820

I have a string like this:

mysz = "name=john age=13 year=2001";

I want to remove the whitespaces in the string. I tried trim() but this removes only whitespaces before and after the whole string. I also tried replaceAll("\\W", "") but then the = also gets removed.

How can I achieve a string with:

mysz2 = "name=johnage=13year=2001"
Mateen Ulhaq
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zyamat
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    `\\W` means all **non-words** see http://download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html – Nishant Mar 28 '11 at 07:27
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    What's your plan with the "name=johnage=13year=2001" string? Not to parse it I hope. – Jonas Elfström Mar 28 '11 at 07:45
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    @JonasElfström I imagine its to help with string comparisons – Isaac Jan 11 '15 at 01:42
  • how about if the string is actually = " " . Is all what trims() does is clearing the empty string just like i mentioned? @zyamat ? – gumuruh Nov 07 '16 at 10:49
  • Possible duplicate of [How to remove white space in java string](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19114902/how-to-remove-white-space-in-java-string) – KIBOU Hassan Apr 27 '17 at 10:50
  • @KIBOUHassan The question you've linked to as this one being a duplicate of is approximately two years younger than this one. If anything, that question is a duplicate of this one. – Agi Hammerthief Feb 01 '19 at 07:52
  • This is quite helpful ==>> StringUtils.deleteWhitespace(mysz); – Kunal Vohra Oct 07 '19 at 07:41

37 Answers37

1495

st.replaceAll("\\s+","") removes all whitespaces and non-visible characters (e.g., tab, \n).


st.replaceAll("\\s+","") and st.replaceAll("\\s","") produce the same result.

The second regex is 20% faster than the first one, but as the number consecutive spaces increases, the first one performs better than the second one.


Assign the value to a variable, if not used directly:

st = st.replaceAll("\\s+","")
Dave Jarvis
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Gursel Koca
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    I would like to note that these two regex's will produce different results if you are looking to replace all whitespace with a single space (or some other set of characters). If you have consecutive spaces, using \\s it will replace each whitespace character with the provided characters given. Given \\s+ it will replace each set of whitespaces with a single replacement string. I can see quite a few case where people may be coming to this post for replacing whitespace with something that is not just an empty string, and this may be helpful. – Caitlin Oct 24 '16 at 16:40
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    but it doesn't remove the white-space if it is at the beginning of the string. – lonesome Dec 07 '16 at 07:11
  • @lonesome use .trim() for that – CQM Apr 05 '17 at 21:01
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    Just use StringUtils from apache-commons. Its a static method called StringUtils.deleteWhitespace. – Crozeta Jun 07 '17 at 13:48
  • if you want to use this method in a loop, you should define Pattern as final variable `Pattern.compile("\\s")` because `replaceAll` recompile pattern on every call `return Pattern.compile(regex).matcher(this).replaceAll(replacement);`. – Waka Waka Nov 05 '18 at 11:25
  • This will not remove NBSP. See \p{Z}* if this is important to you. Nor will StringUtils BTW. – cquezel Sep 03 '20 at 21:26
282
replaceAll("\\s","")

\w = Anything that is a word character

\W = Anything that isn't a word character (including punctuation etc)

\s = Anything that is a space character (including space, tab characters etc)

\S = Anything that isn't a space character (including both letters and numbers, as well as punctuation etc)

(Edit: As pointed out, you need to escape the backslash if you want \s to reach the regex engine, resulting in \\s.)

nitro2k01
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119

The most correct answer to the question is:

String mysz2 = mysz.replaceAll("\\s","");

I just adapted this code from the other answers. I'm posting it because besides being exactly what the question requested, it also demonstrates that the result is returned as a new string, the original string is not modified as some of the answers sort of imply.

(Experienced Java developers might say "of course, you can't actually modify a String", but the target audience for this question may well not know this.)

Fletch
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  • Does this mean we can overwrite the original string by writing for example: S = S.replaceAll("\\s", ""); whereas first the replacing will be done and then S will receive the characterstripped version of S – Sidharth Ghoshal Mar 01 '14 at 17:57
  • @frogeyedpeas That overwrites the variable `S` but it _doesn't_ overwrite the string that `S` points to. – Reinstate Monica Nov 04 '16 at 19:42
78

One way to handle String manipulations is StringUtils from Apache commons.

String withoutWhitespace = StringUtils.deleteWhitespace(whitespaces);

You can find it here. commons-lang includes lots more and is well supported.

jahir
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73

How about replaceAll("\\s", ""). Refer here.

Erkan Haspulat
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53

You should use

s.replaceAll("\\s+", "");

instead of:

s.replaceAll("\\s", "");

This way, it will work with more than one spaces between each string. The + sign in the above regex means "one or more \s"

--\s = Anything that is a space character (including space, tab characters etc). Why do we need s+ here?

learningIsFun
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Varejones
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    I typed out a quick example to check this because it sounded odd to me and found that the added plus sign isn't needed. Multiple spaces separating words are consumed. The reason for this is most likely that `replaceAll` repeats until the pattern doesn't match any part of the string. – nyaray Jul 16 '13 at 09:45
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    Indeed. The `+` may make it marginally more CPU friendly, because consecutive whitespace is handled in a single replace operation, but that's the only difference in this case. It's indeed the `All`, not the `+` that's replacing non-consecutive whitespace in the string. – nitro2k01 Oct 18 '13 at 04:45
  • it does not delete this (u00A0) – kfc Jun 05 '19 at 22:30
52

If you need to remove unbreakable spaces too, you can upgrade your code like this :

st.replaceAll("[\\s|\\u00A0]+", "");
Amer Qarabsa
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v.nivuahc
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35

If you prefer utility classes to regexes, there is a method trimAllWhitespace(String) in StringUtils in the Spring Framework.

kamczak
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26

You've already got the correct answer from Gursel Koca but I believe that there's a good chance that this is not what you really want to do. How about parsing the key-values instead?

import java.util.Enumeration;
import java.util.Hashtable;

class SplitIt {
  public static void main(String args[])  {

    String person = "name=john age=13 year=2001";

    for (String p : person.split("\\s")) {
      String[] keyValue = p.split("=");
      System.out.println(keyValue[0] + " = " + keyValue[1]);
    }
  }
}

output:
name = john
age = 13
year = 2001

Jonas Elfström
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11

The easiest way to do this is by using the org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils class of commons-lang3 library such as "commons-lang3-3.1.jar" for example.

Use the static method "StringUtils.deleteWhitespace(String str)" on your input string & it will return you a string after removing all the white spaces from it. I tried your example string "name=john age=13 year=2001" & it returned me exactly the string that you wanted - "name=johnage=13year=2001". Hope this helps.

OneCricketeer
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Ayaskant
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9

You can do it so simply by

String newMysz = mysz.replace(" ","");
ArtKorchagin
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Vinod Ranga
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6
public static void main(String[] args) {        
    String s = "name=john age=13 year=2001";
    String t = s.replaceAll(" ", "");
    System.out.println("s: " + s + ", t: " + t);
}

Output:
s: name=john age=13 year=2001, t: name=johnage=13year=2001
avngr
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6

I am trying an aggregation answer where I test all ways of removing all whitespaces in a string. Each method is ran 1 million times and then then the average is taken. Note: Some compute will be used on summing up all the runs.


Results:

1st place from @jahir 's answer

  • StringUtils with short text: 1.21E-4 ms (121.0 ms)
  • StringUtils with long text: 0.001648 ms (1648.0 ms)

2nd place

  • String builder with short text: 2.48E-4 ms (248.0 ms)
  • String builder with long text: 0.00566 ms (5660.0 ms)

3rd place

  • Regex with short text: 8.36E-4 ms (836.0 ms)
  • Regex with long text: 0.008877 ms (8877.0 ms)

4th place

  • For loop with short text: 0.001666 ms (1666.0 ms)
  • For loop with long text: 0.086437 ms (86437.0 ms)

Here is the code:

public class RemoveAllWhitespaces {
    public static String Regex(String text){
        return text.replaceAll("\\s+", "");
    }

    public static String ForLoop(String text) {
        for (int i = text.length() - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
            if(Character.isWhitespace(text.codePointAt(i))) {
                text = text.substring(0, i) + text.substring(i + 1);
            }
        }

        return text;
    }

    public static String StringBuilder(String text){
        StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder(text);
        for (int i = text.length() - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
            if(Character.isWhitespace(text.codePointAt(i))) {
                builder.deleteCharAt(i);
            }
        }

        return builder.toString();
    }
}

Here are the tests:

import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;

import java.util.function.Function;
import java.util.stream.IntStream;

import static org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.*;

public class RemoveAllWhitespacesTest {
    private static final String longText = "123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222123 123 \t 1adc \n 222";
    private static final String expected = "1231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc2221231231adc222";

    private static final String shortText = "123 123 \t 1adc \n 222";
    private static final String expectedShortText = "1231231adc222";

    private static final int numberOfIterations = 1000000;

    @Test
    public void Regex_LongText(){
        RunTest("Regex_LongText", text -> RemoveAllWhitespaces.Regex(text), longText, expected);
    }

    @Test
    public void Regex_ShortText(){
        RunTest("Regex_LongText", text -> RemoveAllWhitespaces.Regex(text), shortText, expectedShortText);

    }

    @Test
    public void For_LongText(){
        RunTest("For_LongText", text -> RemoveAllWhitespaces.ForLoop(text), longText, expected);
    }

    @Test
    public void For_ShortText(){
        RunTest("For_LongText", text -> RemoveAllWhitespaces.ForLoop(text), shortText, expectedShortText);
    }

    @Test
    public void StringBuilder_LongText(){
        RunTest("StringBuilder_LongText", text -> RemoveAllWhitespaces.StringBuilder(text), longText, expected);
    }

    @Test
    public void StringBuilder_ShortText(){
        RunTest("StringBuilder_ShortText", text -> RemoveAllWhitespaces.StringBuilder(text), shortText, expectedShortText);
    }

    private void RunTest(String testName, Function<String,String> func, String input, String expected){
        long startTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
        IntStream.range(0, numberOfIterations)
                .forEach(x -> assertEquals(expected, func.apply(input)));
        double totalMilliseconds = (double)System.currentTimeMillis() - (double)startTime;
        System.out.println(
                String.format(
                        "%s: %s ms (%s ms)",
                        testName,
                        totalMilliseconds / (double)numberOfIterations,
                        totalMilliseconds
                )
        );
    }
}
Stian Standahl
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4
mysz = mysz.replace(" ","");

First with space, second without space.

Then it is done.

hichris123
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    Just to clarify, whitespace means `[ \t\n\x0B\f\r]`. You are only doing normal `[ ]` spaces. – GKFX Feb 11 '15 at 11:15
4
String a="string with                multi spaces ";
//or this 
String b= a.replaceAll("\\s+"," ");
String c= a.replace("    "," ").replace("   "," ").replace("  "," ").replace("   "," ").replace("  "," ");

//it work fine with any spaces *don't forget space in sting b

fatsoft
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4

Use mysz.replaceAll("\\s+","");

FelixSFD
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4

When using st.replaceAll("\\s+","") in Kotlin, make sure you wrap "\\s+" with Regex:

"myString".replace(Regex("\\s+"), "")
Jemshit
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3

In java we can do following operation:

String pattern="[\\s]";
String replace="";
part="name=john age=13 year=2001";
Pattern p=Pattern.compile(pattern);
Matcher m=p.matcher(part);
part=m.replaceAll(replace);
System.out.println(part);

for this you need to import following packages to your program:

import java.util.regex.Matcher;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;

i hope it will help you.

user27
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3

Using Pattern And Matcher it is more Dynamic.

import java.util.regex.Matcher;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;

public class RemovingSpace {

    /**
     * @param args
     * Removing Space Using Matcher
     */
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String str= "jld fdkjg jfdg ";
        String pattern="[\\s]";
        String replace="";

        Pattern p= Pattern.compile(pattern);
        Matcher m=p.matcher(str);

        str=m.replaceAll(replace);
        System.out.println(str);    
    }
}
fredmaggiowski
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jayesh
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3

Use apache string util class is better to avoid NullPointerException

org.apache.commons.lang3.StringUtils.replace("abc def ", " ", "")

Output

abcdef
Gowthaman M
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sendon1982
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3

\W means "non word character". The pattern for whitespace characters is \s. This is well documented in the Pattern javadoc.

JB Nizet
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2
import java.util.*;
public class RemoveSpace {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String mysz = "name=john age=13 year=2001";
        Scanner scan = new Scanner(mysz);

        String result = "";
        while(scan.hasNext()) {
            result += scan.next();
        }
        System.out.println(result);
    }
}
L Joey
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Tony Nguyen
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2

To remove spaces in your example, this is another way to do it:

String mysz = "name=john age=13 year=2001";
String[] test = mysz.split(" ");
mysz = String.join("", mysz);

What this does is it converts it into an array with the spaces being the separators, and then it combines the items in the array together without the spaces.

It works pretty well and is easy to understand.

Megawatt
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    But a very inefficient solution. And, as you can see from the other solutions - this only works for " " space - and not for different kinds of whitespaces. – GhostCat Aug 01 '17 at 07:21
2
package com.sanjayacchana.challangingprograms;

public class RemoveAllWhiteSpacesInString {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        
        String str = "name=john age=13 year=2001";
        
        str = str.replaceAll("\\s", ""); 
        
        System.out.println(str);
        
        
    }

}
1

there are many ways to solve this problem. you can use split function or replace function of Strings.

for more info refer smilliar problem http://techno-terminal.blogspot.in/2015/10/how-to-remove-spaces-from-given-string.html

satish
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1

White space can remove using isWhitespace function from Character Class.

public static void main(String[] args) {
    String withSpace = "Remove white space from line";
    StringBuilder removeSpace = new StringBuilder();

    for (int i = 0; i<withSpace.length();i++){
        if(!Character.isWhitespace(withSpace.charAt(i))){
            removeSpace=removeSpace.append(withSpace.charAt(i));
        }
    }
    System.out.println(removeSpace);
}
Abdur Rahman
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1

There are others space char too exists in strings.. So space char we may need to replace from strings.

Ex: NO-BREAK SPACE, THREE-PER-EM SPACE, PUNCTUATION SPACE

Here is the list of space char http://jkorpela.fi/chars/spaces.html

So we need to modify

\u2004 us for THREE-PER-EM SPACE

s.replaceAll("[\u0020\u2004]","")

Rakesh Chaudhari
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-1

You can achieve this without using replaceAll() or any Predefined Method in Java. this way is preferred:-

public class RemoveSpacesFromString {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        // TODO Auto-generated method stub
        String newString;
        String str = "prashant is good" ;
        int i;
        char[] strArray = str.toCharArray();
        StringBuffer sb =  new StringBuffer();
        
        for(i = 0; i < strArray.length; i++)
        {
            if(strArray[i] != ' ' && strArray[i] != '\t')
            {
                sb.append(strArray[i]);
            }
        }
        System.out.println(sb);
    }
}
Jose Manuel de Frutos
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Pranshu Singh
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-1
public static String removeWhiteSpaces(String str){
    String s = "";
    char[] arr = str.toCharArray();
    for (int i = 0; i < arr.length; i++) {
        int temp = arr[i];
        if(temp != 32 && temp != 9) { // 32 ASCII for space and 9 is for Tab
            s += arr[i];
        }
    }
    return s;
}

This might help.

Samuel Philipp
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Rajesh Gurbani
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-1

Separate each group of text into its own substring and then concatenate those substrings:

public Address(String street, String city, String state, String zip ) {
    this.street = street;
    this.city = city;
    // Now checking to make sure that state has no spaces...
    int position = state.indexOf(" ");
    if(position >=0) {
        //now putting state back together if it has spaces...
        state = state.substring(0, position) + state.substring(position + 1);  
    }
}
Samuel Philipp
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user9832813
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-1

You can also take a look at the below Java code. Following codes does not use any "built-in" methods.

/**
 * Remove all characters from an alphanumeric string.
 */
public class RemoveCharFromAlphanumerics {

    public static void main(String[] args) {

        String inp = "01239Debashish123Pattn456aik";

        char[] out = inp.toCharArray();

        int totint=0;

        for (int i = 0; i < out.length; i++) {
            System.out.println(out[i] + " : " + (int) out[i]);
            if ((int) out[i] >= 65 && (int) out[i] <= 122) {
                out[i] = ' ';
            }
            else {
                totint+=1;
            }

        }

        System.out.println(String.valueOf(out));
        System.out.println(String.valueOf("Length: "+ out.length));

        for (int c=0; c<out.length; c++){

            System.out.println(out[c] + " : " + (int) out[c]);

            if ( (int) out[c] == 32) {
                System.out.println("Its Blank");
                 out[c] = '\'';
            }

        }

        System.out.println(String.valueOf(out));

        System.out.println("**********");
        System.out.println("**********");
        char[] whitespace = new char[totint];
        int t=0;
        for (int d=0; d< out.length; d++) {

            int fst =32;



            if ((int) out[d] >= 48 && (int) out[d] <=57 ) {

                System.out.println(out[d]);
                whitespace[t]= out[d];
                t+=1;

            }

        }

        System.out.println("**********");
        System.out.println("**********");

        System.out.println("The String is: " + String.valueOf(whitespace));

    }
}

Input:

String inp = "01239Debashish123Pattn456aik";

Output:

The String is: 01239123456
Markus
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Deb
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private String generateAttachName(String fileName, String searchOn, String char1) {
    return fileName.replaceAll(searchOn, char1);
}


String fileName= generateAttachName("Hello My Mom","\\s","");
Abd Abughazaleh
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-1

Quite a lot of answers are provided. I would like to give a solution which is quite readable and better than regex.

import java.io.IOException;

import org.apache.commons.lang.StringUtils;

public class RemoveAllWhitespaceTest {

    public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {

        String str1 = "\n\tThis is my string \n \r\n  !";

        System.out.println("[" + str1 + "]");

        System.out.println("Whitespace Removed:");

        System.out.println("[" + StringUtils.deleteWhitespace(str1) + "]");

        System.out.println();

    }

}
Kunal Vohra
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-2

The code you want is

str.replaceAll("\\s","");

This will remove all the white spaces.

Exikle
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HANU
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-3

If you want remove all white space from the string:

public String removeSpace(String str) {
    String result = "";
    for (int i = 0; i < str.length(); i++){
        char c = str.charAt(i);        
        if(c!=' ') {
            result += c;
        }
    }
    return result;
}
-3
public String removeSpaces(String word){
        StringBuffer buffer = new StringBuffer();
        if(word != null){
            char[] arr = word.toCharArray();
            for(int i=0; i < arr.length; i++){
                if(!Character.isSpaceChar(arr[i])) {
                    buffer.append(arr[i]);
                }                  
            }
        }
        return buffer.toString();
    }
harun ugur
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-6

Try this:

String str="name=john age=13 year=2001";
String s[]=str.split(" ");
StringBuilder v=new StringBuilder();
for (String string : s) {
    v.append(string);
}
str=v.toString();
Samuel Philipp
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DEVNAG BHARAD
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