Looking for a given substring starting from a specified offset can be achieved by such code: ``++str.substring(beginIndex).indexOf(char1)++``. This works well, but it creates a new ``++String++`` for each call to the ``++substring++`` method. When this is done in a loop, a lot of ``++Strings++`` are created for nothing, which can lead to performance problems if ``++str++`` is large. To avoid performance problems, ``++String.substring(beginIndex)++`` should not be chained with the following methods: * ``++indexOf(int ch)++`` * ``++indexOf(String str)++`` * ``++lastIndexOf(int ch)++`` * ``++lastIndexOf(String str)++`` * ``++startsWith(String prefix)++`` For each of these methods, another method with an additional parameter is available to specify an offset. Using these methods will avoid the creation of additional ``++String++`` instances. For indexOf methods, adjust the returned value by subtracting the substring index parameter to obtain the same result.