How to insert a character in a string at a certain position?
I'm getting in an int
with a 6 digit value. I want to display it as a String
with a decimal point (.) at 2 digits from the end of int
. I wanted to use a float
but was suggested to use String
for a better display output (instead of 1234.5
will be 1234.50
). Therefore, I need a function that will take an int
as parameter and return the properly formatted String
with a decimal point 2 digits from the end.
Say:
int开发者_StackOverflow j= 123456
Integer.toString(j);
//processing...
//output : 1234.56
As mentioned in comments, a StringBuilder is probably a faster implementation than using a StringBuffer. As mentioned in the Java docs:
This class provides an API compatible with StringBuffer, but with no guarantee of synchronization. This class is designed for use as a drop-in replacement for StringBuffer in places where the string buffer was being used by a single thread (as is generally the case). Where possible, it is recommended that this class be used in preference to StringBuffer as it will be faster under most implementations.
Usage :
String str = Integer.toString(j);
str = new StringBuilder(str).insert(str.length()-2, ".").toString();
Or if you need synchronization use the StringBuffer with similar usage :
String str = Integer.toString(j);
str = new StringBuffer(str).insert(str.length()-2, ".").toString();
int j = 123456;
String x = Integer.toString(j);
x = x.substring(0, 4) + "." + x.substring(4, x.length());
int yourInteger = 123450;
String s = String.format("%6.2f", yourInteger / 100.0);
System.out.println(s);
Using ApacheCommons3 StringUtils, you could also do
int j = 123456;
String s = Integer.toString(j);
int pos = s.length()-2;
s = StringUtils.overlay(s,".", pos, pos);
it's basically substring concatenation but shorter if you don't mind using libraries, or already depending on StringUtils
In most use-cases, using a StringBuilder
(as already answered) is a good way to do this. However, if performance matters, this may be a good alternative.
/**
* Insert the 'insert' String at the index 'position' into the 'target' String.
*
* ````
* insertAt("AC", 0, "") -> "AC"
* insertAt("AC", 1, "xxx") -> "AxxxC"
* insertAt("AB", 2, "C") -> "ABC
* ````
*/
public static String insertAt(final String target, final int position, final String insert) {
final int targetLen = target.length();
if (position < 0 || position > targetLen) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("position=" + position);
}
if (insert.isEmpty()) {
return target;
}
if (position == 0) {
return insert.concat(target);
} else if (position == targetLen) {
return target.concat(insert);
}
final int insertLen = insert.length();
final char[] buffer = new char[targetLen + insertLen];
target.getChars(0, position, buffer, 0);
insert.getChars(0, insertLen, buffer, position);
target.getChars(position, targetLen, buffer, position + insertLen);
return new String(buffer);
}
For Kotlin dudes ;) from the accepted answer (@MikeThomsen's)
fun String.insert(insertAt: Int, string: String): String {
return this.substring(0, insertAt) + string + this.substring(insertAt, this.length)
}
Test ✅
"ThisTest".insert(insertAt = 4, string = "Is").should.equal("ThisIsTest")
String.format("%0d.%02d", d / 100, d % 100);
You could use
System.out.printf("%4.2f%n", ((float)12345)/100));
As per the comments, 12345/100.0 would be better, as would the use of double instead of float.
If you are using a system where float is expensive (e.g. no FPU) or not allowed (e.g. in accounting) you could use something like this:
for (int i = 1; i < 100000; i *= 2) {
String s = "00" + i;
System.out.println(s.substring(Math.min(2, s.length() - 2), s.length() - 2) + "." + s.substring(s.length() - 2));
}
Otherwise the DecimalFormat is the better solution. (the StringBuilder variant above won't work with small numbers (<100)
I think a simpler and more elegant solution to insert a String in a certain position would be this one-liner:
target.replaceAll("^(.{" + position + "})", "$1" + insert);
For example, to insert a missing :
into a time String:
"-0300".replaceAll("^(.{3})", "$1:");
What it does is, matches position
characters from the beginning of the string, groups that, and replaces the group with itself ($1
) followed by the insert
string. Mind the replaceAll, even though there's always one occurrence, because the first parameter must be a regex.
Of course it does not have the same performance as the StringBuilder solution, but I believe the succinctness and elegance as a simple and easier to read one-liner (compared to a huge method) is sufficient for making it the preferred solution in most non performance-critical use-cases.
Note I'm solving the generic problem in the title for documentation reasons, of course if you are dealing with decimal numbers you should use the domain-specific solutions already proposed.
There are good answers here, but with Kotlin extensions addition we can do it even more simply:
val indexWhereInsertIsIntended = 2
val inputString = "2408"
val resultingString = inputString.toCharArray().toMutableList()
.also {
it.add(indexWhereInsertIsIntended, '/')
}.joinToString("")
Result = 24/08
This example shows a card expiry date, and slash (/) is intended at 2nd Index. So the resulting index in this case will have / at 2nd index.
If you want to replace and not add:
val indexWhereInsertIsIntended = 2
val inputString = "2408"
val resultingString = inputString.toCharArray()
.also {
it[indexWhereInsertIsIntended] = '/'
}.joinToString("")
Result = 24/0
public static void main(String[] args) {
char ch='m';
String str="Hello",k=String.valueOf(ch),b,c;
System.out.println(str);
int index=3;
b=str.substring(0,index-1 );
c=str.substring(index-1,str.length());
str=b+k+c;
}
// Create given String and make with size 30
String str = "Hello How Are You";
// Creating StringBuffer Object for right padding
StringBuffer stringBufferRightPad = new StringBuffer(str);
while (stringBufferRightPad.length() < 30) {
stringBufferRightPad.insert(stringBufferRightPad.length(), "*");
}
System.out.println("after Left padding : " + stringBufferRightPad);
System.out.println("after Left padding : " + stringBufferRightPad.toString());
// Creating StringBuffer Object for right padding
StringBuffer stringBufferLeftPad = new StringBuffer(str);
while (stringBufferLeftPad.length() < 30) {
stringBufferLeftPad.insert(0, "*");
}
System.out.println("after Left padding : " + stringBufferLeftPad);
System.out.println("after Left padding : " + stringBufferLeftPad.toString());
Try this :
public String ConvertMessage(String content_sendout){
//use unicode (004E00650077) need to change to hex (N&#x;0065&#x;0077;) first ;
String resultcontent_sendout = "";
int i = 4;
int lengthwelcomemsg = content_sendout.length()/i;
for(int nadd=0;nadd<lengthwelcomemsg;nadd++){
if(nadd == 0){
resultcontent_sendout = "&#x"+content_sendout.substring(nadd*i, (nadd*i)+i) + ";&#x";
}else if(nadd == lengthwelcomemsg-1){
resultcontent_sendout += content_sendout.substring(nadd*i, (nadd*i)+i) + ";";
}else{
resultcontent_sendout += content_sendout.substring(nadd*i, (nadd*i)+i) + ";&#x";
}
}
return resultcontent_sendout;
}
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