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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 1 Strings and Text I/O

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Strings and Text I/O. Objectives. To use the String class to process fixed strings (§9.2). To use the Character class to process a single character (§9.3). To use the StringBuilder / StringBuffer class to process flexible strings (§9.4). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 1

Strings and Text I/O

Page 2: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 2

Objectives To use the String class to process fixed strings (§9.2). To use the Character class to process a single character (§9.3). To use the StringBuilder/StringBuffer class to process flexible

strings (§9.4). To distinguish among the String, StringBuilder, and StringBuffer

classes (§9.2-9.4). To learn how to pass arguments to the main method from the

command line (§9.5). To discover file properties and to delete and rename files using

the File class (§9.6). To write data to a file using the PrintWriter class (§9.7.1). To read data from a file using the Scanner class (§9.7.2). (GUI) To open files using a dialog box (§9.8).

Page 3: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 3

MotivationsOften you encounter the problems that involve string processing and file input and output. Suppose you need to write a program to replace all occurrences of a word with a new word in a file. How do you solve this problem?

This chapter introduces strings and text files, which will enable you to solve this problem.• A string is a sequence of characters. • Strings are treated as an array of characters, but

in Java string is an object. • The String class has 11 constructors and more

than 40 methods for manipulating strings.

Page 4: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 4

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

Page 5: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 5

Constructing Strings String newString = new String(stringLiteral); 

String message = new String("Welcome to Java");Since strings are used frequently, Java provides a shorthand initializer for creating a string:

String message = "Welcome to Java";

Here are some more examples of how strings can be used:

System.out.println("abc"); String cde = "cde";

System.out.println("abc" + cde);

String c = "abc".substring(2,3);

String d = cde.substring(1, 2);

Page 6: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 6

Strings Are Immutable

A String object is immutable; its contents cannot be changed. Does the following code change the contents of the string? The answer is no.

String s = "Java"; /*creates a String object with content “Java” and assigns

its reference to s. */

s = "HTML"; // create a new String object with content “HTML” and assigns to s.

Page 7: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 7

Trace Code

String s = "Java";

s = "HTML";

: String

String object for "Java"

s

After executing String s = "Java";

After executing s = "HTML";

: String

String object for "Java"

: String

String object for "HTML"

Contents cannot be changed

This string object is now unreferenced

s

animation

After executing String s= “Java”;Content cannot be changed

After executing s = “HTML”String are immutable; once created, their contents cannot be changed.

Page 8: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 8

Interned StringsTake a look a the String deeper.

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. For example, the following statements:

String s1 = “Welcome to Java”;

String s2 = new String (“Welcome to Java”);

String s3 = “Welcome to Java”;

Page 9: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 9

Examples

display

  s1 == s2 is false

s1 == 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.

String s1 = "Welcome to Java"; String s2 = new String("Welcome to Java"); String s3 = "Welcome to Java"; System.out.println("s1 == s2 is " + (s1 == s2)); System.out.println("s1 == s3 is " + (s1 == s3));

: String

Interned string object for "Welcome to Java"

: String

A string object for "Welcome to Java"

s1

s2

s3

Page 10: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 10

Trace Code String s1 = "Welcome to Java"; String s2 = new String("Welcome to Java"); String s3 = "Welcome to Java";

: String

Interned string object for "Welcome to Java"

s1

animation

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 11

Trace Code String s1 = "Welcome to Java"; String s2 = new String("Welcome to Java"); String s3 = "Welcome to Java";

: String

Interned string object for "Welcome to Java"

: String

A string object for "Welcome to Java"

s1

s2

Page 12: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 12

Trace Code String s1 = "Welcome to Java"; String s2 = new String("Welcome to Java"); String s3 = "Welcome to Java";

: String

Interned string object for "Welcome to Java"

: String

A string object for "Welcome to Java"

s1

s2

s3

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 13

String Comparisons java.lang.String

+equals(s1: String): boolean

+equalsIgnoreCase(s1: String): boolean

+compareTo(s1: String): int

+compareToIgnoreCase(s1: String): int

+regionMatches(toffset: int, s1: String, offset: int, len: int): boolean

+regionMatches(ignoreCase: boolean, toffset: int, s1: String, offset: int, len: int): boolean

+startsWith(prefix: String): boolean

+endsWith(suffix: String): boolean

Returns true if this string is equal to string s1.

Returns true if this string is equal to string s1 case-insensitive.

Returns an integer greater than 0, equal to 0, or less than 0 to indicate whether this string is greater than, equal to, or less than s1.

Same as compareTo except that the comparison is case-insensitive.

Returns true if the specified subregion of this string exactly matches the specified subregion in string s1.

Same as the preceding method except that you can specify whether the match is case-sensitive.

Returns true if this string starts with the specified prefix.

Returns true if this string ends with the specified suffix.

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 14

String Comparisons Statements display true and false.

String s1 = new String("Welcome“);String s2 = "welcome";

String s3 =“Welcome to C++”; system.out.println(s1.equals(s2)); //true system.out.println(s1.equals(s3)); //false

if (s1.equals(s2)){ // s1 and s2 have the same contents }

if (s1 == s2) { /* Check to see if only s1 and s2 are equal and refer to the

same object. s1 and s2 have the same reference*/ }

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 15

String Comparisons, cont. compareTo(Object object)

String s1 = new String("Welcome“);String s2 = "welcome";

if (s1.compareTo(s2) > 0) { //compareTo method can also be used to compare two strings

// s1 is greater than s2 } else if (s1.compareTo(s2) == 0) { //== compare // s1 and s2 have the same contents } else // s1 is less than s2

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 16

String Length, Characters, and Combining Strings

java.lang.String

+length(): int

+charAt(index: int): char

+concat(s1: String): String

Returns the number of characters in this string.

Returns the character at the specified index from this string.

Returns a new string that concatenate this string with string s1. string.

The String class provides the methods for obtaining length, retrieving individual characters, and concate strings as shown below:

You can get the length of a string by invoking its length() method.Example: message.length() //returns the length of the string message.

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 17

Retrieving Individual Characters in a String

Do not use message[0]

Use message.charAt(index)

Index starts from 0

W e l c o m e t o J a v a

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

message

Indices

message.charAt(0) message.charAt(14) message.length() is 15

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 18

String ConcatenationWe can use the concate method to concatenate two strings.

The below example, cancate strings s1, s2, into s3.

String s3 = s1.concat(s2);

Also plus (+) sing works to concate two or more strings.

String s3 = s1 + s2;

s1 + s2 + s3 + s4 + s5 same as

(((s1.concat(s2)).concat(s3)).concat(s4)).concat(s5);

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 19

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";

W e l c o m e t o J a v a

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

message

Indices

message.substring(0, 11) message.substring(11)

Page 20: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 20

Converting, Replacing, and Splitting Strings

java.lang.String

+toLowerCase(): String

+toUpperCase(): String

+trim(): String

+replace(oldChar: char, newChar: char): String

+replaceFirst(oldString: String, newString: String): String

+replaceAll(oldString: String, newString: String): String

+split(delimiter: String): String[]

Returns a new string with all characters converted to lowercase.

Returns a new string with all characters converted to uppercase.

Returns a new string with blank characters trimmed on both sides.

Returns a new string that replaces all matching character in this string with the new character.

Returns a new string that replaces the first matching substring in this string with the new substring.

Returns a new string that replace all matching substrings in this string with the new substring.

Returns an array of strings consisting of the substrings split by the delimiter.

The String class provides the methods for converting, replacing, and splitting string, as show below

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 21

Examples"Welcome".toLowerCase() returns a new string, welcome.

"Welcome".toUpperCase() returns a new string, WELCOME.

" Welcome ".trim() returns a new string, Welcome.

"Welcome".replace('e', 'A') returns a new string, WAlcomA.

"Welcome".replaceFirst("e", "AB") returns a new string, WABlcome.

"Welcome".replace("e", "AB") returns a new string, WABlcomAB.

"Welcome".replace("el", "AB") returns a new string, WABcome.

Page 22: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 22

Splitting a String

String[] tokens = "Java#HTML#Perl".split("#", 0);

for (int i = 0; i < tokens.length; i++)

System.out.print(tokens[i] + " ");

Java HTML Perldisplays

The split method can be sued to extract tokens from a string with specified a character that identified within the string beginning or end.

Page 23: Strings and Text I/O

Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 23

Matching, Replacing and Splitting by Patterns You can match, replace, or split a string by specifying a pattern. This is an extremely useful and powerful feature, commonly known as regular expression. Regular expression is complex to beginning students. For this reason, two simple patterns are used in this section. Please refer to Supplement III.F, “Regular Expressions,” for further studies.

"Java".matches("Java");

"Java".equals("Java");

"Java is fun".matches("Java.*");

"Java is cool".matches("Java.*");

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 24

Matching, Replacing and Splitting by Patterns The replaceAll, replaceFirst, and split methods can be used with a regular expression. For example, the following statement returns a new string that replaces $, +, or # in "a+b$#c" by the string NNN.

String s = "a+b$#c".replaceAll("[$+#]", "NNN");

System.out.println(s);

Here the regular expression [$+#] specifies a pattern that matches $, +, or #. So, the output is aNNNbNNNNNNc.

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 25

Matching, Replacing and Splitting by Patterns The following statement splits the string into an array of strings delimited by some punctuation marks.

String[] tokens = "Java,C?C#,C++".split("[.,:;?]"); for (int i = 0; i < tokens.length; i++) System.out.println(tokens[i]);

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 26

Finding a Character or a Substring in a String

java.lang.String

+indexOf(ch: char): int

+indexOf(ch: char, fromIndex: int): int

+indexOf(s: String): int

+indexOf(s: String, fromIndex: int): int

+lastIndexOf(ch: int): int

+lastIndexOf(ch: int,

fromIndex: int): int

+lastIndexOf(s: String): int

+lastIndexOf(s: String,

fromIndex: int): int

Returns the index of the first occurrence of ch in the string. Returns -1 if not matched.

Returns the index of the first occurrence of ch after fromIndex in the string. Returns -1 if not matched.

Returns the index of the first occurrence of string s in this string. Returns -1 if not matched.

Returns the index of the first occurrence of string s in this string after fromIndex. Returns -1 if not matched.

Returns the index of the last occurrence of ch in the string. Returns -1 if not matched.

Returns the index of the last occurrence of ch before fromIndex in this string. Returns -1 if not matched.

Returns the index of the last occurrence of string s. Returns -1 if not matched.

Returns the index of the last occurrence of string s before fromIndex. Returns -1 if not matched.

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 27

Finding a Character or a Substring in a String

"Welcome to Java".indexOf('W') returns 0.

"Welcome to Java".indexOf('x') returns -1.

"Welcome to Java".indexOf('o', 5) returns 9.

"Welcome to Java".indexOf("come") returns 3.

"Welcome to Java".indexOf("Java", 5) returns 11.

"Welcome to Java".indexOf("java", 5) returns -1.

"Welcome to Java".lastIndexOf('a') returns 14.

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 28

Convert Character and Numbers to Strings

String are not arrays, but a string can be converted into an array and vice versa.

To convert a string to an array of characters, use the toCharArray method.

Convert string “Java” to an array;

char[] chars = “Java”.toCharArray();

So, char[0] is ‘J’, char[1] is ‘a’, char[2] ‘v’, char[3] ‘a’.

You can also getChars (int srcBegin, int srcEnd)

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 29

The Character Class

java.lang.Character

+Character(value: char)

+charValue(): char

+compareTo(anotherCharacter: Character): int

+equals(anotherCharacter: Character): boolean

+isDigit(ch: char): boolean

+isLetter(ch: char): boolean

+isLetterOrDigit(ch: char): boolean

+isLowerCase(ch: char): boolean

+isUpperCase(ch: char): boolean

+toLowerCase(ch: char): char

+toUpperCase(ch: char): char

Constructs a character object with char value

Returns the char value from this object

Compares this character with another

Returns true if this character equals to another

Returns true if the specified character is a digit

Returns true if the specified character is a letter

Returns true if the character is a letter or a digit

Returns true if the character is a lowercase letter

Returns true if the character is an uppercase letter

Returns the lowercase of the specified character

Returns the uppercase of the specified character

Java provides a wrapper class for every primitive type such as Character, Boolean, Byte, Short, Integer, Long, Float, , and more.

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807

Case Study: Checking Palindromes

30

Video- Checking Palindromes 

This program presents whether a string is a palindrom

A palindrome is a word or sentence that reads the same forward as it does backward. The words a and I are perhaps the simplest and least interesting palindromes; the word racecar and the name Hannah are more interesting and illustrative. Neither spaces nor punctuation are usually taken into consideration when constructing sentences that are palindromes -- one of the most famous palindromes is "A man, a plan, a canal, Panama" -- but when the spaces are properly positioned as well, so much the better. An example would be the also famous palindrome "Able was I ere I saw Elba," purportedly spoken by Napoleon, referring to his first sighting of Elba, the island where the British exiled him.

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807

Command-Line ArgumentCase Study: Calculator program

31

The program takes an expression in one argument (operad1 operator operand2) from the command line and displays the expression and the result of the arithmetic operation.

Video – Calculator program

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 32

Examples

You can create a character object from a char value

Character character = new Character (‘a’);Character charObject = new Character('b');

charObject.compareTo(new Character('a')) returns 1charObject.compareTo(new Character('b')) returns 0charObject.compareTo(new Character('c')) returns -1charObject.compareTo(new Character('d') returns –2charObject.equals(new Character('b')) returns truecharObject.equals(new Character('d')) returns false

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 33

Problem: Counting Each Letter in a String

CountEachLetterCountEachLetter

RunRun

import java.util.Scanner;public class CountEachLetter { /** Main method */ public static void main(String[] args) { // Create a Scanner Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in); // Prompt the user to enter a string System.out.print("Enter a string: "); String s = input.nextLine(); // Invoke the countLetters method to count each letter int[] counts = countLetters(s.toLowerCase()); // Display results for (int i = 0; i < counts.length; i++) { if (counts[i] != 0) System.out.println((char)('a' + i) + " appears " + counts[i] + ((counts[i] == 1) ? " time" : " times")); } } /** Count each letter in the string */ public static int[] countLetters(String s) { int[] counts = new int[26]; for (int i = 0; i < s.length(); i++) { if (Character.isLetter(s.charAt(i))) counts[s.charAt(i) - 'a']++; } return counts; }}

This example gives a program that counts the number of occurrence of each letter in a string. Assume the letters are not case-sensitive.

Enter a string: Sarah Northa appears 2 timesh appears 2 timesn appears 1 timeo appears 1 timer appears 2 timess appears 1 timet appears 1 time

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 34

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.

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807

String Builder and String Buffer

The most important difference between String and StringBuffer/StringBuilder in java is that

– String object is immutable whereas– StringBuffer/StringBuilder objects are mutable.

By immutable, we mean that the value stored in the

String object cannot be changed.

35

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Internally a new String object is created to do the changes.So suppose you declare a String object:

String myString = “Hello”;

Next, you want to append “Guest” to the same String. What you can do is the following:

myString = myString + ” Guest”;

When you print the contents of myString the output will be “Hello Guest”. Although we made use of the same object(myString), internally a new object was created in the process.

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Modifying Strings in the Builder

java.lang.StringBuilder

+append(data: char[]): StringBuilder

+append(data: char[], offset: int, len: int): StringBuilder

+append(v: aPrimitiveType): StringBuilder

+append(s: String): StringBuilder

+delete(startIndex: int, endIndex: int): StringBuilder

+deleteCharAt(index: int): StringBuilder

+insert(index: int, data: char[], offset: int, len: int): StringBuilder

+insert(offset: int, data: char[]): StringBuilder

+insert(offset: int, b: aPrimitiveType): StringBuilder

+insert(offset: int, s: String): StringBuilder

+replace(startIndex: int, endIndex: int, s: String): StringBuilder

+reverse(): StringBuilder

+setCharAt(index: int, ch: char): void

Appends a char array into this string builder.

Appends a subarray in data into this string builder.

Appends a primitive type value as a string to this

builder.

Appends a string to this string builder.

Deletes characters from startIndex to endIndex.

Deletes a character at the specified index.

Inserts a subarray of the data in the array to the builder at the specified index.

Inserts data into this builder at the position offset.

Inserts a value converted to a string into this builder.

Inserts a string into this builder at the position offset.

Replaces the characters in this builder from startIndex to endIndex with the specified string.

Reverses the characters in the builder.

Sets a new character at the specified index in this builder.

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807

Using append since StringBuffer/StringBuilder objects are

mutable, we can make changes to the value stored in the object.

What this effectively means is that string operations such as append would be more efficient if performed using StringBuffer/StringBuilder objects than String objects.

38

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ExamplesstringBuilder.append("Java");stringBuilder.insert(11, "HTML and ");stringBuilder.delete(8, 11) changes the builder to Welcome Java.stringBuilder.deleteCharAt(8) changes the builder to Welcome o Java.stringBuilder.reverse() changes the builder to avaJ ot emocleW.stringBuilder.replace(11, 15, "HTML") changes the builder to Welcome to HTML.stringBuilder.setCharAt(0, 'w') sets the builder to welcome to Java.

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Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0132130807 40

The toString, capacity, length, setLength, and charAt Methods

java.lang.StringBuilder

+toString(): String

+capacity(): int

+charAt(index: int): char

+length(): int

+setLength(newLength: int): void

+substring(startIndex: int): String

+substring(startIndex: int, endIndex: int): String

+trimToSize(): void

Returns a string object from the string builder.

Returns the capacity of this string builder.

Returns the character at the specified index.

Returns the number of characters in this builder.

Sets a new length in this builder.

Returns a substring starting at startIndex.

Returns a substring from startIndex to endIndex-1.

Reduces the storage size used for the string builder.

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Problem: 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.

PalindromeIgnoreNonAlphanumeric PalindromeIgnoreNonAlphanumeric RunRun

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Main Method Is Just a Regular Method

public class A { public static void main(String[] args) { String[] strings = {"New York", "Boston", "Atlanta"}; B.main(strings); } }

class B { public static void main(String[] args) { for (int i = 0; i < args.length; i++) System.out.println(args[i]); } }

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:

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Problem: Calculator

Objective: Write a program that will perform binary operations on integers. The program receives three parameters: an operator and two integers.

CalculatorCalculator

java Calculator 2 + 3

java Calculator 2 - 3

RunRun java Calculator 2 / 3

java Calculator 2 “*” 3

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Description:This method is used to get the primitive data type of a certain String.

parseXxx() is a static method and can have one argument or two.

Syntax:All the variant of this method are given below: static int parseInt(String s) static int parseInt(String s, int radix)

Parameters:Here is the detail of parameters:String s : This is a string representation of decimal.int radix : This would be used to convert String s into integer.

Java - parseInt() Method

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Return Value :•parseInt(String s): This returns an integer (decimal only).•parseInt(int i): This returns an integer, given a string representation of decimal, binary, octal, or hexadecimal (radix equals 10, 2, 8, or 16 respectively) numbers as input.

•Example:

public class Test{ public static void main(String args[]){ int x = Integer.parseInt("9"); double c = Double.parseDouble("5"); int b = Integer.parseInt("444",16); System.out.println(x); System.out.println(c); System.out.println(b); } }Result9 5.0 1092

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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.

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Matching Strings

"Java".matches("Java");

"Java".equals("Java");

"Java is fun".matches("Java.*")

"Java is cool".matches("Java.*")

"Java is powerful".matches("Java.*")

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Regular Expression Syntax

Regular Expression Matches Example x a specified character x Java matches Java . any single character Java matches J..a (ab|cd) a, b, or c ten matches t(en|im] [abc] a, b, or c Java matches Ja[uvwx]a [^abc] any character except Java matches Ja[^ars]a

a, b, or c [a-z] a through z Java matches [A-M]av[a-d] [^a-z] any character except Java matches Jav[^b-d] a through z [a-e[m-p]] a through e or Java matches m through p [A-G[I-M]]av[a-d] [a-e&&[c-p]] intersection of a-e Java matches with c-p [A-P&&[I-M]]av[a-d] \d a digit, same as [1-9] Java2 matches "Java[\\d]" \D a non-digit $Java matches "[\\D][\\D]ava" \w a word character Java matches "[\\w]ava" \W a non-word character $Java matches "[\\W][\\w]ava" \s a whitespace character "Java 2" matches "Java\\s2" \S a non-whitespace char Java matches "[\\S]ava" p* zero or more Java matches "[\\w]*" occurrences of pattern p p+ one or more Java matches "[\\w]+" occurrences of pattern p p? zero or one Java matches "[\\w]?Java" occurrence of pattern p Java matches "[\\w]?ava" p{n} exactly n Java matches "[\\w]{4}" occurrences of pattern p p{n,} at least n Java matches "[\\w]{3,}" occurrences of pattern p p{n,m} between n and m Java matches "[\\w]{1,9}" occurrences (inclusive)

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Replacing and Splitting Strings

java.lang.String

+matches(regex: String): boolean

+replaceAll(regex: String, replacement: String): String

+replaceFirst(regex: String, replacement: String): String

+split(regex: String): String[]

Returns true if this string matches the pattern.

Returns a new string that replaces all matching substrings with the replacement.

Returns a new string that replaces the first matching substring with the replacement.

Returns an array of strings consisting of the substrings split by the matches.

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ExamplesString s = "Java Java Java".replaceAll("v\\w", "wi") ;

String s = "Java Java Java".replaceFirst("v\\w", "wi") ;

String[] s = "Java1HTML2Perl".split("\\d");

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java.io.File

+File(pathname: String)

+File(parent: String, child: String)

+File(parent: File, child: String)

+exists(): boolean

+canRead(): boolean

+canWrite(): boolean

+isDirectory(): boolean

+isFile(): boolean

+isAbsolute(): boolean

+isHidden(): boolean

+getAbsolutePath(): String

+getCanonicalPath(): String

+getName(): String

+getPath(): String

+getParent(): String

+lastModified(): long

+delete(): boolean

+renameTo(dest: File): boolean

Creates a File object for the specified pathname. The pathname may be a directory or a file.

Creates a File object for the child under the directory parent. child may be a filename or a subdirectory.

Creates a File object for the child under the directory parent. parent is a File object. In the preceding constructor, the parent is a string.

Returns true if the file or the directory represented by the File object exists.

Returns true if the file represented by the File object exists and can be read.

Returns true if the file represented by the File object exists and can be written.

Returns true if the File object represents a directory.

Returns true if the File object represents a file.

Returns true if the File object is created using an absolute path name.

Returns true if the file represented in the File object is hidden. The exact definition of hidden is system-dependent. On Windows, you can mark a file hidden in the File Properties dialog box. On Unix systems, a file is hidden if its name begins with a period character '.'.

Returns the complete absolute file or directory name represented by the File object.

Returns the same as getAbsolutePath() except that it removes redundant names, such as "." and "..", from the pathname, resolves symbolic links (on Unix platforms), and converts drive letters to standard uppercase (on Win32 platforms).

Returns the last name of the complete directory and file name represented by the File object. For example, new File("c:\\book\\test.dat").getName() returns test.dat.

Returns the complete directory and file name represented by the File object. For example, new File("c:\\book\\test.dat").getPath() returns c:\book\test.dat.

Returns the complete parent directory of the current directory or the file represented by the File object. For example, new File("c:\\book\\test.dat").getParent() returns c:\book.

Returns the time that the file was last modified.

Deletes this file. The method returns true if the deletion succeeds.

Renames this file. The method returns true if the operation succeeds.

Obtaining file properties and manipulating file

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Problem: Explore File Properties

TestFileClassTestFileClass RunRun

Objective: Write a program that demonstrates how to create files in a platform-independent way and use the methods in the File class to obtain their properties. Figure 16.1 shows a sample run of the program on Windows, and Figure 16.2 a sample run on Unix.

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Text I/O

A File object encapsulates the properties of a file or a path, but does not contain the methods for reading/writing data from/to a file. In order to perform I/O, you need to create objects using appropriate Java I/O classes. The objects contain the methods for reading/writing data from/to a file. This section introduces how to read/write strings and numeric values from/to a text file using the Scanner and PrintWriter classes.

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Writing Data Using PrintWriter

WriteDataWriteData RunRun

java.io.PrintWriter

+PrintWriter(filename: String)

+print(s: String): void

+print(c: char): void

+print(cArray: char[]): void

+print(i: int): void

+print(l: long): void

+print(f: float): void

+print(d: double): void

+print(b: boolean): void

Also contains the overloaded println methods.

Also contains the overloaded printf methods.

.

Creates a PrintWriter for the specified file.

Writes a string.

Writes a character.

Writes an array of character.

Writes an int value.

Writes a long value.

Writes a float value.

Writes a double value.

Writes a boolean value.

A println method acts like a print method; additionally it prints a line separator. The line separator string is defined by the system. It is \r\n on Windows and \n on Unix.

The printf method was introduced in §3.6, “Formatting Console Output and Strings.”

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Reading Data Using Scanner

java.util.Scanner

+Scanner(source: File)

+Scanner(source: String)

+close()

+hasNext(): boolean

+next(): String

+nextByte(): byte

+nextShort(): short

+nextInt(): int

+nextLong(): long

+nextFloat(): float

+nextDouble(): double

+useDelimiter(pattern: String): Scanner

Creates a Scanner that produces values scanned from the specified file.

Creates a Scanner that produces values scanned from the specified string.

Closes this scanner.

Returns true if this scanner has another token in its input.

Returns next token as a string.

Returns next token as a byte.

Returns next token as a short.

Returns next token as an int.

Returns next token as a long.

Returns next token as a float.

Returns next token as a double.

Sets this scanner’s delimiting pattern.

ReadDataReadData RunRun

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Decimal to Binary Program Program end of the chapter – 9.10 Decimal to binary – write a method that parse a

decimal number into a binary number as a string. The method header is as follows:

public static String decimalToBinary(int value)

Write a test program that prompts the user to enter a decimal integer value and displays the corresponding binary value.

56

Video – Exercise 9-10 – Decimal to binary

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(GUI) File Dialogs

ReadFileUsingJFileChooserReadFileUsingJFileChooser RunRun