Is there a native way to sort a String by its contents in java? E.g.
String s = "edcba" -> "abcde"
Is there a native way to sort a String by its contents in java? E.g.
String s = "edcba" -> "abcde"
toCharArray
followed by Arrays.sort
followed by a String constructor call:
import java.util.Arrays;
public class Test
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
String original = "edcba";
char[] chars = original.toCharArray();
Arrays.sort(chars);
String sorted = new String(chars);
System.out.println(sorted);
}
}
EDIT: As tackline points out, this will fail if the string contains surrogate pairs or indeed composite characters (accent + e as separate chars) etc. At that point it gets a lot harder... hopefully you don't need this :) In addition, this is just ordering by ordinal, without taking capitalisation, accents or anything else into account.
No there is no built-in String method. You can convert it to a char array, sort it using Arrays.sort and convert that back into a String.
String test= "edcba";
char[] ar = test.toCharArray();
Arrays.sort(ar);
String sorted = String.valueOf(ar);
Or, when you want to deal correctly with locale-specific stuff like uppercase and accented characters:
import java.text.Collator;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.Comparator;
import java.util.Locale;
public class Test
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
Collator collator = Collator.getInstance(new Locale("fr", "FR"));
String original = "éDedCBcbAàa";
String[] split = original.split("");
Arrays.sort(split, collator);
String sorted = "";
for (int i = 0; i < split.length; i++)
{
sorted += split[i];
}
System.out.println(sorted); // "aAàbBcCdDeé"
}
}
In Java 8 it can be done with:
String s = "edcba".chars()
.sorted()
.collect(StringBuilder::new, StringBuilder::appendCodePoint, StringBuilder::append)
.toString();
A slightly shorter alternative that works with a Stream of Strings of length one (each character in the unsorted String is converted into a String in the Stream) is:
String sorted =
Stream.of("edcba".split(""))
.sorted()
.collect(Collectors.joining());
A more raw approach without using sort Arrays.sort method. This is using insertion sort.
public static void main(String[] args){
String wordSt="watch";
char[] word=wordSt.toCharArray();
for(int i=0;i<(word.length-1);i++){
for(int j=i+1;j>0;j--){
if(word[j]<word[j-1]){
char temp=word[j-1];
word[j-1]=word[j];
word[j]=temp;
}
}
}
wordSt=String.valueOf(word);
System.out.println(wordSt);
}
String a ="dgfa";
char [] c = a.toCharArray();
Arrays.sort(c);
return new String(c);
Note that this will not work as expected if it is a mixed case String (It'll put uppercase before lowercase). You can pass a comparator to the Sort method to change that.
Convert to array of chars → Sort → Convert back to String:
String s = "edcba";
char[] c = s.toCharArray(); // convert to array of chars
java.util.Arrays.sort(c); // sort
String newString = new String(c); // convert back to String
System.out.println(newString); // "abcde"
Procedure :
Code snippet:
String input = "world";
char[] arr = input.toCharArray();
Arrays.sort(arr);
String sorted = new String(arr);
System.out.println(sorted);
public static void main(String[] args) {
String str = "helloword";
char[] arr;
List<Character> l = new ArrayList<Character>();
for (int i = 0; i < str.length(); i++) {
arr = str.toCharArray();
l.add(arr[i]);
}
Collections.sort(l);
str = l.toString();
System.out.println(str);
str = str.replaceAll("\\[", "").replaceAll("\\]", "")
.replaceAll("[,]", "");
System.out.println(str);
}
Without using Collections in Java:
import java.util.Scanner;
public class SortingaString {
public static String Sort(String s1)
{
char ch[]=s1.toCharArray();
String res=" ";
for(int i=0; i<ch.length ; i++)
{
for(int j=i+1;j<ch.length; j++)
{
if(ch[i]>=ch[j])
{
char m=ch[i];
ch[i]=ch[j];
ch[j]=m;
}
}
res=res+ch[i];
}
return res;
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
Scanner sc=new Scanner(System.in);
System.out.println("enter the string");
String s1=sc.next();
String ans=Sort( s1);
System.out.println("after sorting=="+ans);
}
}
Output:
enter the string==
sorting
after sorting== ginorst