String performance optimization in Java
- 2020-04-01 03:48:11
- OfStack
Instead of using a String constructor, use a String if possible.
Two special cases:
1) want to convert char [] to a String,
2) use the substring() method of a large String object;
String.equals() is faster than string.equalsignorecase ();
Try to use StringBuilder to construct a String instead of the "+" operator and string.concat () (unless it's an expression, String s = a + b + c);
StringBuilder is not synchronized, so it is faster than StringBuffer.
Add a capacity parameter to the String[Buffer|Builder] constructor because creating a Buffer that is too small can degrade performance.
String.length()==0 is faster than string.equals (""). With Java 6, string.isempty () is faster;
Calling string.tostring () is meaningless;
Since String is immutable, all String methods that return modified strings return a new instance;
String.split(regex) actually simply calls the Pattern.compile(regex).split(this, limit), and each compile() returns a new Pattern. So if you call split frequently, it's best to create a single Pattern instance and reuse it instead of a split().
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