0) { // s1 and s2 have the same contents } else // s1 is less than s2

  20. String Conversions The contents of a string cannot be changed once the string is created. But you can convert a string to a new string using the following methods: • toLowerCase • E.g. “Welcome”.toLowerCase() returns a new string, welcome. • toUpperCase • E.g. “Welcome”.toUpperCase() returns a new string, WELCOME. • trim • Returns a new string by eliminating blank characters from both ends of the string. • replace(oldChar, newChar) • Use to replace all occurrences of a character in the string with a new character.

  21. Finding a Character or a Substring in a String "Welcome to Java".indexOf('W')returns 0. "Welcome to Java".indexOf('x')returns -1. • Return the index of the first character in the string that matches the specified character. "Welcome to Java".indexOf('o', 5)returns 9. • Returns the index of the first character in the starting from the specified index that matches the specified character. "Welcome to Java".indexOf("come")returns 3. Returns the index of the first character of the substring in the string that matches the specified string.

  22. "Welcome to Java".indexOf("Java", 5)returns 11. "Welcome to Java".indexOf("java", 5)returns -1. - Returns the index of the first character of the substring in the string starting from the specified index that matches the specified string. "Welcome to Java".lastIndexOf('a')returns 14.

  23. Convert Character and Numbers to Strings The String class provides several static valueOf methods for converting a character, an array of characters, and numeric values to strings. These methods have the same name valueOf with different argument types char, char[], double, long, int, and float. For example, to convert a double value to a string, use String.valueOf(5.44). The return value is string consists of characters ‘5’, ‘.’, ‘4’, and ‘4’.

  24. Convert String to Array char[] chars = “Java”.toCharArray(); • chars[0] is ‘J’, chars[1] is ‘a’, chars[2] is ‘v’ and chars[3] is ‘a’. • getChars(int srcBegin, int srcEnd, char[] dst, int dstBegin) char[] dst = {‘J’,’a’,’v’,’a’,’1’,’3’,’0’,’1’}; “CS3720”.getChars(2, 6, dst, 4); dst becomes {‘J’,’a’,’v’,’a’,’3’,’7’,’2’,’0’}

  25. String str = new String(new char[]{‘J’,’a’, ‘v’, ‘a’}); Or String str = String.valueOf(new char[] {‘J’,’a’, ‘v’, ‘a’}); • String.valueOf(5.44) converts 5.44 to String, ‘5’, ‘.’,’4’ and’4’. • Double.parseDouble(str) or Integer.parseInt(str) to convert string double value or an int value.

  26. Example:Finding Palindromes • Objective: Checking whether a string is a palindrome: a string that reads the same forward and backward. Run CheckPalindrome

  27. import javax.swing.JOptionPane; • public class CheckPalindrome { • public static void main(String[] args) { • String s = JOptionPane.showInputDialog(“Enter a string:”); • String output = “”; • if (isPalindrome(s)) • output = s + “ is a palindrome”; • else • output = s + “ is not a palindrome”; • JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null, output); • } • public static boolean isPalindrome(String s) { • int low = 0; • int high = s.length()-1; • while (low < high) { • if (s.charAt(low) != s.charAt(high)) • return false; • low++; • high--; • } • return true; • }}

  28. The Character Class

  29. Examples Character charObject = new Character('b'); charObject.compareTo(new Character('a')) returns 1 charObject.compareTo(new Character('b')) returns 0 charObject.compareTo(new Character('c')) returns -1 charObject.compareTo(new Character('d') returns –2 charObject.equals(new Character('b')) returns true charObject.equals(new Character('d')) returns false

  30. Example: Counting Each Letter in a String This example gives a program that counts the number of occurrence of each letter in a string. Assume the letters are not case-sensitive. Run CountEachLetter

  31. StringBuilder and StringBuffer The StringBuilder/StringBuffer class is an alternative to the String class. In general, a StringBuilder/StringBuffer can be used wherever a string is used. StringBuilder/StringBuffer is more flexible than String. You can add, insert, or append new contents into a string buffer, whereas the value of a String object is fixed once the string is created.

  32. StringBuilder vs. StringBuffer The StringBuilder class, introduced in JDK 1.5, is similar to StringBuffer except that the update methods in StringBuffer are synchronized. Use StringBuffer if it may be accessed by multiple tasks concurrently. Using StringBuilder is more efficient if it is accessed by a single task. The constructors and methods in StringBuffer and StringBuilder are almost the same. This book covers StringBuffer. You may replace StringBuffer by StringBuilder. The program can compile and run without any other changes.

  33. The StringBuffer Class The StringBuffer class is an alternative to the String class. In general, a string buffer can be used wherever a string is used.StringBuffer is more flexible than String. You can add, insert, or append new contentsinto a string buffer. However, the value ofa String object is fixed once the string is created.

  34. StringBuffer Constructors • public StringBuffer() No characters, initial capacity 16 characters. • public StringBuffer(int length) No characters, initial capacity specified by the length argument. • public StringBuffer(String str) Represents the same sequence of charactersas the string argument. Initial capacity 16plus the length of the stringargument.

  35. Appending New Contentsinto a String Buffer StringBuffer strBuf = new StringBuffer(); strBuf.append("Welcome"); strBuf.append(' '); strBuf.append("to"); strBuf.append(' '); strBuf.append("Java");

  36. strBuf contains “Welcome to Java” • strBuf.insert(11, “HTML and “); • Insert string “HTML and “ at position 11. • Now strBuf contains • “Welcome to HTML and Java”

  37. strBuf.delete(8, 11) changes the buffer to “Welcome Java” • strBuf.deleteCharAt(8) changes the buffer to “Welcome o Java” • strBuf.reverse() changer the buffer to “avaJ ot emocleW” • strBuf.replace(11, 15, “HTML”) changes the buffer to “Welcome to HTML” • strBuf.setCharAt(), ‘w’) sets the buffer to “welcome to Java”;

  38. Example:Checking Palindromes Ignoring Non-alphanumeric Characters This example gives a program that counts the number of occurrence of each letter in a string. Assume the letters are not case-sensitive. Run PalindromeIgnoreNonAlphanumeric

  39. Main Method Is Just a Regular Method You can call a regular method by passing actual parameters. Can you pass arguments to main? Of course, yes. For example, the main method in class B is invoked by a method in A, as shown below:

  40. Command-Line Parameters class TestMain { public static void main(String[] args) { ... } } java TestMain arg0 arg1 arg2 ... argn • Don’t need double quotes because separated by space • If a string contains a space, use double quotes to separate them.

  41. ProcessingCommand-Line Parameters In the main method, get the arguments from args[0], args[1], ..., args[n], which corresponds to arg0, arg1, ..., argn in the command line.

  42. Example: Using Command-Line Parameters • Objective: Write a program that will perform binary operations on integers. The program receives three parameters: an operator and two integers. java Calculator 2 + 3 Calculator java Calculator 2 - 3 java Calculator 2 / 3 Run java Calculator 2 “*” 3

  43. Optional Regular Expressions A regular expression (abbreviated regex) is a string that describes a pattern for matching a set of strings. Regular expression is a powerful tool for string manipulations. You can use regular expressions for matching, replacing, and splitting strings.

  44. Optional Matching Strings "Java".matches("Java"); "Java".equals("Java"); • They are similar and give value true. • However, the matches method is more powerful "Java is fun".matches("Java.*") "Java is cool".matches("Java.*") "Java is powerful".matches("Java.*") • All true • The substring “.*” matches any zero or more characters.

  45. Optional Regular Expression Syntax

  46. Optional Replacing and Splitting Strings

  47. Examples String s = "Java Java Java".replaceAll("v\\w", "wi") ; Output  Jawi Jawi Jawi String s = "Java Java Java".replaceFirst("v\\w", "wi") ; Output  Jawi Java Java String[] s = "Java1HTML2Perl".split("\\d");

  48. Pedagogical NOTE The previous edition of this book introduced text I/O using many subclasses of java.io.Writer and java.io.Reader. These classes are lower-level and difficult to learn. The java.util.PrintWriter and java.util.Scanner classes are higher-level and easy to use. All the programs written using the lower-level text I/O classes can be revised using the PrintWriter and Scanner classes. Therefore, the PrintWriter and Scanner classes supersede the lower-level text I/O classes. If students need to know these lower-level text I/O classes, please refer to Supplement V.I, “Text I/O Using Reader and Writer.”

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