How do I concatenate strings in Swift?

StringSwiftConcatString Concatenation

String Problem Overview


How to concatenate string in Swift?

In Objective-C we do like

NSString *string = @"Swift";
NSString *resultStr = [string stringByAppendingString:@" is a new Programming Language"];

or

NSString *resultStr=[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@ is a new Programming Language",string];

But I want to do this in Swift-language.

String Solutions


Solution 1 - String

You can concatenate strings a number of ways:

let a = "Hello"
let b = "World"

let first = a + ", " + b
let second = "\(a), \(b)"

You could also do:

var c = "Hello"
c += ", World"

I'm sure there are more ways too.

Bit of description

let creates a constant. (sort of like an NSString). You can't change its value once you have set it. You can still add it to other things and create new variables though.

var creates a variable. (sort of like NSMutableString) so you can change the value of it. But this has been answered several times on Stack Overflow, (see difference between let and var).

Note

In reality let and var are very different from NSString and NSMutableString but it helps the analogy.

Solution 2 - String

You can add a string in these ways:

  • str += ""
  • str = str + ""
  • str = str + str2
  • str = "" + ""
  • str = "\(variable)"
  • str = str + "\(variable)"

I think I named them all.

Solution 3 - String

var language = "Swift" 
var resultStr = "\(language) is a new programming language"

Solution 4 - String

This will work too:

var string = "swift"
var resultStr = string + " is a new Programming Language"

Solution 5 - String

\ this is being used to append one string to another string.

var first = "Hi" 
var combineStr = "\(first) Start develop app for swift"

You can try this also:- + keyword.

 var first = "Hi" 
 var combineStr = "+(first) Start develop app for swift"

Try this code.

Solution 6 - String

let the_string = "Swift"
let resultString = "\(the_string) is a new Programming Language"

Solution 7 - String

Very Simple:

let StringA = "Hello"
let StringB = "World"
let ResultString = "\(StringA)\(StringB)"
println("Concatenated result = \(ResultString)")

Solution 8 - String

You can now use stringByAppendingString in Swift.

var string = "Swift"
var resultString = string.stringByAppendingString(" is new Programming Language")

Solution 9 - String

Xcode didn't accept optional strings added with a normal string. I wrote this extensions to solve that problem:

extension String {
    mutating func addString(str: String) {
        self = self + str
    }
}

Then you can call it like:

var str1: String?
var str1 = "hi"
var str2 = " my name is"
str1.addString(str2)
println(str1) //hi my name is

However you could now also do something like this:

var str1: String?
var str1 = "hi"
var str2 = " my name is"
str1! += str2

Solution 10 - String

It is called as String Interpolation. It is way of creating NEW string with CONSTANTS, VARIABLE, LITERALS and EXPRESSIONS. for examples:

      let price = 3
      let staringValue = "The price of \(price) mangoes is equal to \(price*price) "

also

let string1 = "anil"
let string2 = "gupta"
let fullName = string1 + string2  // fullName is equal to "anilgupta"
or 
let fullName = "\(string1)\(string2)" // fullName is equal to "anilgupta"

it also mean as concatenating string values.

Hope this helps you.

Solution 11 - String

I just switched from Objective-C to Swift (4), and I find that I often use:

let allWords = String(format:"%@ %@ %@",message.body!, message.subject!, message.senderName!)

Solution 12 - String

To print the combined string using

Println("\(string1)\(string2)")

or String3 stores the output of combination of 2 strings

let strin3 = "\(string1)\(string2)"

Solution 13 - String

One can also use stringByAppendingFormat in Swift.

var finalString : NSString = NSString(string: "Hello")
finalString = finalString.stringByAppendingFormat("%@", " World")
print(finalString) //Output:- Hello World
finalString = finalString.stringByAppendingFormat("%@", " Of People")
print(finalString) //Output:- Hello World Of People

Solution 14 - String

Swift 5

You can achieve it using appending API. This returns a new string made by appending a given string to the receiver.

API Details : here

Use:

var text = "Hello"
text = text.appending(" Namaste")

Result:

Hello
Hello Namaste

Solution 15 - String

Concatenation refers to the combining of Strings in Swift. Strings may contain texts, integers, or even emojis! There are many ways to String Concatenation. Let me enumerate some:

Same String

Using +=

This is useful if we want to add to an already existing String. For this to work, our String should be mutable or can be modified, thus declaring it as a Variable. For instance:

var myClassmates = "John, Jane"
myClassmates += ", Mark" // add a new Classmate
// Result: "John, Jane, Mark"

Different Strings

If we want to combine different Strings together, for instance:

let oldClassmates = "John, Jane" 
let newClassmate = "Mark"

We can use any of the following:

1) Using +

let myClassmates = oldClassmates + ", " + newClassmate
// Result: "John, Jane, Mark"

Notice that the each String may be a Variable or a Constant. Declare it as a Constant if you're only gonna change the value once.

2) String Interpolation

let myClassmates = "\(oldClassmates), \(newClassmate)"
// Result: "John, Jane, Mark"

3) Appending

let myClassmates = oldClassmates.appending(newClassmate)
// Result: "John, Jane, Mark"

Refer to Strings & Characters from the Swift Book for more.

Update: Tested on Swift 5.1

Solution 16 - String

Swift 4.2

You can also use an extension:

extension Array where Element == String? {
    func compactConcate(separator: String) -> String {
        return self.compactMap { $0 }.filter { !$0.isEmpty }.joined(separator: separator)
    }
}

Use:

label.text = [m.firstName, m.lastName].compactConcate(separator: " ")

Result:

"The Man"
"The"
"Man"

Solution 17 - String

From: Matt Neuburg Book “iOS 13 Programming Fundamentals with Swift.” :

To combine (concatenate) two strings, the simplest approach is to use the + operator:

let s = "hello"
let s2 = " world"
let greeting = s + s2

This convenient notation is possible because the + operator is overloaded: it does one thing when the operands are numbers (numeric addition) and another when the operands are strings (concatenation). The + operator comes with a += assignment shortcut; naturally, the variable on the left side must have been declared with var:

var s = "hello"
let s2 = " world"
s += s2

As an alternative to +=, you can call the append(_:) instance method:

var s = "hello"
let s2 = " world"
s.append(s2)

Another way of concatenating strings is with the joined(separator:) method. You start with an array of strings to be concatenated, and hand it the string that is to be inserted between all of them:

let s = "hello"
let s2 = "world"
let space = " "
let greeting = [s,s2].joined(separator:space)

Solution 18 - String

You could use SwiftString (https://github.com/amayne/SwiftString) to do this.

"".join(["string1", "string2", "string3"]) // "string1string2string"
" ".join(["hello", "world"]) // "hello world"

DISCLAIMER: I wrote this extension

Solution 19 - String

Several words about performance

UI Testing Bundle on iPhone 7(real device) with iOS 14

var result = ""
for i in 0...count {
    <concat_operation>
}

Count = 5_000

//Append
result.append(String(i))                         //0.007s 39.322kB

//Plus Equal
result += String(i)                              //0.006s 19.661kB

//Plus
result = result + String(i)                      //0.130s 36.045kB

//Interpolation
result = "\(result)\(i)"                         //0.164s 16.384kB

//NSString
result = NSString(format: "%@%i", result, i)     //0.354s 108.142kB

//NSMutableString
result.append(String(i))                         //0.008s 19.661kB

Disable next tests:

  • Plus up to 100_000 ~10s
  • interpolation up to 100_000 ~10s
  • NSString up to 10_000 -> memory issues

Count = 1_000_000

//Append
result.append(String(i))                         //0.566s 5894.979kB

//Plus Equal
result += String(i)                              //0.570s 5894.979kB

//NSMutableString
result.append(String(i))                         //0.751s 5891.694kB

*Note about Convert Int to String

Source code

import XCTest

class StringTests: XCTestCase {

    let count = 1_000_000
    
    let metrics: [XCTMetric] = [
        XCTClockMetric(),
        XCTMemoryMetric()
    ]
    
    let measureOptions = XCTMeasureOptions.default

    
    override func setUp() {
        measureOptions.iterationCount = 5
    }
    
    func testAppend() {
        var result = ""
        measure(metrics: metrics, options: measureOptions) {
            for i in 0...count {
                result.append(String(i))
            }
        }

    }
    
    func testPlusEqual() {
        var result = ""
        measure(metrics: metrics, options: measureOptions) {
            for i in 0...count {
                result += String(i)
            }
        }
    }
    
    func testPlus() {
        var result = ""
        measure(metrics: metrics, options: measureOptions) {
            for i in 0...count {
                result = result + String(i)
            }
        }
    }
    
    func testInterpolation() {
        var result = ""
        measure(metrics: metrics, options: measureOptions) {
            for i in 0...count {
                result = "\(result)\(i)"
            }
        }
    }
    
    //Up to 10_000
    func testNSString() {
        var result: NSString =  ""
        measure(metrics: metrics, options: measureOptions) {
            for i in 0...count {
                result = NSString(format: "%@%i", result, i)
            }
        }
    }
    
    func testNSMutableString() {
        let result = NSMutableString()
        measure(metrics: metrics, options: measureOptions) {
            for i in 0...count {
                result.append(String(i))
            }
        }
    }

}

Solution 20 - String

Swift 5:

Array of strings into a Single string

let array = ["Ramana","Meharshi","Awareness","Oneness","Enlightnment","Nothing"]
let joined = array.joined(separator: ",")

Solution 21 - String

In Swift 5 apple has introduces Raw Strings using # symbols.

Example:

print(#"My name is "XXX" and I'm "28"."#)
let name = "XXX"
print(#"My name is \#(name)."#)

symbol # is necessary after \. A regular \(name) will be interpreted as characters in the string.

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionRajneesh071View Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - StringFogmeisterView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - StringArbiturView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - StringyoeribovenView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - StringCW0007007View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - StringJitendraView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - StringBagvendtView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - StringRajesh LoganathanView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - StringMark MoeykensView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - StringEsqarrouthView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - StringAnil GuptaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 11 - StringSjakelienView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 12 - StringPvniView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 13 - StringPushpa YView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 14 - StringVittal PaiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 15 - Stringmjoe7View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 16 - StringNike KovView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 17 - StringH S ProgrView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 18 - StringeurobrewView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 19 - StringyoAlex5View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 20 - StringSourabh SharmaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 21 - StringYogendra SinghView Answer on Stackoverflow