The Arrays class has been around since JDK 1.2, but the methods for conveniently and simply converting arrays to a readable String including relevant array content without using Arrays.asList() were added with J2SE 5. Both
Arrays.toString(Object[]) and Arrays.deepToString(Object[]) are static methods that act upon the arrays provided to them. The former, Arrays.toString(Object[]), is intended for single-dimension arrays while the latter, Arrays.deepToString(Object[]), is intended for multi-dimensional arrays. As my example later in this post will demonstrate, the multi-dimension deepToString will produce expected results even for single-dimension arrays. The two methods also provide easy and safe null handling, something that I appreciate.The next code listing is for a simple demonstration class that demonstrates trying to put the contents of various types of Java arrays into a String format. The types of arrays demonstrated are a single dimension array, a double dimensional array representing multi-dimensional arrays of various sizes, and an array that is really just null. The three methods demonstrated for getting a String out of these three types of arrays are (1) simple Object.toString() on each array (implicitly in case of null array to avoid the dreaded NullPointerException), (2)
Arrays.toString(Object[]), and (3) Arrays.deepToString(Object[]).ArrayStrings.java
package dustin.examples;
import java.util.Arrays;
import static java.lang.System.out;
/**
* Simple demonstration of Arrays.toString(Object[]) method and the
* Arrays.deepToString(Object[]) method.
*/
public class ArrayStrings
{
/**
* Demonstrate usage and behavior of Arrays.toString(Object[]).
*/
private static void demonstrateArraysToString()
{
printHeader("Arrays.toString(Object[])");
out.println(
"Single Dimension Arrays.toString: "
+ Arrays.toString(prepareSingleDimensionArray()));
out.println(
"Double Dimension Arrays.toString: "
+ Arrays.toString(prepareDoubleDimensionArray()));
out.println(
"Null Array Arrays.toString: "
+ Arrays.toString(prepareNullArray()));
}
/**
* Demonstrate usage and behavior of Arrays.deepToString(Object[]).
*/
private static void demonstrateArraysDeepToString()
{
printHeader("Arrays.deepToString(Object[])");
out.println(
"Single Dimension Arrays.deepToString: "
+ Arrays.deepToString(prepareSingleDimensionArray()));
out.println(
"Double Dimension Arrays.deepToString: "
+ Arrays.deepToString(prepareDoubleDimensionArray()));
out.println(
"Null Array Arrays.deepToString: "
+ Arrays.deepToString(prepareNullArray()));
}
/**
* Demonstrate attempting to get String version of array with simple toString()
* call (not using Arrays class).
*/
private static void demonstrateDirectArrayString()
{
printHeader("Object[].toString() [implicit or explicit]");
out.println("Single Dimension toString(): " + prepareSingleDimensionArray().toString());
out.println("Double Dimension toString(): " + prepareDoubleDimensionArray());
out.println("Null Array toString(): " + prepareNullArray());
}
/**
* Prepare a single-dimensional array to be used in demonstrations.
*
* @return Single-dimensional array.
*/
private static Object[] prepareSingleDimensionArray()
{
final String[] names = {"Aaron", "Bianca", "Charles", "Denise", "Elmer"};
return names;
}
/**
* Prepare a double-dimension array to be used in demonstrations.
*
* @return Double-dimensional array.
*/
private static Object[] prepareDoubleDimensionArray()
{
final Object[][] namesAndAges = {
{"Aaron", 10}, {"Bianca", 25}, {"Charles", 32}, {"Denise", 29}, {"Elmer", 67}};
return namesAndAges;
}
/**
* Prepare a null array.
*
* @return Array that is really null.
*/
private static Object[] prepareNullArray()
{
return null;
}
/**
* Print simple header to standard output with provided header string.
*
* @param headerString Text to be included in simple header.
*/
public static void printHeader(final String headerString)
{
out.println(
"\n===================================================================");
out.println("== " + headerString);
out.println(
"===================================================================");
}
/**
* Main executable function for demonstrating Arrays.toString(Object[]) and
* Arrays.deepToString(Object[]) methods.
*/
public static void main(final String[] arguments)
{
demonstrateDirectArrayString();
demonstrateArraysToString();
demonstrateArraysDeepToString();
}
}
The above code exercises the three mentioned approaches for getting a String out of an array on the three different types of arrays: single dimension, multi dimension, and null array. The output from running this code demonstrates the utility of the different approaches. That output is shown next.
=================================================================== == Object[].toString() [implicit or explicit] =================================================================== Single Dimension toString(): [Ljava.lang.String;@3e25a5 Double Dimension toString(): [[Ljava.lang.Object;@19821f Null Array toString(): null =================================================================== == Arrays.toString(Object[]) =================================================================== Single Dimension Arrays.toString: [Aaron, Bianca, Charles, Denise, Elmer] Double Dimension Arrays.toString: [[Ljava.lang.Object;@addbf1, [Ljava.lang.Object;@42e816, [Ljava.lang.Object;@9304b1, [Ljava.lang.Object;@190d11, [Ljava.lang.Object;@a90653] Null Array Arrays.toString: null =================================================================== == Arrays.deepToString(Object[]) =================================================================== Single Dimension Arrays.deepToString: [Aaron, Bianca, Charles, Denise, Elmer] Double Dimension Arrays.deepToString: [[Aaron, 10], [Bianca, 25], [Charles, 32], [Denise, 29], [Elmer, 67]] Null Array Arrays.deepToString: null
The code above and its corresponding output lead to several observations:
- Simple
Object.toString()on arrays is seldom what we want as it only prints the String representation of the array itself and not of its contents. Arrays.toString(Object[])will print a String representation for multi-dimensional arrays, but this representation suffers the same drawbacks asObject.toString()after the first dimension. The first dimension (and only dimension for a single dimension array) gets put into an expected String, but deeper dimensions have the sameObject.toString()treatment.Arrays.deepToString(Object[]), while intended for multi-dimensional arrays, produces the expected results for both single and multi-dimensional arrays.- Both
Arrays.toString(Object[])andArrays.deepToString(Object[])handle null array gracefully, simply returning a String "null".
I tend to use Java Collections far more than I use Java arrays. However, when I do need to work with arrays, it is nice to have the many useful features of the
java.util.Arrays class. As this post has demonstrated, Arrays.toString(Object[]) and Arrays.deepToString(Object[]) are particularly valuable in obtaining a useful String representation of an array's contents. The java.util.Arrays class provides similar "deep" methods for performing equals and hashCode functionality on multi-dimensional arrays: Arrays.deepEquals and Arrays.deepHashCode.
4 comments:
I follow your blog posts- and almost all the times- there's something new which I learn from your posts. And your posts are descriptive with code examples as well.
But there's one thing- the text area is very less due to which the code gets split into multiple lines. So you can try using a different theme where u have lot of text space. Or you can even try wordpress ( I find it really good).
Mohamed,
Thanks for the feedback. Although I do really like this template and color schemes, I agree with you that the presentation of code listings leaves something to be desired. Because I tend to use a lot of code examples, this can be a problem. I'll look into some ways to improve it. Thanks again for taking the time to provide the feedback.
Dustin
You can keep the template and color scheme (incidentally, I use the same one for my blog). There is a "Template Designer" tab when you go to the Design page. In the Template Designer, there is a "Layout" button that lets you choose the overall width as well as the width of the right column.
Ingo,
Thanks for the tip. I was thinking about changing the HTML/CSS directly, but I like your idea better. I also checked out use of this template on your blog.
Dustin
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