String statement = "value = alpha*beta + gamma;" ;
int loc = statement.indexOf( "=");
if ( loc != -1 )
{
String left = statement.substring( 0, loc );
String right = statement.substring( loc + 1 );
}
A correct line of a Java program only rarely includes two assignment operators. Here is a program fragment that inspects a line for this:
String line = "alpha = beta + 23 = 99;" ;
int spot = line.indexOf( "=" );
if ( spot != -1 )
{
String newLine = line.substring( spot+1 ) ;
if ( newLine.indexOf("=") > 0 )
{
System.out.println( "Possible Bad Line: " + line );
}
}
The statement
String newLine = line.substring( spot+1 ) ;
computes the tail of the original line, starting with the character after
the first = sign.
The clause newLine.indexOf("=") > 0 detects
= anywhere but at the beginning of this new line
(where it would be OK because it would be part of "==").
What if you did not have the startsWith(String str) method?
Could you use other methods to replace it?