Scala Bitsets are sets of non-negative integers which are represented as variable-size arrays of bits packed into 64-bit words. The addString(sb: mutable.StringBuilder, start: String, sep: String, end: String)
method is utilised to appends all elements of this bitset to a string builder using start, end, and separator strings.
Method Definition: def addString()
Return Type: It returns the string builder b to which elements were appended.
Example #1:
// Scala program of Bitset addString // method import scala.collection.immutable.BitSet
// Creating object object GfG
{ // Main method
def main(args : Array[String])
{
val bitSet : BitSet = BitSet( 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 )
val b = new StringBuilder()
// Applying BitSet addString() function
val bs 1 = bitSet.addString(b)
// Displays output
println(bs 1 )
}
} |
Output:
0123
Example #2:
// Scala program of Bitset addString // method import scala.collection.immutable.BitSet
// Creating object object GfG
{ // Main method
def main(args : Array[String])
{
val bitSet : BitSet = BitSet( 11 , 22 , 33 , 44 )
val b = new StringBuilder()
// Applying BitSet addString() function
val bs 1 = bitSet.addString(b, "BitSet(" , ", " , ")" )
// Displays output
println(bs 1 )
}
} |
Output:
BitSet(11, 22, 33, 44)