Java: join array of primitives with separator

spirit picture spirit · Jul 17, 2016 · Viewed 47.5k times · Source

Suppose, I have an array:

int[] arr = new int[] {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7};

And I need to join its elements using separator, for example, " - ", so as the result I should get string like this:

"1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7"

How could I do this?

PS: yes, I know about this and this posts, but its solutions won't work with an array of primitives.

Answer

spirit picture spirit · Jul 17, 2016

Here what I came up with. There are several way to do this and they are depends on the tools you using.


Using StringUtils and ArrayUtils from Common Lang:

int[] arr = new int[] {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7};
String result = StringUtils.join(ArrayUtils.toObject(arr), " - ");

You can't just use StringUtils.join(arr, " - "); because StringUtils doesn't have that overloaded version of method. Though, it has method StringUtils.join(int[], char).

Works at any Java version, from 1.2.


Using Java 8 streams:

Something like this:

int[] arr = new int[] {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7};
String result = Arrays.stream(arr)
        .mapToObj(String::valueOf)
        .collect(Collectors.joining(" - "));

In fact, there are lot of variations to achive the result using streams.

Java 8's method String.join() works only with strings, so to use it you still have to convert int[] to String[].

String[] sarr = Arrays.stream(arr).mapToObj(String::valueOf).toArray(String[]::new);
String result = String.join(" - ", sarr);

If you stuck using Java 7 or earlier with no libraries, you could write your own utility method:

public static String myJoin(int[] arr, String separator) {
    if (null == arr || 0 == arr.length) return "";

    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(256);
    sb.append(arr[0]);

    //if (arr.length == 1) return sb.toString();

    for (int i = 1; i < arr.length; i++) sb.append(separator).append(arr[i]);

    return sb.toString();
}

Than you can do:

int[] arr = new int[] {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7};
String result = myJoin(arr, " - ");