so basically user enters a sequence from an scanner input.
12, 3, 4
, etc.
It can be of any length long and it has to be integers.
I want to convert the
Line by line
int [] v = Stream.of(line.split(",\\s+"))
.mapToInt(Integer::parseInt)
.toArray();
Stream.of().mapToInt().toArray()
seems to be the best options.
int[] arr = Stream.of(new String[]{"1", "2", "3"})
.mapToInt(Integer::parseInt).toArray();
System.out.println(Arrays.toString(arr));
Converting String array into stream and mapping to int is the best option available in java 8.
String[] stringArray = new String[] { "0", "1", "2" };
int[] intArray = Stream.of(stringArray).mapToInt(Integer::parseInt).toArray();
System.out.println(Arrays.toString(intArray));
Java has a method for this, "convertStringArrayToIntArray".
String numbers = sc.nextLine();
int[] intArray = convertStringArrayToIntArray(numbers.split(", "));
You could read the entire input line from scanner, then split the line by ,
then you have a String[]
, parse each number into int[]
with index one to one matching...(assuming valid input and no NumberFormatExceptions
) like
String line = scanner.nextLine();
String[] numberStrs = line.split(",");
int[] numbers = new int[numberStrs.length];
for(int i = 0;i < numberStrs.length;i++)
{
// Note that this is assuming valid input
// If you want to check then add a try/catch
// and another index for the numbers if to continue adding the others (see below)
numbers[i] = Integer.parseInt(numberStrs[i]);
}
As YoYo's answer suggests, the above can be achieved more concisely in Java 8:
int[] numbers = Arrays.stream(line.split(",")).mapToInt(Integer::parseInt).toArray();
To handle invalid input
You will need to consider what you want need to do in this case, do you want to know that there was bad input at that element or just skip it.
If you don't need to know about invalid input but just want to continue parsing the array you could do the following:
int index = 0;
for(int i = 0;i < numberStrs.length;i++)
{
try
{
numbers[index] = Integer.parseInt(numberStrs[i]);
index++;
}
catch (NumberFormatException nfe)
{
//Do nothing or you could print error if you want
}
}
// Now there will be a number of 'invalid' elements
// at the end which will need to be trimmed
numbers = Arrays.copyOf(numbers, index);
The reason we should trim the resulting array is that the invalid elements at the end of the int[]
will be represented by a 0
, these need to be removed in order to differentiate between a valid input value of 0
.
Results in
Input: "2,5,6,bad,10"
Output: [2,3,6,10]
If you need to know about invalid input later you could do the following:
Integer[] numbers = new Integer[numberStrs.length];
for(int i = 0;i < numberStrs.length;i++)
{
try
{
numbers[i] = Integer.parseInt(numberStrs[i]);
}
catch (NumberFormatException nfe)
{
numbers[i] = null;
}
}
In this case bad input (not a valid integer) the element will be null.
Results in
Input: "2,5,6,bad,10"
Output: [2,3,6,null,10]
You could potentially improve performance by not catching the exception (see this question for more on this) and use a different method to check for valid integers.
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Scanner;
class MultiArg {
Scanner sc;
int n;
String as;
List<Integer> numList = new ArrayList<Integer>();
public void fun() {
sc = new Scanner(System.in);
System.out.println("enter value");
while (sc.hasNextInt())
as = sc.nextLine();
}
public void diplay() {
System.out.println("x");
Integer[] num = numList.toArray(new Integer[numList.size()]);
System.out.println("show value " + as);
for (Integer m : num) {
System.out.println("\t" + m);
}
}
}
but to terminate the while loop you have to put any charecter at the end of input.
ex. input:
12 34 56 78 45 67 .
output:
12 34 56 78 45 67