You could use commons lang's ArrayUtils.

array = ArrayUtils.removeElement(array, element)

commons.apache.org library:Javadocs

Answer from Peter Lawrey on Stack Overflow
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DigitalOcean
digitalocean.com › community › tutorials › java-remove-array-elements
How to Remove Array Elements in Java | DigitalOcean
May 2, 2025 - It can be used to remove an element from an array by copying all elements before the element to be removed, and then copying all elements after the element to be removed, starting from the position of the element to be removed. This method is more efficient than manual shifting but still requires creating a new array. Here is an example of how System.arraycopy() can be used to remove an element from an array in Java:
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W3Schools
w3schools.com › java › ref_arraylist_remove.asp
Java ArrayList remove() Method
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DigitalOcean
digitalocean.com › community › tutorials › java-list-remove-methods-arraylist-remove
How To Use remove() Methods for Java List and ArrayList | DigitalOcean
September 9, 2025 - Java List remove() method is used to remove elements from the list. ArrayList is the most widely used implementation of the List interface, so the examples here will use ArrayList remove() methods.
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Stack Abuse
stackabuse.com › remove-element-from-an-array-in-java
Remove Element from an Array in Java
December 16, 2021 - In case you're already using the Apache Commons library, you can use the ArrayUtils.remove() method.
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Software Testing Help
softwaretestinghelp.com › home › java › remove/delete an element from an array in java
Remove/Delete An Element From An Array In Java
April 1, 2025 - To remove an element from an array, we first convert the array to an ArrayList and then use the ‘remove’ method of ArrayList to remove the element at a particular index. Once removed, we convert the ArrayList back to the array. The following implementation shows removing the element from an array using ArrayList. import java.util.*; import java.util.stream.*; class Main { public static int[] remove_Element(int[] myArray, int index) { if (myArray == null || index < 0 || index >= myArray.length) { System.out.println("non-existing index"); return myArray; } //array to arrayList List<
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Baeldung
baeldung.com › home › java › java array › removing an element from an array in java
Removing an Element from an Array in Java | Baeldung
June 12, 2024 - We can also use the previously discussed removeAnElementWithAGivenIndex() method to remove the last element of an array.
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GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › java › remove-an-element-at-specific-index-from-an-array-in-java
Remove an Element at Specific Index from an Array in Java - GeeksforGeeks
July 11, 2025 - We can use Java 8 streams to remove element at specific index from an array, when modifying small or mid-sized arrays. ... Get the array and the index. Convert the array into IntStream using IntStream.range() method.
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Delft Stack
delftstack.com › home › howto › java › java remove element from array and shift
How to Remove Element From Array and Then Shift Other Elements in Java | Delft Stack
February 2, 2024 - In this code, we create an ArrayList from the array, allowing us to use the remove method to eliminate the element at the specified index. After removing the element, convert the ArrayList back to an array.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › having trouble with java arrays, removing an element then returning a new size of an array
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: Having trouble with java arrays, removing an element then returning a new size of an array
July 13, 2018 -

So guys i'm having trouble finding a solution for this question. I'm kinda frustrated that i didn't solve this kind of problem during my exam for employment.

Problem: The task is to provide an implementation for the given function. int[] removeElem(int[] array, value), the objective is to find if the array contains the given 'value' inside it. if found then remove the element from the array then return an array with a new size, else return original array.

So far this is what i got:

  public static void main(String[] args) {
  int[] myArray = {5,6,9,4};
  
  int[] newArray = removeElem(myArray,9);
  
  for(int i=0;i<newArray.length;i++){
      System.out.print(newArray[i] + " ");
  }

}

public static int[] removeElem(int[] array, int value){
    int[] tempArray = array;
    int newArrayLength = 0;
    int[] newArray;
    
    for(int index=0;index < tempArray.length; index++){
        if(tempArray[index] == value){
            tempArray[index] = -1;
            newArrayLength++;
        }
    }
    
    newArray = new int[tempArray.length - newArrayLength];
    for(int index=0;index < newArray.length; index++){
        if(tempArray[index] != -1){
            newArray[index] = tempArray[index];
        }
    }
    
    return newArray;
    
}

Unfortunately i can't get it right :/

Edit: Thank you! everyone for suggesting different solutions to this problem, I feel like I need to work more on my solutions and such :|.

Top answer
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I’m on my phone so I’ll just explain what im thinking in pseudo code, but why don’t you just do something like: Create a new array of size n-1 where n is the size of the original array. Iterate over the old array in a for loop, adding each element to the new array. If the element at the ith position equals the element to remove, continue to the next iteration. Would that work? EDIT: I'm at my PC now so here's the code. I ended up doing it a little differently than I mentioned above. Note that it doesn't account for if the element appears multiple times in the array or when the element does not exist. public static void main(String []args) { int[] myArray = { 5,6,9,4 }; int[] newArray = removeElem(myArray, 9); for (int i = 0; i < newArray.length; i++) System.out.print(newArray[i] + " "); } public static int[] removeElem(int[] array, int value) { int index = -1; // First confirm the element to remove exists in the array for (int i = 0; i < array.length; i++) { // If it does, store its index if (array[i] == value) index = i; } // If element exists if (index != -1) { int[] newArray = new int[array.length - 1]; for (int i = 0; i < array.length; i ++) { if (i < index) newArray[i] = array[i]; else if (i > index) newArray[i - 1] = array[i]; } return newArray; } // Do some error handling for if the element does not exist else return array; } Output is: 5 6 4
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newArray[index] = tempArray[index]; This is your problem. As you skip elements that are to be removed, the insertion index in newArray must no longer match the read index in tempArray, but you're using the same index for both. You need to use two indices, and only increment the newArray index when you insert an element, while incrementing the tempArray index every time. Also the whole thing would be better if you just used Lists or Streams, but maybe your interviewer didn't want that. It's really best to try to avoid using raw arrays in Java.
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Codidact
software.codidact.com › posts › 289778
How do I remove an element from a Java array? - Software Development
One way to remove element from array is to replace element with zero. Below is a rough snippet I am sharing: ```java int N = sc.nextInt(); int pos...
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Codecademy
codecademy.com › docs › java › arraylist › .remove()
Java | ArrayList | .remove() | Codecademy
March 21, 2022 - The .remove() method is used for removing specified elements from instances of the ArrayList class. ... Looking for an introduction to the theory behind programming? Master Python while learning data structures, algorithms, and more!
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TutorialsPoint
tutorialspoint.com › home › java_data_structures › remove elements from array in java
Remove Elements from Array in Java
September 1, 2008 - The ArrayUtils class provide remove() method to delete an element from an array. import java.util.Scanner; import org.apache.commons.lang3.ArrayUtils; public class RemovingElements { public static void main(String args[]) { Scanner sc = new ...
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How to do in Java
howtodoinjava.com › home › java array › removing items from an array in java
Removing Items from an Array in Java
February 10, 2022 - Learn to remove the array items in Java by the index positions as well as the item values using ArrayUtils, Collections APIs and custom code.
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Netjstech
netjstech.com › 2017 › 07 › how-to-remove-elements-from-array-java.html
How to Remove Elements From an Array Java Program | Tech Tutorials
When you remove an element from an array, you can fill the empty space with 0, space or null depending on whether it is a primitive array, string array or an Object array. Other alternative is to create a new array and copy the elements in that array. New array should have size of old array’s ...
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Java67
java67.com › 2012 › 12 › how-to-remove-element-from-array-in-java-example.html
How to Remove an Element from Array in Java with Example | Java67
There is no direct way to remove elements from an Array in Java. Though Array in Java objects, it doesn't provide any methods to add(), remove(), or search an element in Array. This is the reason Collection classes like ArrayList and HashSet ...
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TutorialsPoint
tutorialspoint.com › home › java/util › java arraylist remove method
Java ArrayList remove Method
September 1, 2008 - The Java ArrayList remove(Object) method removes the first occurrence of the specified element from this list, if it is present.If the list does not contain the element, it is unchanged.
Top answer
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6

The Java Collections framework is something that you should browse. There are also some types that aren't array-like (Set and Map) but you will find that you will use them often. There are many different types of collections, and some have advantages over others for certain types of operations.

Classic arrays

First, the thing that isn't in the collections framework. The Array. Not ArrayList, but rather the classic int[]. The advantage of the array is that it closely maps to what memory is. foo[42] is to lookup. Many system level calls that give you a fixed number of items are arrays and they are good to know. "1,2,3".split(",") returns back an array for example.

The problem with arrays is that they aren't that flexible. Adding an element to the end of an array that already is at is maximum capacity means allocating a new, larger array and then doing an System.arraycopy() (javadoc) to copy all the elements from one array to another array in a timely manner.

To remove an element from the list you need to remove it and then walk the remainder of the list to have everything be contagious again. If you want to remove foo[4] from the list, you then assign foo[4] = foo[5] and foo[5] = foo[6] and so on down to the end of the list. Thats if you have to do it by hand. You can also use that System.arraycopy mentioned to do it for you given the right set of arguments. Something like:

System.arraycopy(foo,5,foo,4,foo.length - 4);

I might have that wrong, but thats the general idea. Copying the array back on itself. It should work.

If the src and dest arguments refer to the same array object, then the copying is performed as if the components at positions srcPos through srcPos+length-1 were first copied to a temporary array with length components and then the contents of the temporary array were copied into positions destPos through destPos+length-1 of the destination array.

Lists

As you see, arrays are a bit awkward to work with. You've got do it all by hand. Its good to know, but a pain to practice. There are two lists that are in common use that make this easier for you. For the most part, Lists look like arrays.

List<Integer> foo = ...;
foo.get(4);
foo.remove(5);

You call methods on them, but you are fetching the 4th element via method call instead of via direct access through the array. See that foo.remove(5). Thats it. You're done. You have removed an element from the list and deleted it. Much easier to remember.

ArrayList

The ArrayList is backed by an Array. This means that doing foo.get(4) runs fast, but foo.add(42, foo.size()+1) is likely to be slow because it has to do all of that moving of things around to allocate a new list (yes, I know that the list can be longer than the size, but lets assume that its the same size as its actual list).

Instead of having to remember how to do all the shuffling, you've got nice methods to do your work for you. It doesn't mean that its not done (the work is still done behind the scenes of the interface), but its something that you don't have to worry about.

So, the ArrayList is for:

  • fast get (O(1))
  • slow remove and insert (O(length))
  • slow append when full (O(length))

LinkedList

For some reason, everyone's goto list implementation is the ArrayList. I don't know why. Many times when I'm working with Lists, the LinkedList is the one that is more applicable. You keep adding things to the end. Rarely do you want the nth element. You just want to iterate over them.

This is what the LinkedList is good for. It does fast remove and append and its iterator is just as fast as the ArrayList. Its just if you want foo.get(400) its going to be a bit slower than the ArrayList implement.

The LinkedList is also a Deque too, but people forget about that. That lets you access the LinkedList as a double ended queue (nice for implementing a Stack or Queue).

So, if you are just appending and iterating, the LinkedList is for you.

  • Get is slowish (O(index))
  • Fast append (O(1))
  • Remove and insert is slowish (O(index))

Note that the O(index) there is a bit of an award bit. It will index depending on which way is faster to get there (from the end or start). So if the LinkedList is 100 long, and you get(10), it starts from the start. If you ask for get(90), it starts from the end. So get(index) is never more than get(length/2), but thats all just factors that don't matter when looking at Big O.

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If you must really do this using an array, then you will need to:

  • copy all elements of the array after the element being deleted down by one position to cover the removed element.

  • resize your array to be smaller by one element.

Copying elements down by one position can be done either by writing a loop yourself, or by invoking System.arraycopy( src, srcPos, dest, destPos, length).

Resizing the array can be done like this: myArray = Arrays.copyOf( myArray, newCapacity ).

That having been said, if you have any need to manipulate the length of the array, then definitely go with ArrayList instead of using arrays. This wheel has already been invented.

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Oracle
docs.oracle.com › javase › 8 › docs › api › java › util › ArrayList.html
ArrayList (Java Platform SE 8 )
October 20, 2025 - This method eliminates the need for explicit range operations (of the sort that commonly exist for arrays). Any operation that expects a list can be used as a range operation by passing a subList view instead of a whole list. For example, the following idiom removes a range of elements from a list: