Correct way to trim a string in Java

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独厮守ぢ 2020-12-15 04:30

In Java, I am doing this to trim a string:

String input = \" some Thing \";
System.out.println(\"before->>\"+input+\"<<-\");
input = input.trim(         


        
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  • 2020-12-15 04:40

    Yes, but there will still be two objects until the garbage collector removes the original value that input was pointing to. Strings in Java are immutable. Here is a good explanation: Immutability of Strings in Java.

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  • 2020-12-15 04:42

    The java string trim() method eliminates leading and trailing spaces

    public class StringTrimExample{  
    public static void main(String args[]){  
    String s1="  hello string   ";  
    System.out.println(s1+"javatpoint");//without trim()  
    System.out.println(s1.trim()+"javatpoint");//with trim()  
    }}  
    

    output

     hello string   javatpoint
    hello stringjavatpoint   
    
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  • 2020-12-15 04:44

    If we have to trim a String without using trim(), split() methods of Java then following source code can be helpful.

    static String allTrim(String str)
    {
        int j = 0;
        int count = 0;  // Number of extra spaces
        int lspaces = 0;// Number of left spaces
        char ch[] = str.toCharArray();
        int len = str.length();
        StringBuffer bchar = new StringBuffer();
        if(ch[0] == ' ')
        {
            while(ch[j] == ' ')
            {
                lspaces++;
                j++;
            }   
        }   
        for(int i = lspaces; i < len; i++)
        {   
            if(ch[i] != ' ')
            {
                if(count > 1 || count == 1)     
                {
                    bchar.append(' ');
                    count = 0;
                }
                bchar.append(ch[i]);
            }
            else if(ch[i] == ' ')
            {
                count++;    
            }
        }
        return bchar.toString();
    }
    
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  • 2020-12-15 04:49

    String::strip…

    The old String::trim method has a strange definition of whitespace.

    As discussed here, Java 11 adds new strip… methods to the String class. These use a more Unicode-savvy definition of whitespace. See the rules of this definition in the class JavaDoc for Character::isWhitespace.

    Example code.

    String input = " some Thing ";
    System.out.println("before->>"+input+"<<-");
    input = input.strip();
    System.out.println("after->>"+input+"<<-");
    

    Or you can strip just the leading or just the trailing whitespace.

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  • 2020-12-15 04:51

    As strings in Java are immutable objects, there is no way to execute trimming in-place. The only thing you can do to trim the string is create new trimmed version of your string and return it (and this is what the trim() method does).

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  • 2020-12-15 04:59

    You are doing it right. From the documentation:

    Strings are constant; their values cannot be changed after they are created. String buffers support mutable strings. Because String objects are immutable they can be shared.

    Also from the documentation:

    trim

    public String trim()

    Returns a copy of the string, with leading and trailing whitespace omitted. If this String object represents an empty character sequence, or the first and last characters of character sequence represented by this String object both have codes greater than '\u0020' (the space character), then a reference to this String object is returned.

    Otherwise, if there is no character with a code greater than '\u0020' in the string, then a new String object representing an empty string is created and returned.

    Otherwise, let k be the index of the first character in the string whose code is greater than '\u0020', and let m be the index of the last character in the string whose code is greater than '\u0020'. A new String object is created, representing the substring of this string that begins with the character at index k and ends with the character at index m-that is, the result of this.substring(k, m+1).

    This method may be used to trim whitespace (as defined above) from the beginning and end of a string.

    Returns:

    A copy of this string with leading and trailing white space removed, or this string if it has no leading or trailing white space.

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