560
votes

How do I get a platform-dependent newline in Java? I can’t use "\n" everywhere.

9
Please consider changing the accepted answers. The 2nd answer is more appropriate.Gray

9 Answers

372
votes

In addition to the line.separator property, if you are using java 1.5 or later and the String.format (or other formatting methods) you can use %n as in

Calendar c = ...;
String s = String.format("Duke's Birthday: %1$tm %1$te,%1$tY%n", c); 
//Note `%n` at end of line                                  ^^

String s2 = String.format("Use %%n as a platform independent newline.%n"); 
//         %% becomes %        ^^
//                                        and `%n` becomes newline   ^^

See the Java 1.8 API for Formatter for more details.

653
votes

You can use

System.getProperty("line.separator");

to get the line separator

43
votes

If you're trying to write a newline to a file, you could simply use BufferedWriter's newLine() method.

31
votes

This is also possible: String.format("%n").

Or String.format("%n").intern() to save some bytes.

22
votes

The commons-lang library has a constant field available called SystemUtils.LINE_SEPARATOR

17
votes
StringBuilder newLine=new StringBuilder();
newLine.append("abc");
newline.append(System.getProperty("line.separator"));
newline.append("def");
String output=newline.toString();

The above snippet will have two strings separated by a new line irrespective of platforms.

13
votes

If you are writing to a file, using a BufferedWriter instance, use the newLine() method of that instance. It provides a platform-independent way to write the new line in a file.

-4
votes

Avoid appending strings using String + String etc, use StringBuilder instead.

String separator = System.getProperty( "line.separator" );
StringBuilder lines = new StringBuilder( line1 );
lines.append( separator );
lines.append( line2 );
lines.append( separator );
String result = lines.toString( );