Popular Tutorials
Start Learning JavaCreated with over a decade of experience.
Certification Courses
Created with over a decade of experience and thousands of feedback.
Java String Methods
- Java String split()
- Java String compareTo()
- Java String compareToIgnoreCase()
- Java String length()
- Java String replace()
- Java String replaceAll()
- Java String substring()
- Java String equals()
- Java String equalsIgnoreCase()
- Java String contains()
- Java String indexOf()
- Java String trim()
- Java String charAt()
- Java String toLowerCase()
- Java String concat()
- Java String valueOf()
- Java String matches()
- Java String startsWith()
- Java String endsWith()
- Java String isEmpty()
- Java String intern()
- Java String getBytes()
- Java String contentEquals()
- Java String hashCode()
- Java String join()
- Java String replaceFirst()
- Java String subSequence()
- Java String toCharArray()
- Java String format()
Java String equals()
The equals() method returns true if two strings are identical and false if the strings are different.
Example
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String str1 = "Learn Java";
String str2 = "Learn Java";
// comparing str1 with str2
boolean result = str1.equals(str2);
System.out.println(result);
}
}
// Output: true
Syntax of equals()
The syntax of the String equals() method is:
string.equals(String str)
equals() Arguments
The equals() method takes a single argument.
- str - the string to be compared
equals() Return Value
- returns true if the strings are equal
- returns false if the strings are not equal
- returns false if the str argument is
null
Example: Java String equals()
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String str1 = "Learn Java";
String str2 = "Learn Java";
String str3 = "Learn Kolin";
boolean result;
// comparing str1 with str2
result = str1.equals(str2);
System.out.println(result); // true
// comparing str1 with str3
result = str1.equals(str3);
System.out.println(result); // false
// comparing str3 with str1
result = str3.equals(str1);
System.out.println(result); // false
}
}
Here,
- str1 and str2 are equal. Hence,
str1.equals(str2)returnstrue. - str1 and str3 are not equal. Hence,
str1.equals(str3)andstr3.equals(str1)returnsfalse.
Example 2: Check if Two Strings are Equal
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String str1 = "Learn Python";
String str2 = "Learn Java";
// if str1 and str2 are equal, the result is true
if (str1.equals(str2)) {
System.out.println("str1 and str2 are equal");
}
else {
System.out.println("str1 and str2 are not equal");
}
}
}
Output
str1 and str2 are not equal
Example 3: Case-Sensitive Comparison
The equals() method performs case-sensitive comparison. Meaning "Java" and "java" are considered different strings.
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String str1 = "Java";
String str2 = "java";
Boolean result;
// comparing str1 with str2
result = str1.equals(str2);
System.out.println(result); // false
}
}
Notes:
- If you need to compare two strings ignoring case differences, use the Java String compareToIgnoreCase() method.
- The
equals()method is available for all Java objects (not only Strings). It is because theequals()method is also defined in theObjectclass (which is the superclass of all Java classes).
Also Read:
Did you find this article helpful?
