No — that is one of the advantages of using StringBuffer.
A palindrome is a string that reads the same when it is reversed. Punctuation, spaces, and capitalization are ignored. For example, the following is a palindrome:
A man, a plan, a canal, Panama!
Let us write a program that determines if a
string is a palindrome.
In this program,
the string is hard-coded in the program
as a String object.
class Tester
{
public boolean test( String trial )
{
. . . .
}
}
public class PalindromeTester
{
public static void main ( String[] args )
{
Tester pTester = new Tester();
String trial = "A man, a plan, a canal, Panama!" ;
if ( pTester.test( trial ) )
System.out.println( "Is a Palindrome" );
else
System.out.println( "Not a Palindrome" );
}
}
Class String has a method toLowerCase()
and a method toUpperCase().
Will these methods be useful?