The code is
String veggie = "eggplant";
int length = veggie.length();
char zeroeth = veggie.charAt(0);
char third = veggie.charAt(4);
String caps = veggie.toUpperCase();
System.out.println(veggie + " " + caps);
System.out.println(zeroeth + " " + third + " " + length);
System.out.println(zeroeth + third + length);
The output reads:
eggplant EGGPLANT
e 1 8
217
This doesn't make sense to me. Referencing a charAt outputs numbers instead of characters. I was expecting it to output the characters. What did I do wrong?
The second line should actually be:
e l 8
(note that the second value is a lower-case L, not a 1) which probably doesn't violate your expections. Although your variable is confusingly called third
despite it being the fifth character in the string.
That just leaves the third line. The type of the expression
zeroeth + third + length
is int
... you're performing an arithmetic addition. There's no implicit conversion to String
involved, so instead, there's binary numeric promotion from each operand to int
. It's effectively:
System.out.println((int) zeroeth + (int) third + (int) length);
It's summing the UTF-16 code units involved in 'e', 'l' and 8 (the length).
If you want string conversions to be involved, then you could use:
System.out.println(String.valueOf(zeroeth) + third + length);
Only the first addition needs to be a string concatenation... after that, it flows due to associativity. (i.e. x + y + z
is (x + y) + z
; if the type of x + y
is String
, then the second addition also becomes a string concatention.)
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