6 Array
6 Array
6 Array
An array is a container object that holds a fixed number of values of a single type.
The length of an array is established when the array is created. After creation, its
length is fixed. You've seen an example of arrays already, in the main method of the
"Hello World!" application. This section discusses arrays in greater detail.
Each item in an array is called an element, and each element is accessed by its
numerical index. As shown in the above illustration, numbering begins with 0. The
9th element, for example, would therefore be accessed at index 8.
The following program, ArrayDemo, creates an array of integers, puts some values in
it, and prints each value to standard output.
class ArrayDemo {
public static void main(String[] args) {
int[] anArray; // declares an array of integers
The above program declares anArray with the following line of code:
int[] anArray; // declares an array of integers
Like declarations for variables of other types, an array declaration has two
components: the array's type and the array's name. An array's type is written as
type[], where type is the data type of the contained elements; the square brackets are
special symbols indicating that this variable holds an array. The size of the array is
not part of its type (which is why the brackets are empty). An array's name can be
anything you want, provided that it follows the rules and conventions as previously
discussed in the naming section. As with variables of other types, the declaration
does not actually create an array — it simply tells the compiler that this variable will
hold an array of the specified type.
byte[] anArrayOfBytes;
short[] anArrayOfShorts;
long[] anArrayOfLongs;
float[] anArrayOfFloats;
double[] anArrayOfDoubles;
boolean[] anArrayOfBooleans;
char[] anArrayOfChars;
String[] anArrayOfStrings;
You can also place the square brackets after the array's name:
One way to create an array is with the new operator. The next statement in the
ArrayDemo program allocates an array with enough memory for ten integer elements
and assigns the array to the anArray variable.
anArray = new int[10]; // create an array of integers
If this statement were missing, the compiler would print an error like the following,
and compilation would fail:
ArrayDemo.java:4: Variable anArray may not have been initialized.
The next few lines assign values to each element of the array:
anArray[0] = 100; // initialize first element
anArray[1] = 200; // initialize second element
anArray[2] = 300; // etc.
Each array element is accessed by its numerical index:
System.out.println("Element 1 at index 0: " + anArray[0]);
System.out.println("Element 2 at index 1: " + anArray[1]);
System.out.println("Element 3 at index 2: " + anArray[2]);
Alternatively, you can use the shortcut syntax to create and initialize an array:
int[] anArray = {100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000};
Here the length of the array is determined by the number of values provided between
{ and }.
You can also declare an array of arrays (also known as a multidimensional array) by
using two or more sets of square brackets, such as String[][] names. Each element,
therefore, must be accessed by a corresponding number of index values.
Finally, you can use the built-in length property to determine the size of any array.
The code
System.out.println(anArray.length);
will print the array's size to standard output.
Copying Arrays
The System class has an arraycopy method that you can use to efficiently copy data
from one array into another:
public static void arraycopy(Object src,
int srcPos,
Object dest,
int destPos,
int length)
The two Object arguments specify the array to copy from and the array to copy to.
The three int arguments specify the starting position in the source array, the starting
position in the destination array, and the number of array elements to copy.
The following program, ArrayCopyDemo, declares an array of char elements,
spelling the word "decaffeinated". It uses arraycopy to copy a subsequence of array
components into a second array:
class ArrayCopyDemo {
public static void main(String[] args) {
char[] copyFrom = { 'd', 'e', 'c', 'a', 'f', 'f', 'e',
'i', 'n', 'a', 't', 'e', 'd' };
char[] copyTo = new char[7];
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