On Thursday, October 7, 2010, DanH danhi...@ieee.org wrote:
Yep, substring MAY (or may not) decide to avoid copying the characters
and simply keep a reference to the char array in the source String. A
smart substring implementation wouldn't do this if the result string
were quite short or the
On Thursday, October 7, 2010, DanH danhi...@ieee.org wrote:
Yep, substring MAY (or may not) decide to avoid copying the characters
and simply keep a reference to the char array in the source String. A
smart substring implementation wouldn't do this if the result string
were quite short or the
On Thursday, October 7, 2010, DanH danhi...@ieee.org wrote:
Yep, substring MAY (or may not) decide to avoid copying the characters
and simply keep a reference to the char array in the source String. A
smart substring implementation wouldn't do this if the result string
were quite short or the
Hi everybody!
First of all, sorry for my bad english ;-)
After several hours of searching for the cause of a OutOfMemoryError,
I found a wierd problem with Strings. To keep it simple, trimmed it
down to something like this:
ArrayListString someStringList = new ArrayListString(1000);
for (int
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