int length()
Returns the length of this character sequence. The length is the number of 16-bit char
s in the sequence.
char
s in this sequence
char charAt(int index)
Returns the
char
value at the specified index. An index ranges from zero to
length() - 1
. The first
char
value of the sequence is at index zero, the next at index one, and so on, as for array indexing.
If the char
value specified by the index is a surrogate, the surrogate value is returned.
index
- the index of the char
value to be returned
char
value
IndexOutOfBoundsException
- if the index
argument is negative or not less than length()
CharSequence subSequence(int start, int end)
Returns a CharSequence
that is a subsequence of this sequence. The subsequence starts with the char
value at the specified index and ends with the char
value at index end - 1
. The length (in char
s) of the returned sequence is end - start
, so if start == end
then an empty sequence is returned.
start
- the start index, inclusive
end
- the end index, exclusive
IndexOutOfBoundsException
- if start
or end
are negative, if end
is greater than length()
, or if start
is greater than end
String toString()
Returns a string containing the characters in this sequence in the same order as this sequence. The length of the string will be the length of this sequence.
default IntStream chars()
Returns a stream of
int
zero-extending the
char
values from this sequence. Any char which maps to a
surrogate code pointis passed through uninterpreted.
The stream binds to this sequence when the terminal stream operation commences (specifically, for mutable sequences the spliterator for the stream is late-binding). If the sequence is modified during that operation then the result is undefined.
default IntStream codePoints()
Returns a stream of code point values from this sequence. Any surrogate pairs encountered in the sequence are combined as if by
Character.toCodePointand the result is passed to the stream. Any other code units, including ordinary BMP characters, unpaired surrogates, and undefined code units, are zero-extended to
int
values which are then passed to the stream.
The stream binds to this sequence when the terminal stream operation commences (specifically, for mutable sequences the spliterator for the stream is late-binding). If the sequence is modified during that operation then the result is undefined.
static int compare(CharSequence cs1, CharSequence cs2)
Compares two
CharSequence
instances lexicographically. Returns a negative value, zero, or a positive value if the first sequence is lexicographically less than, equal to, or greater than the second, respectively.
The lexicographical ordering of CharSequence
is defined as follows. Consider a CharSequence
cs of length len to be a sequence of char values, cs[0] to cs[len-1]. Suppose k is the lowest index at which the corresponding char values from each sequence differ. The lexicographic ordering of the sequences is determined by a numeric comparison of the char values cs1[k] with cs2[k]. If there is no such index k, the shorter sequence is considered lexicographically less than the other. If the sequences have the same length, the sequences are considered lexicographically equal.
cs1
- the first CharSequence
cs2
- the second CharSequence
0
if the two CharSequence
are equal; a negative integer if the first CharSequence
is lexicographically less than the second; or a positive integer if the first CharSequence
is lexicographically greater than the second.
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4