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#
#
# Nim's Runtime Library
# (c) Copyright 2012 Andreas Rumpf
#
# See the file "copying.txt", included in this
# distribution, for details about the copyright.
#
## The system module defines several common functions for working with strings,
## such as:
## * `$` for converting other data-types to strings
## * `&` for string concatenation
## * `add` for adding a new character or a string to the existing one
## * `in` (alias for `contains`) and `notin` for checking if a character
## is in a string
##
## This module builds upon that, providing additional functionality in form of
## procedures, iterators and templates for strings.
runnableExamples:
let
numbers = @[867, 5309]
multiLineString = "first line\nsecond line\nthird line"
let jenny = numbers.join("-")
assert jenny == "867-5309"
assert splitLines(multiLineString) ==
@["first line", "second line", "third line"]
assert split(multiLineString) == @["first", "line", "second",
"line", "third", "line"]
assert indent(multiLineString, 4) ==
" first line\n second line\n third line"
assert 'z'.repeat(5) == "zzzzz"
## The chaining of functions is possible thanks to the
## `method call syntax<manual.html#procedures-method-call-syntax>`_:
runnableExamples:
from std/sequtils import map
let jenny = "867-5309"
assert jenny.split('-').map(parseInt) == @[867, 5309]
assert "Beetlejuice".indent(1).repeat(3).strip ==
"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice Beetlejuice"
## This module is available for the `JavaScript target
## <backends.html#backends-the-javascript-target>`_.
##
## ----
##
## **See also:**
## * `strformat module<strformat.html>`_ for string interpolation and formatting
## * `unicode module<unicode.html>`_ for Unicode UTF-8 handling
## * `sequtils module<sequtils.html>`_ for operations on container
## types (including strings)
## * `parsecsv module<parsecsv.html>`_ for a high-performance CSV parser
## * `parseutils module<parseutils.html>`_ for lower-level parsing of tokens,
## numbers, identifiers, etc.
## * `parseopt module<parseopt.html>`_ for command-line parsing
## * `pegs module<pegs.html>`_ for PEG (Parsing Expression Grammar) support
## * `strtabs module<strtabs.html>`_ for efficient hash tables
## (dictionaries, in some programming languages) mapping from strings to strings
## * `ropes module<ropes.html>`_ for rope data type, which can represent very
## long strings efficiently
## * `re module<re.html>`_ for regular expression (regex) support
## * `strscans<strscans.html>`_ for `scanf` and `scanp` macros, which offer
## easier substring extraction than regular expressions
import std/parseutils
from std/math import pow, floor, log10
from std/algorithm import fill, reverse
import std/enumutils
from std/unicode import toLower, toUpper
export toLower, toUpper
include "system/inclrtl"
import std/private/[since, jsutils]
from std/private/strimpl import cmpIgnoreStyleImpl, cmpIgnoreCaseImpl,
startsWithImpl, endsWithImpl
when defined(nimPreviewSlimSystem):
import std/assertions
const
Whitespace* = {' ', '\t', '\v', '\r', '\l', '\f'}
## All the characters that count as whitespace (space, tab, vertical tab,
## carriage return, new line, form feed).
Letters* = {'A'..'Z', 'a'..'z'}
## The set of letters.
UppercaseLetters* = {'A'..'Z'}
## The set of uppercase ASCII letters.
LowercaseLetters* = {'a'..'z'}
## The set of lowercase ASCII letters.
PunctuationChars* = {'!'..'/', ':'..'@', '['..'`', '{'..'~'}
## The set of all ASCII punctuation characters.
Digits* = {'0'..'9'}
## The set of digits.
HexDigits* = {'0'..'9', 'A'..'F', 'a'..'f'}
## The set of hexadecimal digits.
IdentChars* = {'a'..'z', 'A'..'Z', '0'..'9', '_'}
## The set of characters an identifier can consist of.
IdentStartChars* = {'a'..'z', 'A'..'Z', '_'}
## The set of characters an identifier can start with.
Newlines* = {'\13', '\10'}
## The set of characters a newline terminator can start with (carriage
## return, line feed).
PrintableChars* = Letters + Digits + PunctuationChars + Whitespace
## The set of all printable ASCII characters (letters, digits, whitespace, and punctuation characters).
AllChars* = {'\x00'..'\xFF'}
## A set with all the possible characters.
##
## Not very useful by its own, you can use it to create *inverted* sets to
## make the `find func<#find,string,set[char],Natural,int>`_
## find **invalid** characters in strings. Example:
## ```nim
## let invalid = AllChars - Digits
## doAssert "01234".find(invalid) == -1
## doAssert "01A34".find(invalid) == 2
## ```
func isAlphaAscii*(c: char): bool {.rtl, extern: "nsuIsAlphaAsciiChar".} =
## Checks whether or not character `c` is alphabetical.
##
## This checks a-z, A-Z ASCII characters only.
## Use `Unicode module<unicode.html>`_ for UTF-8 support.
runnableExamples:
doAssert isAlphaAscii('e') == true
doAssert isAlphaAscii('E') == true
doAssert isAlphaAscii('8') == false
return c in Letters
func isAlphaNumeric*(c: char): bool {.rtl, extern: "nsuIsAlphaNumericChar".} =
## Checks whether or not `c` is alphanumeric.
##
## This checks a-z, A-Z, 0-9 ASCII characters only.
runnableExamples:
doAssert isAlphaNumeric('n') == true
doAssert isAlphaNumeric('8') == true
doAssert isAlphaNumeric(' ') == false
return c in Letters+Digits
func isDigit*(c: char): bool {.rtl, extern: "nsuIsDigitChar".} =
## Checks whether or not `c` is a number.
##
## This checks 0-9 ASCII characters only.
runnableExamples:
doAssert isDigit('n') == false
doAssert isDigit('8') == true
return c in Digits
func isSpaceAscii*(c: char): bool {.rtl, extern: "nsuIsSpaceAsciiChar".} =
## Checks whether or not `c` is a whitespace character.
runnableExamples:
doAssert isSpaceAscii('n') == false
doAssert isSpaceAscii(' ') == true
doAssert isSpaceAscii('\t') == true
return c in Whitespace
func isLowerAscii*(c: char): bool {.rtl, extern: "nsuIsLowerAsciiChar".} =
## Checks whether or not `c` is a lower case character.
##
## This checks ASCII characters only.
## Use `Unicode module<unicode.html>`_ for UTF-8 support.
##
## See also:
## * `toLowerAscii func<#toLowerAscii,char>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert isLowerAscii('e') == true
doAssert isLowerAscii('E') == false
doAssert isLowerAscii('7') == false
return c in LowercaseLetters
func isUpperAscii*(c: char): bool {.rtl, extern: "nsuIsUpperAsciiChar".} =
## Checks whether or not `c` is an upper case character.
##
## This checks ASCII characters only.
## Use `Unicode module<unicode.html>`_ for UTF-8 support.
##
## See also:
## * `toUpperAscii func<#toUpperAscii,char>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert isUpperAscii('e') == false
doAssert isUpperAscii('E') == true
doAssert isUpperAscii('7') == false
return c in UppercaseLetters
func toLowerAscii*(c: char): char {.rtl, extern: "nsuToLowerAsciiChar".} =
## Returns the lower case version of character `c`.
##
## This works only for the letters `A-Z`. See `unicode.toLower
## <unicode.html#toLower,Rune>`_ for a version that works for any Unicode
## character.
##
## See also:
## * `isLowerAscii func<#isLowerAscii,char>`_
## * `toLowerAscii func<#toLowerAscii,string>`_ for converting a string
runnableExamples:
doAssert toLowerAscii('A') == 'a'
doAssert toLowerAscii('e') == 'e'
if c in UppercaseLetters:
result = char(uint8(c) xor 0b0010_0000'u8)
else:
result = c
template toImpl(call) =
result = newString(len(s))
for i in 0..len(s) - 1:
result[i] = call(s[i])
func toLowerAscii*(s: string): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuToLowerAsciiStr".} =
## Converts string `s` into lower case.
##
## This works only for the letters `A-Z`. See `unicode.toLower
## <unicode.html#toLower,string>`_ for a version that works for any Unicode
## character.
##
## See also:
## * `normalize func<#normalize,string>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert toLowerAscii("FooBar!") == "foobar!"
toImpl toLowerAscii
func toUpperAscii*(c: char): char {.rtl, extern: "nsuToUpperAsciiChar".} =
## Converts character `c` into upper case.
##
## This works only for the letters `A-Z`. See `unicode.toUpper
## <unicode.html#toUpper,Rune>`_ for a version that works for any Unicode
## character.
##
## See also:
## * `isUpperAscii func<#isUpperAscii,char>`_
## * `toUpperAscii func<#toUpperAscii,string>`_ for converting a string
## * `capitalizeAscii func<#capitalizeAscii,string>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert toUpperAscii('a') == 'A'
doAssert toUpperAscii('E') == 'E'
if c in LowercaseLetters:
result = char(uint8(c) xor 0b0010_0000'u8)
else:
result = c
func toUpperAscii*(s: string): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuToUpperAsciiStr".} =
## Converts string `s` into upper case.
##
## This works only for the letters `A-Z`. See `unicode.toUpper
## <unicode.html#toUpper,string>`_ for a version that works for any Unicode
## character.
##
## See also:
## * `capitalizeAscii func<#capitalizeAscii,string>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert toUpperAscii("FooBar!") == "FOOBAR!"
toImpl toUpperAscii
func capitalizeAscii*(s: string): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuCapitalizeAscii".} =
## Converts the first character of string `s` into upper case.
##
## This works only for the letters `A-Z`.
## Use `Unicode module<unicode.html>`_ for UTF-8 support.
##
## See also:
## * `toUpperAscii func<#toUpperAscii,char>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert capitalizeAscii("foo") == "Foo"
doAssert capitalizeAscii("-bar") == "-bar"
if s.len == 0: result = ""
else: result = toUpperAscii(s[0]) & substr(s, 1)
func nimIdentNormalize*(s: string): string =
## Normalizes the string `s` as a Nim identifier.
##
## That means to convert to lower case and remove any '_' on all characters
## except first one.
##
## .. Warning:: Backticks (`) are not handled: they remain *as is* and
## spaces are preserved. See `nimIdentBackticksNormalize
## <dochelpers.html#nimIdentBackticksNormalize,string>`_ for
## an alternative approach.
runnableExamples:
doAssert nimIdentNormalize("Foo_bar") == "Foobar"
result = newString(s.len)
if s.len == 0:
return
result[0] = s[0]
var j = 1
for i in 1..len(s) - 1:
if s[i] in UppercaseLetters:
result[j] = chr(ord(s[i]) + (ord('a') - ord('A')))
inc j
elif s[i] != '_':
result[j] = s[i]
inc j
if j != s.len: setLen(result, j)
func normalize*(s: string): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuNormalize".} =
## Normalizes the string `s`.
##
## That means to convert it to lower case and remove any '_'. This
## should NOT be used to normalize Nim identifier names.
##
## See also:
## * `toLowerAscii func<#toLowerAscii,string>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert normalize("Foo_bar") == "foobar"
doAssert normalize("Foo Bar") == "foo bar"
result = newString(s.len)
var j = 0
for i in 0..len(s) - 1:
if s[i] in UppercaseLetters:
result[j] = chr(ord(s[i]) + (ord('a') - ord('A')))
inc j
elif s[i] != '_':
result[j] = s[i]
inc j
if j != s.len: setLen(result, j)
func cmpIgnoreCase*(a, b: string): int {.rtl, extern: "nsuCmpIgnoreCase".} =
## Compares two strings in a case insensitive manner. Returns:
##
## | `0` if a == b
## | `< 0` if a < b
## | `> 0` if a > b
runnableExamples:
doAssert cmpIgnoreCase("FooBar", "foobar") == 0
doAssert cmpIgnoreCase("bar", "Foo") < 0
doAssert cmpIgnoreCase("Foo5", "foo4") > 0
cmpIgnoreCaseImpl(a, b)
{.push checks: off, line_trace: off.} # this is a hot-spot in the compiler!
# thus we compile without checks here
func cmpIgnoreStyle*(a, b: string): int {.rtl, extern: "nsuCmpIgnoreStyle".} =
## Semantically the same as `cmp(normalize(a), normalize(b))`. It
## is just optimized to not allocate temporary strings. This should
## NOT be used to compare Nim identifier names.
## Use `macros.eqIdent<macros.html#eqIdent,string,string>`_ for that.
##
## Returns:
##
## | `0` if a == b
## | `< 0` if a < b
## | `> 0` if a > b
runnableExamples:
doAssert cmpIgnoreStyle("foo_bar", "FooBar") == 0
doAssert cmpIgnoreStyle("foo_bar_5", "FooBar4") > 0
cmpIgnoreStyleImpl(a, b)
{.pop.}
# --------- Private templates for different split separators -----------
func substrEq(s: string, pos: int, substr: string): bool =
# Always returns false for empty `substr`
var length = substr.len
if length > 0:
var i = 0
while i < length and pos+i < s.len and s[pos+i] == substr[i]:
inc i
i == length
else: false
template stringHasSep(s: string, index: int, seps: set[char]): bool =
s[index] in seps
template stringHasSep(s: string, index: int, sep: char): bool =
s[index] == sep
template stringHasSep(s: string, index: int, sep: string): bool =
s.substrEq(index, sep)
template splitCommon(s, sep, maxsplit, sepLen) =
## Common code for split procs
var last = 0
var splits = maxsplit
while last <= len(s):
var first = last
while last < len(s) and not stringHasSep(s, last, sep):
inc(last)
if splits == 0: last = len(s)
yield substr(s, first, last-1)
if splits == 0: break
dec(splits)
inc(last, sepLen)
template oldSplit(s, seps, maxsplit) =
var last = 0
var splits = maxsplit
assert(not ('\0' in seps))
while last < len(s):
while last < len(s) and s[last] in seps: inc(last)
var first = last
while last < len(s) and s[last] notin seps: inc(last)
if first <= last-1:
if splits == 0: last = len(s)
yield substr(s, first, last-1)
if splits == 0: break
dec(splits)
template accResult(iter: untyped) =
result = @[]
for x in iter: add(result, x)
iterator split*(s: string, sep: char, maxsplit: int = -1): string =
## Splits the string `s` into substrings using a single separator.
##
## Substrings are separated by the character `sep`.
## The code:
## ```nim
## for word in split(";;this;is;an;;example;;;", ';'):
## writeLine(stdout, word)
## ```
## Results in:
## ```
## ""
## ""
## "this"
## "is"
## "an"
## ""
## "example"
## ""
## ""
## ""
## ```
##
## See also:
## * `rsplit iterator<#rsplit.i,string,char,int>`_
## * `splitLines iterator<#splitLines.i,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace iterator<#splitWhitespace.i,string,int>`_
## * `split func<#split,string,char,int>`_
splitCommon(s, sep, maxsplit, 1)
iterator split*(s: string, seps: set[char] = Whitespace,
maxsplit: int = -1): string =
## Splits the string `s` into substrings using a group of separators.
##
## Substrings are separated by a substring containing only `seps`.
##
## ```nim
## for word in split("this\lis an\texample"):
## writeLine(stdout, word)
## ```
##
## ...generates this output:
##
## ```
## "this"
## "is"
## "an"
## "example"
## ```
##
## And the following code:
##
## ```nim
## for word in split("this:is;an$example", {';', ':', '$'}):
## writeLine(stdout, word)
## ```
##
## ...produces the same output as the first example. The code:
##
## ```nim
## let date = "2012-11-20T22:08:08.398990"
## let separators = {' ', '-', ':', 'T'}
## for number in split(date, separators):
## writeLine(stdout, number)
## ```
##
## ...results in:
##
## ```
## "2012"
## "11"
## "20"
## "22"
## "08"
## "08.398990"
## ```
##
## .. note:: Empty separator set results in returning an original string,
## following the interpretation "split by no element".
##
## See also:
## * `rsplit iterator<#rsplit.i,string,set[char],int>`_
## * `splitLines iterator<#splitLines.i,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace iterator<#splitWhitespace.i,string,int>`_
## * `split func<#split,string,set[char],int>`_
splitCommon(s, seps, maxsplit, 1)
iterator split*(s: string, sep: string, maxsplit: int = -1): string =
## Splits the string `s` into substrings using a string separator.
##
## Substrings are separated by the string `sep`.
## The code:
##
## ```nim
## for word in split("thisDATAisDATAcorrupted", "DATA"):
## writeLine(stdout, word)
## ```
##
## Results in:
##
## ```
## "this"
## "is"
## "corrupted"
## ```
##
## .. note:: Empty separator string results in returning an original string,
## following the interpretation "split by no element".
##
## See also:
## * `rsplit iterator<#rsplit.i,string,string,int,bool>`_
## * `splitLines iterator<#splitLines.i,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace iterator<#splitWhitespace.i,string,int>`_
## * `split func<#split,string,string,int>`_
let sepLen = if sep.len == 0: 1 # prevents infinite loop
else: sep.len
splitCommon(s, sep, maxsplit, sepLen)
template rsplitCommon(s, sep, maxsplit, sepLen) =
## Common code for rsplit functions
var
last = s.len - 1
first = last
splits = maxsplit
startPos = 0
# go to -1 in order to get separators at the beginning
while first >= -1:
while first >= 0 and not stringHasSep(s, first, sep):
dec(first)
if splits == 0:
# No more splits means set first to the beginning
first = -1
if first == -1:
startPos = 0
else:
startPos = first + sepLen
yield substr(s, startPos, last)
if splits == 0: break
dec(splits)
dec(first)
last = first
iterator rsplit*(s: string, sep: char,
maxsplit: int = -1): string =
## Splits the string `s` into substrings from the right using a
## string separator. Works exactly the same as `split iterator
## <#split.i,string,char,int>`_ except in **reverse** order.
##
## ```nim
## for piece in "foo:bar".rsplit(':'):
## echo piece
## ```
##
## Results in:
##
## ```
## "bar"
## "foo"
## ```
##
## Substrings are separated from the right by the char `sep`.
##
## See also:
## * `split iterator<#split.i,string,char,int>`_
## * `splitLines iterator<#splitLines.i,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace iterator<#splitWhitespace.i,string,int>`_
## * `rsplit func<#rsplit,string,char,int>`_
rsplitCommon(s, sep, maxsplit, 1)
iterator rsplit*(s: string, seps: set[char] = Whitespace,
maxsplit: int = -1): string =
## Splits the string `s` into substrings from the right using a
## string separator. Works exactly the same as `split iterator
## <#split.i,string,char,int>`_ except in **reverse** order.
##
## ```nim
## for piece in "foo bar".rsplit(WhiteSpace):
## echo piece
## ```
##
## Results in:
##
## ```
## "bar"
## "foo"
## ```
##
## Substrings are separated from the right by the set of chars `seps`
##
## .. note:: Empty separator set results in returning an original string,
## following the interpretation "split by no element".
##
## See also:
## * `split iterator<#split.i,string,set[char],int>`_
## * `splitLines iterator<#splitLines.i,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace iterator<#splitWhitespace.i,string,int>`_
## * `rsplit func<#rsplit,string,set[char],int>`_
rsplitCommon(s, seps, maxsplit, 1)
iterator rsplit*(s: string, sep: string, maxsplit: int = -1,
keepSeparators: bool = false): string =
## Splits the string `s` into substrings from the right using a
## string separator. Works exactly the same as `split iterator
## <#split.i,string,string,int>`_ except in **reverse** order.
##
## ```nim
## for piece in "foothebar".rsplit("the"):
## echo piece
## ```
##
## Results in:
##
## ```
## "bar"
## "foo"
## ```
##
## Substrings are separated from the right by the string `sep`
##
## .. note:: Empty separator string results in returning an original string,
## following the interpretation "split by no element".
##
## See also:
## * `split iterator<#split.i,string,string,int>`_
## * `splitLines iterator<#splitLines.i,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace iterator<#splitWhitespace.i,string,int>`_
## * `rsplit func<#rsplit,string,string,int>`_
let sepLen = if sep.len == 0: 1 # prevents infinite loop
else: sep.len
rsplitCommon(s, sep, maxsplit, sepLen)
iterator splitLines*(s: string, keepEol = false): string =
## Splits the string `s` into its containing lines.
##
## Every `character literal <manual.html#lexical-analysis-character-literals>`_
## newline combination (CR, LF, CR-LF) is supported. The result strings
## contain no trailing end of line characters unless the parameter `keepEol`
## is set to `true`.
##
## Example:
##
## ```nim
## for line in splitLines("\nthis\nis\nan\n\nexample\n"):
## writeLine(stdout, line)
## ```
##
## Results in:
##
## ```nim
## ""
## "this"
## "is"
## "an"
## ""
## "example"
## ""
## ```
##
## See also:
## * `splitWhitespace iterator<#splitWhitespace.i,string,int>`_
## * `splitLines func<#splitLines,string>`_
var first = 0
var last = 0
var eolpos = 0
while true:
while last < s.len and s[last] notin {'\c', '\l'}: inc(last)
eolpos = last
if last < s.len:
if s[last] == '\l': inc(last)
elif s[last] == '\c':
inc(last)
if last < s.len and s[last] == '\l': inc(last)
yield substr(s, first, if keepEol: last-1 else: eolpos-1)
# no eol characters consumed means that the string is over
if eolpos == last:
break
first = last
iterator splitWhitespace*(s: string, maxsplit: int = -1): string =
## Splits the string `s` at whitespace stripping leading and trailing
## whitespace if necessary. If `maxsplit` is specified and is positive,
## no more than `maxsplit` splits is made.
##
## The following code:
##
## ```nim
## let s = " foo \t bar baz "
## for ms in [-1, 1, 2, 3]:
## echo "------ maxsplit = ", ms, ":"
## for item in s.splitWhitespace(maxsplit=ms):
## echo '"', item, '"'
## ```
##
## ...results in:
##
## ```
## ------ maxsplit = -1:
## "foo"
## "bar"
## "baz"
## ------ maxsplit = 1:
## "foo"
## "bar baz "
## ------ maxsplit = 2:
## "foo"
## "bar"
## "baz "
## ------ maxsplit = 3:
## "foo"
## "bar"
## "baz"
## ```
##
## See also:
## * `splitLines iterator<#splitLines.i,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace func<#splitWhitespace,string,int>`_
oldSplit(s, Whitespace, maxsplit)
func split*(s: string, sep: char, maxsplit: int = -1): seq[string] {.rtl,
extern: "nsuSplitChar".} =
## The same as the `split iterator <#split.i,string,char,int>`_ (see its
## documentation), but is a func that returns a sequence of substrings.
##
## See also:
## * `split iterator <#split.i,string,char,int>`_
## * `rsplit func<#rsplit,string,char,int>`_
## * `splitLines func<#splitLines,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace func<#splitWhitespace,string,int>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert "a,b,c".split(',') == @["a", "b", "c"]
doAssert "".split(' ') == @[""]
accResult(split(s, sep, maxsplit))
func split*(s: string, seps: set[char] = Whitespace, maxsplit: int = -1): seq[
string] {.rtl, extern: "nsuSplitCharSet".} =
## The same as the `split iterator <#split.i,string,set[char],int>`_ (see its
## documentation), but is a func that returns a sequence of substrings.
##
## .. note:: Empty separator set results in returning an original string,
## following the interpretation "split by no element".
##
## See also:
## * `split iterator <#split.i,string,set[char],int>`_
## * `rsplit func<#rsplit,string,set[char],int>`_
## * `splitLines func<#splitLines,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace func<#splitWhitespace,string,int>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert "a,b;c".split({',', ';'}) == @["a", "b", "c"]
doAssert "".split({' '}) == @[""]
doAssert "empty seps return unsplit s".split({}) == @["empty seps return unsplit s"]
accResult(split(s, seps, maxsplit))
func split*(s: string, sep: string, maxsplit: int = -1): seq[string] {.rtl,
extern: "nsuSplitString".} =
## Splits the string `s` into substrings using a string separator.
##
## Substrings are separated by the string `sep`. This is a wrapper around the
## `split iterator <#split.i,string,string,int>`_.
##
## .. note:: Empty separator string results in returning an original string,
## following the interpretation "split by no element".
##
## See also:
## * `split iterator <#split.i,string,string,int>`_
## * `rsplit func<#rsplit,string,string,int>`_
## * `splitLines func<#splitLines,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace func<#splitWhitespace,string,int>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert "a,b,c".split(",") == @["a", "b", "c"]
doAssert "a man a plan a canal panama".split("a ") == @["", "man ", "plan ", "canal panama"]
doAssert "".split("Elon Musk") == @[""]
doAssert "a largely spaced sentence".split(" ") == @["a", "", "largely",
"", "", "", "spaced", "sentence"]
doAssert "a largely spaced sentence".split(" ", maxsplit = 1) == @["a", " largely spaced sentence"]
doAssert "empty sep returns unsplit s".split("") == @["empty sep returns unsplit s"]
accResult(split(s, sep, maxsplit))
func rsplit*(s: string, sep: char, maxsplit: int = -1): seq[string] {.rtl,
extern: "nsuRSplitChar".} =
## The same as the `rsplit iterator <#rsplit.i,string,char,int>`_, but is a func
## that returns a sequence of substrings in original order.
##
## A possible common use case for `rsplit` is path manipulation,
## particularly on systems that don't use a common delimiter.
##
## For example, if a system had `#` as a delimiter, you could
## do the following to get the tail of the path:
##
## ```nim
## var tailSplit = rsplit("Root#Object#Method#Index", '#', maxsplit=1)
## ```
##
## Results in `tailSplit` containing:
##
## ```nim
## @["Root#Object#Method", "Index"]
## ```
##
## See also:
## * `rsplit iterator <#rsplit.i,string,char,int>`_
## * `split func<#split,string,char,int>`_
## * `splitLines func<#splitLines,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace func<#splitWhitespace,string,int>`_
accResult(rsplit(s, sep, maxsplit))
result.reverse()
func rsplit*(s: string, seps: set[char] = Whitespace,
maxsplit: int = -1): seq[string]
{.rtl, extern: "nsuRSplitCharSet".} =
## The same as the `rsplit iterator <#rsplit.i,string,set[char],int>`_, but is a
## func that returns a sequence of substrings in original order.
##
## A possible common use case for `rsplit` is path manipulation,
## particularly on systems that don't use a common delimiter.
##
## For example, if a system had `#` as a delimiter, you could
## do the following to get the tail of the path:
##
## ```nim
## var tailSplit = rsplit("Root#Object#Method#Index", {'#'}, maxsplit=1)
## ```
##
## Results in `tailSplit` containing:
##
## ```nim
## @["Root#Object#Method", "Index"]
## ```
##
## .. note:: Empty separator set results in returning an original string,
## following the interpretation "split by no element".
##
## See also:
## * `rsplit iterator <#rsplit.i,string,set[char],int>`_
## * `split func<#split,string,set[char],int>`_
## * `splitLines func<#splitLines,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace func<#splitWhitespace,string,int>`_
accResult(rsplit(s, seps, maxsplit))
result.reverse()
func rsplit*(s: string, sep: string, maxsplit: int = -1): seq[string] {.rtl,
extern: "nsuRSplitString".} =
## The same as the `rsplit iterator <#rsplit.i,string,string,int,bool>`_, but is a func
## that returns a sequence of substrings in original order.
##
## A possible common use case for `rsplit` is path manipulation,
## particularly on systems that don't use a common delimiter.
##
## For example, if a system had `#` as a delimiter, you could
## do the following to get the tail of the path:
##
## ```nim
## var tailSplit = rsplit("Root#Object#Method#Index", "#", maxsplit=1)
## ```
##
## Results in `tailSplit` containing:
##
## ```nim
## @["Root#Object#Method", "Index"]
## ```
##
## .. note:: Empty separator string results in returning an original string,
## following the interpretation "split by no element".
##
## See also:
## * `rsplit iterator <#rsplit.i,string,string,int,bool>`_
## * `split func<#split,string,string,int>`_
## * `splitLines func<#splitLines,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace func<#splitWhitespace,string,int>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert "a largely spaced sentence".rsplit(" ", maxsplit = 1) == @[
"a largely spaced", "sentence"]
doAssert "a,b,c".rsplit(",") == @["a", "b", "c"]
doAssert "a man a plan a canal panama".rsplit("a ") == @["", "man ",
"plan ", "canal panama"]
doAssert "".rsplit("Elon Musk") == @[""]
doAssert "a largely spaced sentence".rsplit(" ") == @["a", "",
"largely", "", "", "", "spaced", "sentence"]
doAssert "empty sep returns unsplit s".rsplit("") == @["empty sep returns unsplit s"]
accResult(rsplit(s, sep, maxsplit))
result.reverse()
func splitLines*(s: string, keepEol = false): seq[string] {.rtl,
extern: "nsuSplitLines".} =
## The same as the `splitLines iterator<#splitLines.i,string>`_ (see its
## documentation), but is a func that returns a sequence of substrings.
##
## See also:
## * `splitLines iterator<#splitLines.i,string>`_
## * `splitWhitespace func<#splitWhitespace,string,int>`_
## * `countLines func<#countLines,string>`_
accResult(splitLines(s, keepEol = keepEol))
func splitWhitespace*(s: string, maxsplit: int = -1): seq[string] {.rtl,
extern: "nsuSplitWhitespace".} =
## The same as the `splitWhitespace iterator <#splitWhitespace.i,string,int>`_
## (see its documentation), but is a func that returns a sequence of substrings.
##
## See also:
## * `splitWhitespace iterator <#splitWhitespace.i,string,int>`_
## * `splitLines func<#splitLines,string>`_
accResult(splitWhitespace(s, maxsplit))
func toBin*(x: BiggestInt, len: Positive): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuToBin".} =
## Converts `x` into its binary representation.
##
## The resulting string is always `len` characters long. No leading `0b`
## prefix is generated.
runnableExamples:
let
a = 29
b = 257
doAssert a.toBin(8) == "00011101"
doAssert b.toBin(8) == "00000001"
doAssert b.toBin(9) == "100000001"
var
mask = BiggestUInt 1
shift = BiggestUInt 0
assert(len > 0)
result = newString(len)
for j in countdown(len-1, 0):
result[j] = chr(int((BiggestUInt(x) and mask) shr shift) + ord('0'))
inc shift
mask = mask shl BiggestUInt(1)
func toOct*(x: BiggestInt, len: Positive): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuToOct".} =
## Converts `x` into its octal representation.
##
## The resulting string is always `len` characters long. No leading `0o`
## prefix is generated.
##
## Do not confuse it with `toOctal func<#toOctal,char>`_.
runnableExamples:
let
a = 62
b = 513
doAssert a.toOct(3) == "076"
doAssert b.toOct(3) == "001"
doAssert b.toOct(5) == "01001"
var
mask = BiggestUInt 7
shift = BiggestUInt 0
assert(len > 0)
result = newString(len)
for j in countdown(len-1, 0):
result[j] = chr(int((BiggestUInt(x) and mask) shr shift) + ord('0'))
inc shift, 3
mask = mask shl BiggestUInt(3)
func toHexImpl(x: BiggestUInt, len: Positive, handleNegative: bool): string =
const
HexChars = "0123456789ABCDEF"
var n = x
result = newString(len)
for j in countdown(len-1, 0):
result[j] = HexChars[int(n and 0xF)]
n = n shr 4
# handle negative overflow
if n == 0 and handleNegative: n = not(BiggestUInt 0)
func toHex*[T: SomeInteger](x: T, len: Positive): string =
## Converts `x` to its hexadecimal representation.
##
## The resulting string will be exactly `len` characters long. No prefix like
## `0x` is generated. `x` is treated as an unsigned value.
runnableExamples:
let
a = 62'u64
b = 4097'u64
doAssert a.toHex(3) == "03E"
doAssert b.toHex(3) == "001"
doAssert b.toHex(4) == "1001"
doAssert toHex(62, 3) == "03E"
doAssert toHex(-8, 6) == "FFFFF8"
whenJsNoBigInt64:
toHexImpl(cast[BiggestUInt](x), len, x < 0)
do:
when T is SomeSignedInt:
toHexImpl(cast[BiggestUInt](BiggestInt(x)), len, x < 0)
else:
toHexImpl(BiggestUInt(x), len, x < 0)
func toHex*[T: SomeInteger](x: T): string =
## Shortcut for `toHex(x, T.sizeof * 2)`
runnableExamples:
doAssert toHex(1984'i64) == "00000000000007C0"
doAssert toHex(1984'i16) == "07C0"
whenJsNoBigInt64:
toHexImpl(cast[BiggestUInt](x), 2*sizeof(T), x < 0)
do:
when T is SomeSignedInt:
toHexImpl(cast[BiggestUInt](BiggestInt(x)), 2*sizeof(T), x < 0)
else:
toHexImpl(BiggestUInt(x), 2*sizeof(T), x < 0)
func toHex*(s: string): string {.rtl.} =
## Converts a bytes string to its hexadecimal representation.
##
## The output is twice the input long. No prefix like
## `0x` is generated.
##
## See also:
## * `parseHexStr func<#parseHexStr,string>`_ for the reverse operation
runnableExamples:
let
a = "1"
b = "A"
c = "\0\255"
doAssert a.toHex() == "31"
doAssert b.toHex() == "41"
doAssert c.toHex() == "00FF"
const HexChars = "0123456789ABCDEF"
result = newString(s.len * 2)
for pos, c in s:
var n = ord(c)
result[pos * 2 + 1] = HexChars[n and 0xF]
n = n shr 4
result[pos * 2] = HexChars[n]
func toOctal*(c: char): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuToOctal".} =
## Converts a character `c` to its octal representation.
##
## The resulting string may not have a leading zero. Its length is always
## exactly 3.
##
## Do not confuse it with `toOct func<#toOct,BiggestInt,Positive>`_.
runnableExamples:
doAssert toOctal('1') == "061"
doAssert toOctal('A') == "101"
doAssert toOctal('a') == "141"
doAssert toOctal('!') == "041"
result = newString(3)
var val = ord(c)
for i in countdown(2, 0):
result[i] = chr(val mod 8 + ord('0'))
val = val div 8
func fromBin*[T: SomeInteger](s: string): T =
## Parses a binary integer value from a string `s`.
##
## If `s` is not a valid binary integer, `ValueError` is raised. `s` can have
## one of the following optional prefixes: `0b`, `0B`. Underscores within
## `s` are ignored.
##
## Does not check for overflow. If the value represented by `s`
## is too big to fit into a return type, only the value of the rightmost
## binary digits of `s` is returned without producing an error.
runnableExamples:
let s = "0b_0100_1000_1000_1000_1110_1110_1001_1001"
doAssert fromBin[int](s) == 1216933529
doAssert fromBin[int8](s) == 0b1001_1001'i8
doAssert fromBin[int8](s) == -103'i8
doAssert fromBin[uint8](s) == 153
doAssert s.fromBin[:int16] == 0b1110_1110_1001_1001'i16
doAssert s.fromBin[:uint64] == 1216933529'u64
let p = parseutils.parseBin(s, result)
if p != s.len or p == 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid binary integer: " & s)
func fromOct*[T: SomeInteger](s: string): T =
## Parses an octal integer value from a string `s`.
##
## If `s` is not a valid octal integer, `ValueError` is raised. `s` can have
## one of the following optional prefixes: `0o`, `0O`. Underscores within
## `s` are ignored.
##
## Does not check for overflow. If the value represented by `s`
## is too big to fit into a return type, only the value of the rightmost
## octal digits of `s` is returned without producing an error.
runnableExamples:
let s = "0o_123_456_777"
doAssert fromOct[int](s) == 21913087
doAssert fromOct[int8](s) == 0o377'i8
doAssert fromOct[int8](s) == -1'i8
doAssert fromOct[uint8](s) == 255'u8
doAssert s.fromOct[:int16] == 24063'i16
doAssert s.fromOct[:uint64] == 21913087'u64
let p = parseutils.parseOct(s, result)
if p != s.len or p == 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid oct integer: " & s)
func fromHex*[T: SomeInteger](s: string): T =
## Parses a hex integer value from a string `s`.
##
## If `s` is not a valid hex integer, `ValueError` is raised. `s` can have
## one of the following optional prefixes: `0x`, `0X`, `#`. Underscores within
## `s` are ignored.
##
## Does not check for overflow. If the value represented by `s`
## is too big to fit into a return type, only the value of the rightmost
## hex digits of `s` is returned without producing an error.
runnableExamples:
let s = "0x_1235_8df6"
doAssert fromHex[int](s) == 305499638
doAssert fromHex[int8](s) == 0xf6'i8
doAssert fromHex[int8](s) == -10'i8
doAssert fromHex[uint8](s) == 246'u8
doAssert s.fromHex[:int16] == -29194'i16
doAssert s.fromHex[:uint64] == 305499638'u64
let p = parseutils.parseHex(s, result)
if p != s.len or p == 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid hex integer: " & s)
func intToStr*(x: int, minchars: Positive = 1): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuIntToStr".} =
## Converts `x` to its decimal representation.
##
## The resulting string will be minimally `minchars` characters long. This is
## achieved by adding leading zeros.
runnableExamples:
doAssert intToStr(1984) == "1984"
doAssert intToStr(1984, 6) == "001984"
result = $abs(x)
for i in 1 .. minchars - len(result):
result = '0' & result
if x < 0:
result = '-' & result
func parseInt*(s: string): int {.rtl, extern: "nsuParseInt".} =
## Parses a decimal integer value contained in `s`.
##
## If `s` is not a valid integer, `ValueError` is raised.
runnableExamples:
doAssert parseInt("-0042") == -42
result = 0
let L = parseutils.parseInt(s, result, 0)
if L != s.len or L == 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid integer: " & s)
func parseBiggestInt*(s: string): BiggestInt {.rtl,
extern: "nsuParseBiggestInt".} =
## Parses a decimal integer value contained in `s`.
##
## If `s` is not a valid integer, `ValueError` is raised.
result = BiggestInt(0)
let L = parseutils.parseBiggestInt(s, result, 0)
if L != s.len or L == 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid integer: " & s)
func parseUInt*(s: string): uint {.rtl, extern: "nsuParseUInt".} =
## Parses a decimal unsigned integer value contained in `s`.
##
## If `s` is not a valid integer, `ValueError` is raised.
result = uint(0)
let L = parseutils.parseUInt(s, result, 0)
if L != s.len or L == 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid unsigned integer: " & s)
func parseBiggestUInt*(s: string): BiggestUInt {.rtl,
extern: "nsuParseBiggestUInt".} =
## Parses a decimal unsigned integer value contained in `s`.
##
## If `s` is not a valid integer, `ValueError` is raised.
result = BiggestUInt(0)
let L = parseutils.parseBiggestUInt(s, result, 0)
if L != s.len or L == 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid unsigned integer: " & s)
func parseFloat*(s: string): float {.rtl, extern: "nsuParseFloat".} =
## Parses a decimal floating point value contained in `s`.
##
## If `s` is not a valid floating point number, `ValueError` is raised.
##`NAN`, `INF`, `-INF` are also supported (case insensitive comparison).
runnableExamples:
doAssert parseFloat("3.14") == 3.14
doAssert parseFloat("inf") == 1.0/0
result = 0.0
let L = parseutils.parseFloat(s, result, 0)
if L != s.len or L == 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid float: " & s)
func parseBinInt*(s: string): int {.rtl, extern: "nsuParseBinInt".} =
## Parses a binary integer value contained in `s`.
##
## If `s` is not a valid binary integer, `ValueError` is raised. `s` can have
## one of the following optional prefixes: `0b`, `0B`. Underscores within
## `s` are ignored.
runnableExamples:
let
a = "0b11_0101"
b = "111"
doAssert a.parseBinInt() == 53
doAssert b.parseBinInt() == 7
result = 0
let L = parseutils.parseBin(s, result, 0)
if L != s.len or L == 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid binary integer: " & s)
func parseOctInt*(s: string): int {.rtl, extern: "nsuParseOctInt".} =
## Parses an octal integer value contained in `s`.
##
## If `s` is not a valid oct integer, `ValueError` is raised. `s` can have one
## of the following optional prefixes: `0o`, `0O`. Underscores within
## `s` are ignored.
result = 0
let L = parseutils.parseOct(s, result, 0)
if L != s.len or L == 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid oct integer: " & s)
func parseHexInt*(s: string): int {.rtl, extern: "nsuParseHexInt".} =
## Parses a hexadecimal integer value contained in `s`.
##
## If `s` is not a valid hex integer, `ValueError` is raised. `s` can have one
## of the following optional prefixes: `0x`, `0X`, `#`. Underscores
## within `s` are ignored.
result = 0
let L = parseutils.parseHex(s, result, 0)
if L != s.len or L == 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid hex integer: " & s)
func generateHexCharToValueMap(): string =
## Generates a string to map a hex digit to uint value.
result = ""
for inp in 0..255:
let ch = chr(inp)
let o =
case ch
of '0'..'9': inp - ord('0')
of 'a'..'f': inp - ord('a') + 10
of 'A'..'F': inp - ord('A') + 10
else: 17 # indicates an invalid hex char
result.add chr(o)
const hexCharToValueMap = generateHexCharToValueMap()
func parseHexStr*(s: string): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuParseHexStr".} =
## Converts hex-encoded string to byte string, e.g.:
##
## Raises `ValueError` for an invalid hex values. The comparison is
## case-insensitive.
##
## See also:
## * `toHex func<#toHex,string>`_ for the reverse operation
runnableExamples:
let
a = "41"
b = "3161"
c = "00ff"
doAssert parseHexStr(a) == "A"
doAssert parseHexStr(b) == "1a"
doAssert parseHexStr(c) == "\0\255"
if s.len mod 2 != 0:
raise newException(ValueError, "Incorrect hex string len")
result = newString(s.len div 2)
var buf = 0
for pos, c in s:
let val = hexCharToValueMap[ord(c)].ord
if val == 17:
raise newException(ValueError, "Invalid hex char `" &
c & "` (ord " & $c.ord & ")")
if pos mod 2 == 0:
buf = val
else:
result[pos div 2] = chr(val + buf shl 4)
func parseBool*(s: string): bool =
## Parses a value into a `bool`.
##
## If `s` is one of the following values: `y, yes, true, 1, on`, then
## returns `true`. If `s` is one of the following values: `n, no, false,
## 0, off`, then returns `false`. If `s` is something else a
## `ValueError` exception is raised.
runnableExamples:
let a = "n"
doAssert parseBool(a) == false
case normalize(s)
of "y", "yes", "true", "1", "on": result = true
of "n", "no", "false", "0", "off": result = false
else: raise newException(ValueError, "cannot interpret as a bool: " & s)
func parseEnum*[T: enum](s: string): T =
## Parses an enum `T`. This errors at compile time, if the given enum
## type contains multiple fields with the same string value.
##
## Raises `ValueError` for an invalid value in `s`. The comparison is
## done in a style insensitive way (first letter is still case-sensitive).
runnableExamples:
type
MyEnum = enum
first = "1st",
second,
third = "3rd"
doAssert parseEnum[MyEnum]("1_st") == first
doAssert parseEnum[MyEnum]("second") == second
doAssertRaises(ValueError):
echo parseEnum[MyEnum]("third")
genEnumCaseStmt(T, s, default = nil, ord(low(T)), ord(high(T)), nimIdentNormalize)
func parseEnum*[T: enum](s: string, default: T): T =
## Parses an enum `T`. This errors at compile time, if the given enum
## type contains multiple fields with the same string value.
##
## Uses `default` for an invalid value in `s`. The comparison is done in a
## style insensitive way (first letter is still case-sensitive).
runnableExamples:
type
MyEnum = enum
first = "1st",
second,
third = "3rd"
doAssert parseEnum[MyEnum]("1_st") == first
doAssert parseEnum[MyEnum]("second") == second
doAssert parseEnum[MyEnum]("last", third) == third
genEnumCaseStmt(T, s, default, ord(low(T)), ord(high(T)), nimIdentNormalize)
func repeat*(c: char, count: Natural): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuRepeatChar".} =
## Returns a string of length `count` consisting only of
## the character `c`.
runnableExamples:
let a = 'z'
doAssert a.repeat(5) == "zzzzz"
result = newString(count)
for i in 0..count-1: result[i] = c
func repeat*(s: string, n: Natural): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuRepeatStr".} =
## Returns string `s` concatenated `n` times.
runnableExamples:
doAssert "+ foo +".repeat(3) == "+ foo ++ foo ++ foo +"
result = newStringOfCap(n * s.len)
for i in 1..n: result.add(s)
func spaces*(n: Natural): string {.inline.} =
## Returns a string with `n` space characters. You can use this func
## to left align strings.
##
## See also:
## * `align func<#align,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `alignLeft func<#alignLeft,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `indent func<#indent,string,Natural,string>`_
## * `center func<#center,string,int,char>`_
runnableExamples:
let
width = 15
text1 = "Hello user!"
text2 = "This is a very long string"
doAssert text1 & spaces(max(0, width - text1.len)) & "|" ==
"Hello user! |"
doAssert text2 & spaces(max(0, width - text2.len)) & "|" ==
"This is a very long string|"
repeat(' ', n)
func align*(s: string, count: Natural, padding = ' '): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuAlignString".} =
## Aligns a string `s` with `padding`, so that it is of length `count`.
##
## `padding` characters (by default spaces) are added before `s` resulting in
## right alignment. If `s.len >= count`, no spaces are added and `s` is
## returned unchanged. If you need to left align a string use the `alignLeft
## func<#alignLeft,string,Natural,char>`_.
##
## See also:
## * `alignLeft func<#alignLeft,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `spaces func<#spaces,Natural>`_
## * `indent func<#indent,string,Natural,string>`_
## * `center func<#center,string,int,char>`_
runnableExamples:
assert align("abc", 4) == " abc"
assert align("a", 0) == "a"
assert align("1232", 6) == " 1232"
assert align("1232", 6, '#') == "##1232"
if s.len < count:
result = newString(count)
let spaces = count - s.len
for i in 0..spaces-1: result[i] = padding
for i in spaces..count-1: result[i] = s[i-spaces]
else:
result = s
func alignLeft*(s: string, count: Natural, padding = ' '): string =
## Left-Aligns a string `s` with `padding`, so that it is of length `count`.
##
## `padding` characters (by default spaces) are added after `s` resulting in
## left alignment. If `s.len >= count`, no spaces are added and `s` is
## returned unchanged. If you need to right align a string use the `align
## func<#align,string,Natural,char>`_.
##
## See also:
## * `align func<#align,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `spaces func<#spaces,Natural>`_
## * `indent func<#indent,string,Natural,string>`_
## * `center func<#center,string,int,char>`_
runnableExamples:
assert alignLeft("abc", 4) == "abc "
assert alignLeft("a", 0) == "a"
assert alignLeft("1232", 6) == "1232 "
assert alignLeft("1232", 6, '#') == "1232##"
if s.len < count:
result = newString(count)
if s.len > 0:
result[0 .. (s.len - 1)] = s
for i in s.len ..< count:
result[i] = padding
else:
result = s
func center*(s: string, width: int, fillChar: char = ' '): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuCenterString".} =
## Return the contents of `s` centered in a string `width` long using
## `fillChar` (default: space) as padding.
##
## The original string is returned if `width` is less than or equal
## to `s.len`.
##
## See also:
## * `align func<#align,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `alignLeft func<#alignLeft,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `spaces func<#spaces,Natural>`_
## * `indent func<#indent,string,Natural,string>`_
runnableExamples:
let a = "foo"
doAssert a.center(2) == "foo"
doAssert a.center(5) == " foo "
doAssert a.center(6) == " foo "
if width <= s.len: return s
result = newString(width)
# Left padding will be one fillChar
# smaller if there are an odd number
# of characters
let
charsLeft = (width - s.len)
leftPadding = charsLeft div 2
for i in 0 ..< width:
if i >= leftPadding and i < leftPadding + s.len:
# we are where the string should be located
result[i] = s[i-leftPadding]
else:
# we are either before or after where
# the string s should go
result[i] = fillChar
func indent*(s: string, count: Natural, padding: string = " "): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuIndent".} =
## Indents each line in `s` by `count` amount of `padding`.
##
## **Note:** This does not preserve the new line characters used in `s`.
##
## See also:
## * `align func<#align,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `alignLeft func<#alignLeft,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `spaces func<#spaces,Natural>`_
## * `unindent func<#unindent,string,Natural,string>`_
## * `dedent func<#dedent,string,Natural>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert indent("First line\c\l and second line.", 2) ==
" First line\l and second line."
result = ""
var i = 0
for line in s.splitLines():
if i != 0:
result.add("\n")
for j in 1..count:
result.add(padding)
result.add(line)
i.inc
func unindent*(s: string, count: Natural = int.high,
padding: string = " "): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuUnindent".} =
## Unindents each line in `s` by `count` amount of `padding`.
##
## **Note:** This does not preserve the new line characters used in `s`.
##
## See also:
## * `dedent func<#dedent,string,Natural>`_
## * `align func<#align,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `alignLeft func<#alignLeft,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `spaces func<#spaces,Natural>`_
## * `indent func<#indent,string,Natural,string>`_
runnableExamples:
let x = """
Hello
There
""".unindent()
doAssert x == "Hello\nThere\n"
result = ""
var i = 0
for line in s.splitLines():
if i != 0:
result.add("\n")
var indentCount = 0
for j in 0..<count.int:
indentCount.inc
if j + padding.len-1 >= line.len or line[j .. j + padding.len-1] != padding:
indentCount = j
break
result.add(line[indentCount*padding.len .. ^1])
i.inc
func indentation*(s: string): Natural {.since: (1, 3).} =
## Returns the amount of indentation all lines of `s` have in common,
## ignoring lines that consist only of whitespace.
result = int.high
for line in s.splitLines:
for i, c in line:
if i >= result: break
elif c != ' ':
result = i
break
if result == int.high:
result = 0
func dedent*(s: string, count: Natural = indentation(s)): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuDedent", since: (1, 3).} =
## Unindents each line in `s` by `count` amount of `padding`.
## The only difference between this and the
## `unindent func<#unindent,string,Natural,string>`_ is that this by default
## only cuts off the amount of indentation that all lines of `s` share as
## opposed to all indentation. It only supports spaces as padding.
##
## **Note:** This does not preserve the new line characters used in `s`.
##
## See also:
## * `unindent func<#unindent,string,Natural,string>`_
## * `align func<#align,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `alignLeft func<#alignLeft,string,Natural,char>`_
## * `spaces func<#spaces,Natural>`_
## * `indent func<#indent,string,Natural,string>`_
runnableExamples:
let x = """
Hello
There
""".dedent()
doAssert x == "Hello\n There\n"
unindent(s, count, " ")
func delete*(s: var string, slice: Slice[int]) =
## Deletes the items `s[slice]`, raising `IndexDefect` if the slice contains
## elements out of range.
##
## This operation moves all elements after `s[slice]` in linear time, and
## is the string analog to `sequtils.delete`.
runnableExamples:
var a = "abcde"
doAssertRaises(IndexDefect): a.delete(4..5)
assert a == "abcde"
a.delete(4..4)
assert a == "abcd"
a.delete(1..2)
assert a == "ad"
a.delete(1..<1) # empty slice
assert a == "ad"
when compileOption("boundChecks"):
if not (slice.a < s.len and slice.a >= 0 and slice.b < s.len):
raise newException(IndexDefect, $(slice: slice, len: s.len))
if slice.b >= slice.a:
var i = slice.a
var j = slice.b + 1
var newLen = s.len - j + i
# if j < s.len: moveMem(addr s[i], addr s[j], s.len - j) # pending benchmark
while i < newLen:
s[i] = s[j]
inc(i)
inc(j)
setLen(s, newLen)
func delete*(s: var string, first, last: int) {.rtl, extern: "nsuDelete",
deprecated: "use `delete(s, first..last)`".} =
## Deletes in `s` the characters at positions `first .. last` (both ends included).
runnableExamples("--warning:deprecated:off"):
var a = "abracadabra"
a.delete(4, 5)
doAssert a == "abradabra"
a.delete(1, 6)
doAssert a == "ara"
a.delete(2, 999)
doAssert a == "ar"
var i = first
var j = min(len(s), last+1)
var newLen = len(s)-j+i
while i < newLen:
s[i] = s[j]
inc(i)
inc(j)
setLen(s, newLen)
func startsWith*(s: string, prefix: char): bool {.inline.} =
## Returns true if `s` starts with character `prefix`.
##
## See also:
## * `endsWith func<#endsWith,string,char>`_
## * `continuesWith func<#continuesWith,string,string,Natural>`_
## * `removePrefix func<#removePrefix,string,char>`_
runnableExamples:
let a = "abracadabra"
doAssert a.startsWith('a') == true
doAssert a.startsWith('b') == false
result = s.len > 0 and s[0] == prefix
func startsWith*(s, prefix: string): bool {.rtl, extern: "nsuStartsWith".} =
## Returns true if `s` starts with string `prefix`.
##
## If `prefix == ""` true is returned.
##
## See also:
## * `endsWith func<#endsWith,string,string>`_
## * `continuesWith func<#continuesWith,string,string,Natural>`_
## * `removePrefix func<#removePrefix,string,string>`_
runnableExamples:
let a = "abracadabra"
doAssert a.startsWith("abra") == true
doAssert a.startsWith("bra") == false
startsWithImpl(s, prefix)
func endsWith*(s: string, suffix: char): bool {.inline.} =
## Returns true if `s` ends with `suffix`.
##
## See also:
## * `startsWith func<#startsWith,string,char>`_
## * `continuesWith func<#continuesWith,string,string,Natural>`_
## * `removeSuffix func<#removeSuffix,string,char>`_
runnableExamples:
let a = "abracadabra"
doAssert a.endsWith('a') == true
doAssert a.endsWith('b') == false
result = s.len > 0 and s[s.high] == suffix
func endsWith*(s, suffix: string): bool {.rtl, extern: "nsuEndsWith".} =
## Returns true if `s` ends with `suffix`.
##
## If `suffix == ""` true is returned.
##
## See also:
## * `startsWith func<#startsWith,string,string>`_
## * `continuesWith func<#continuesWith,string,string,Natural>`_
## * `removeSuffix func<#removeSuffix,string,string>`_
runnableExamples:
let a = "abracadabra"
doAssert a.endsWith("abra") == true
doAssert a.endsWith("dab") == false
endsWithImpl(s, suffix)
func continuesWith*(s, substr: string, start: Natural): bool {.rtl,
extern: "nsuContinuesWith".} =
## Returns true if `s` continues with `substr` at position `start`.
##
## If `substr == ""` true is returned.
##
## See also:
## * `startsWith func<#startsWith,string,string>`_
## * `endsWith func<#endsWith,string,string>`_
runnableExamples:
let a = "abracadabra"
doAssert a.continuesWith("ca", 4) == true
doAssert a.continuesWith("ca", 5) == false
doAssert a.continuesWith("dab", 6) == true
var i = 0
while true:
if i >= substr.len: return true
if i+start >= s.len or s[i+start] != substr[i]: return false
inc(i)
func removePrefix*(s: var string, chars: set[char] = Newlines) {.rtl,
extern: "nsuRemovePrefixCharSet".} =
## Removes all characters from `chars` from the start of the string `s`
## (in-place).
##
## See also:
## * `removeSuffix func<#removeSuffix,string,set[char]>`_
runnableExamples:
var userInput = "\r\n*~Hello World!"
userInput.removePrefix
doAssert userInput == "*~Hello World!"
userInput.removePrefix({'~', '*'})
doAssert userInput == "Hello World!"
var otherInput = "?!?Hello!?!"
otherInput.removePrefix({'!', '?'})
doAssert otherInput == "Hello!?!"
var start = 0
while start < s.len and s[start] in chars: start += 1
if start > 0: s.delete(0..start - 1)
func removePrefix*(s: var string, c: char) {.rtl,
extern: "nsuRemovePrefixChar".} =
## Removes all occurrences of a single character (in-place) from the start
## of a string.
##
## See also:
## * `removeSuffix func<#removeSuffix,string,char>`_
## * `startsWith func<#startsWith,string,char>`_
runnableExamples:
var ident = "pControl"
ident.removePrefix('p')
doAssert ident == "Control"
removePrefix(s, chars = {c})
func removePrefix*(s: var string, prefix: string) {.rtl,
extern: "nsuRemovePrefixString".} =
## Remove the first matching prefix (in-place) from a string.
##
## See also:
## * `removeSuffix func<#removeSuffix,string,string>`_
## * `startsWith func<#startsWith,string,string>`_
runnableExamples:
var answers = "yesyes"
answers.removePrefix("yes")
doAssert answers == "yes"
if s.startsWith(prefix) and prefix.len > 0:
s.delete(0..prefix.len - 1)
func removeSuffix*(s: var string, chars: set[char] = Newlines) {.rtl,
extern: "nsuRemoveSuffixCharSet".} =
## Removes all characters from `chars` from the end of the string `s`
## (in-place).
##
## See also:
## * `removePrefix func<#removePrefix,string,set[char]>`_
runnableExamples:
var userInput = "Hello World!*~\r\n"
userInput.removeSuffix
doAssert userInput == "Hello World!*~"
userInput.removeSuffix({'~', '*'})
doAssert userInput == "Hello World!"
var otherInput = "Hello!?!"
otherInput.removeSuffix({'!', '?'})
doAssert otherInput == "Hello"
if s.len == 0: return
var last = s.high
while last > -1 and s[last] in chars: last -= 1
s.setLen(last + 1)
func removeSuffix*(s: var string, c: char) {.rtl,
extern: "nsuRemoveSuffixChar".} =
## Removes all occurrences of a single character (in-place) from the end
## of a string.
##
## See also:
## * `removePrefix func<#removePrefix,string,char>`_
## * `endsWith func<#endsWith,string,char>`_
runnableExamples:
var table = "users"
table.removeSuffix('s')
doAssert table == "user"
var dots = "Trailing dots......."
dots.removeSuffix('.')
doAssert dots == "Trailing dots"
removeSuffix(s, chars = {c})
func removeSuffix*(s: var string, suffix: string) {.rtl,
extern: "nsuRemoveSuffixString".} =
## Remove the first matching suffix (in-place) from a string.
##
## See also:
## * `removePrefix func<#removePrefix,string,string>`_
## * `endsWith func<#endsWith,string,string>`_
runnableExamples:
var answers = "yeses"
answers.removeSuffix("es")
doAssert answers == "yes"
var newLen = s.len
if s.endsWith(suffix):
newLen -= len(suffix)
s.setLen(newLen)
func addSep*(dest: var string, sep = ", ", startLen: Natural = 0) {.inline.} =
## Adds a separator to `dest` only if its length is bigger than `startLen`.
##
## A shorthand for:
##
## ```nim
## if dest.len > startLen: add(dest, sep)
## ```
##
## This is often useful for generating some code where the items need to
## be *separated* by `sep`. `sep` is only added if `dest` is longer than
## `startLen`. The following example creates a string describing
## an array of integers.
runnableExamples:
var arr = "["
for x in items([2, 3, 5, 7, 11]):
addSep(arr, startLen = len("["))
add(arr, $x)
add(arr, "]")
doAssert arr == "[2, 3, 5, 7, 11]"
if dest.len > startLen: add(dest, sep)
func allCharsInSet*(s: string, theSet: set[char]): bool =
## Returns true if every character of `s` is in the set `theSet`.
runnableExamples:
doAssert allCharsInSet("aeea", {'a', 'e'}) == true
doAssert allCharsInSet("", {'a', 'e'}) == true
for c in items(s):
if c notin theSet: return false
return true
func abbrev*(s: string, possibilities: openArray[string]): int =
## Returns the index of the first item in `possibilities` which starts
## with `s`, if not ambiguous.
##
## Returns -1 if no item has been found and -2 if multiple items match.
runnableExamples:
doAssert abbrev("fac", ["college", "faculty", "industry"]) == 1
doAssert abbrev("foo", ["college", "faculty", "industry"]) == -1 # Not found
doAssert abbrev("fac", ["college", "faculty", "faculties"]) == -2 # Ambiguous
doAssert abbrev("college", ["college", "colleges", "industry"]) == 0
result = -1 # none found
for i in 0..possibilities.len-1:
if possibilities[i].startsWith(s):
if possibilities[i] == s:
# special case: exact match shouldn't be ambiguous
return i
if result >= 0: return -2 # ambiguous
result = i
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
func join*(a: openArray[string], sep: string = ""): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuJoinSep".} =
## Concatenates all strings in the container `a`, separating them with `sep`.
runnableExamples:
doAssert join(["A", "B", "Conclusion"], " -> ") == "A -> B -> Conclusion"
if len(a) > 0:
var L = sep.len * (a.len-1)
for i in 0..high(a): inc(L, a[i].len)
result = newStringOfCap(L)
add(result, a[0])
for i in 1..high(a):
add(result, sep)
add(result, a[i])
else:
result = ""
proc join*[T: not string](a: openArray[T], sep: string = ""): string =
## Converts all elements in the container `a` to strings using `$`,
## and concatenates them with `sep`.
runnableExamples:
doAssert join([1, 2, 3], " -> ") == "1 -> 2 -> 3"
result = ""
for i, x in a:
if i > 0:
add(result, sep)
add(result, $x)
type
SkipTable* = array[char, int] ## Character table for efficient substring search.
func initSkipTable*(a: var SkipTable, sub: string) {.rtl,
extern: "nsuInitSkipTable".} =
## Initializes table `a` for efficient search of substring `sub`.
##
## See also:
## * `initSkipTable func<#initSkipTable,string>`_
## * `find func<#find,SkipTable,string,string,Natural,int>`_
# TODO: this should be the `default()` initializer for the type.
let m = len(sub)
fill(a, m)
for i in 0 ..< m - 1:
a[sub[i]] = m - 1 - i
func initSkipTable*(sub: string): SkipTable {.noinit, rtl,
extern: "nsuInitNewSkipTable".} =
## Returns a new table initialized for `sub`.
##
## See also:
## * `initSkipTable func<#initSkipTable,SkipTable,string>`_
## * `find func<#find,SkipTable,string,string,Natural,int>`_
initSkipTable(result, sub)
func find*(a: SkipTable, s, sub: string, start: Natural = 0, last = -1): int {.
rtl, extern: "nsuFindStrA".} =
## Searches for `sub` in `s` inside range `start..last` using preprocessed
## table `a`. If `last` is unspecified, it defaults to `s.high` (the last
## element).
##
## Searching is case-sensitive. If `sub` is not in `s`, -1 is returned.
##
## See also:
## * `initSkipTable func<#initSkipTable,string>`_
## * `initSkipTable func<#initSkipTable,SkipTable,string>`_
let
last = if last < 0: s.high else: last
subLast = sub.len - 1
if subLast == -1:
# this was an empty needle string,
# we count this as match in the first possible position:
return start
# This is an implementation of the Boyer-Moore Horspool algorithms
# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boyer%E2%80%93Moore%E2%80%93Horspool_algorithm
result = -1
var skip = start
while last - skip >= subLast:
var i = subLast
while s[skip + i] == sub[i]:
if i == 0:
return skip
dec i
inc skip, a[s[skip + subLast]]
when not (defined(js) or defined(nimdoc) or defined(nimscript)):
func c_memchr(cstr: pointer, c: char, n: csize_t): pointer {.
importc: "memchr", header: "<string.h>".}
const hasCStringBuiltin = true
else:
const hasCStringBuiltin = false
func find*(s: string, sub: char, start: Natural = 0, last = -1): int {.rtl,
extern: "nsuFindChar".} =
## Searches for `sub` in `s` inside range `start..last` (both ends included).
## If `last` is unspecified or negative, it defaults to `s.high` (the last element).
##
## Searching is case-sensitive. If `sub` is not in `s`, -1 is returned.
## Otherwise the index returned is relative to `s[0]`, not `start`.
## Subtract `start` from the result for a `start`-origin index.
##
## See also:
## * `rfind func<#rfind,string,char,Natural,int>`_
## * `replace func<#replace,string,char,char>`_
result = -1
let last = if last < 0: s.high else: last
template findImpl =
for i in int(start)..last:
if s[i] == sub:
return i
when nimvm:
findImpl()
else:
when hasCStringBuiltin:
let length = last-start+1
if length > 0:
let found = c_memchr(s[start].unsafeAddr, sub, cast[csize_t](length))
if not found.isNil:
return cast[int](found) -% cast[int](s.cstring)
else:
findImpl()
func find*(s: string, chars: set[char], start: Natural = 0, last = -1): int {.
rtl, extern: "nsuFindCharSet".} =
## Searches for `chars` in `s` inside range `start..last` (both ends included).
## If `last` is unspecified or negative, it defaults to `s.high` (the last element).
##
## If `s` contains none of the characters in `chars`, -1 is returned.
## Otherwise the index returned is relative to `s[0]`, not `start`.
## Subtract `start` from the result for a `start`-origin index.
##
## See also:
## * `rfind func<#rfind,string,set[char],Natural,int>`_
## * `multiReplace func<#multiReplace,string,varargs[]>`_
result = -1
let last = if last < 0: s.high else: last
for i in int(start)..last:
if s[i] in chars:
return i
when defined(linux):
proc memmem(haystack: pointer, haystacklen: csize_t,
needle: pointer, needlelen: csize_t): pointer {.importc, header: """#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <string.h>""".}
elif defined(bsd) or (defined(macosx) and not defined(ios)):
proc memmem(haystack: pointer, haystacklen: csize_t,
needle: pointer, needlelen: csize_t): pointer {.importc, header: "#include <string.h>".}
func find*(s, sub: string, start: Natural = 0, last = -1): int {.rtl,
extern: "nsuFindStr".} =
## Searches for `sub` in `s` inside range `start..last` (both ends included).
## If `last` is unspecified or negative, it defaults to `s.high` (the last element).
##
## Searching is case-sensitive. If `sub` is not in `s`, -1 is returned.
## Otherwise the index returned is relative to `s[0]`, not `start`.
## Subtract `start` from the result for a `start`-origin index.
##
## See also:
## * `rfind func<#rfind,string,string,Natural,int>`_
## * `replace func<#replace,string,string,string>`_
if sub.len > s.len - start: return -1
if sub.len == 1: return find(s, sub[0], start, last)
template useSkipTable =
result = find(initSkipTable(sub), s, sub, start, last)
when nimvm:
useSkipTable()
else:
when declared(memmem):
let subLen = sub.len
if last < 0 and start < s.len and subLen != 0:
let found = memmem(s[start].unsafeAddr, csize_t(s.len - start), sub.cstring, csize_t(subLen))
result = if not found.isNil:
cast[int](found) -% cast[int](s.cstring)
else:
-1
else:
useSkipTable()
else:
useSkipTable()
func rfind*(s: string, sub: char, start: Natural = 0, last = -1): int {.rtl,
extern: "nsuRFindChar".} =
## Searches for `sub` in `s` inside range `start..last` (both ends included)
## in reverse -- starting at high indexes and moving lower to the first
## character or `start`. If `last` is unspecified, it defaults to `s.high`
## (the last element).
##
## Searching is case-sensitive. If `sub` is not in `s`, -1 is returned.
## Otherwise the index returned is relative to `s[0]`, not `start`.
## Subtract `start` from the result for a `start`-origin index.
##
## See also:
## * `find func<#find,string,char,Natural,int>`_
let last = if last == -1: s.high else: last
for i in countdown(last, start):
if sub == s[i]: return i
return -1
func rfind*(s: string, chars: set[char], start: Natural = 0, last = -1): int {.
rtl, extern: "nsuRFindCharSet".} =
## Searches for `chars` in `s` inside range `start..last` (both ends
## included) in reverse -- starting at high indexes and moving lower to the
## first character or `start`. If `last` is unspecified, it defaults to
## `s.high` (the last element).
##
## If `s` contains none of the characters in `chars`, -1 is returned.
## Otherwise the index returned is relative to `s[0]`, not `start`.
## Subtract `start` from the result for a `start`-origin index.
##
## See also:
## * `find func<#find,string,set[char],Natural,int>`_
let last = if last == -1: s.high else: last
for i in countdown(last, start):
if s[i] in chars: return i
return -1
func rfind*(s, sub: string, start: Natural = 0, last = -1): int {.rtl,
extern: "nsuRFindStr".} =
## Searches for `sub` in `s` inside range `start..last` (both ends included)
## included) in reverse -- starting at high indexes and moving lower to the
## first character or `start`. If `last` is unspecified, it defaults to
## `s.high` (the last element).
##
## Searching is case-sensitive. If `sub` is not in `s`, -1 is returned.
## Otherwise the index returned is relative to `s[0]`, not `start`.
## Subtract `start` from the result for a `start`-origin index.
##
## See also:
## * `find func<#find,string,string,Natural,int>`_
if sub.len == 0:
let rightIndex: Natural = if last < 0: s.len else: last
return max(start, rightIndex)
if sub.len > s.len - start:
return -1
let last = if last == -1: s.high else: last
result = 0
for i in countdown(last - sub.len + 1, start):
for j in 0..sub.len-1:
result = i
if sub[j] != s[i+j]:
result = -1
break
if result != -1: return
return -1
func count*(s: string, sub: char): int {.rtl, extern: "nsuCountChar".} =
## Counts the occurrences of the character `sub` in the string `s`.
##
## See also:
## * `countLines func<#countLines,string>`_
result = 0
for c in s:
if c == sub: inc result
func count*(s: string, subs: set[char]): int {.rtl,
extern: "nsuCountCharSet".} =
## Counts the occurrences of the group of character `subs` in the string `s`.
##
## See also:
## * `countLines func<#countLines,string>`_
doAssert card(subs) > 0
result = 0
for c in s:
if c in subs: inc result
func count*(s: string, sub: string, overlapping: bool = false): int {.rtl,
extern: "nsuCountString".} =
## Counts the occurrences of a substring `sub` in the string `s`.
## Overlapping occurrences of `sub` only count when `overlapping`
## is set to true (default: false).
##
## See also:
## * `countLines func<#countLines,string>`_
doAssert sub.len > 0
result = 0
var i = 0
while true:
i = s.find(sub, i)
if i < 0: break
if overlapping: inc i
else: i += sub.len
inc result
func countLines*(s: string): int {.rtl, extern: "nsuCountLines".} =
## Returns the number of lines in the string `s`.
##
## This is the same as `len(splitLines(s))`, but much more efficient
## because it doesn't modify the string creating temporary objects. Every
## `character literal <manual.html#lexical-analysis-character-literals>`_
## newline combination (CR, LF, CR-LF) is supported.
##
## In this context, a line is any string separated by a newline combination.
## A line can be an empty string.
##
## See also:
## * `splitLines func<#splitLines,string>`_
runnableExamples:
doAssert countLines("First line\l and second line.") == 2
result = 1
var i = 0
while i < s.len:
case s[i]
of '\c':
if i+1 < s.len and s[i+1] == '\l': inc i
inc result
of '\l': inc result
else: discard
inc i
func contains*(s, sub: string): bool =
## Same as `find(s, sub) >= 0`.
##
## See also:
## * `find func<#find,string,string,Natural,int>`_
return find(s, sub) >= 0
func contains*(s: string, chars: set[char]): bool =
## Same as `find(s, chars) >= 0`.
##
## See also:
## * `find func<#find,string,set[char],Natural,int>`_
return find(s, chars) >= 0
func replace*(s, sub: string, by = ""): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuReplaceStr".} =
## Replaces every occurrence of the string `sub` in `s` with the string `by`.
##
## See also:
## * `find func<#find,string,string,Natural,int>`_
## * `replace func<#replace,string,char,char>`_ for replacing
## single characters
## * `replaceWord func<#replaceWord,string,string,string>`_
## * `multiReplace func<#multiReplace,string,varargs[]>`_
result = ""
let subLen = sub.len
if subLen == 0:
result = s
elif subLen == 1:
# when the pattern is a single char, we use a faster
# char-based search that doesn't need a skip table:
let c = sub[0]
let last = s.high
var i = 0
while true:
let j = find(s, c, i, last)
if j < 0: break
add result, substr(s, i, j - 1)
add result, by
i = j + subLen
# copy the rest:
add result, substr(s, i)
else:
var a = initSkipTable(sub)
let last = s.high
var i = 0
while true:
let j = find(a, s, sub, i, last)
if j < 0: break
add result, substr(s, i, j - 1)
add result, by
i = j + subLen
# copy the rest:
add result, substr(s, i)
func replace*(s: string, sub, by: char): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuReplaceChar".} =
## Replaces every occurrence of the character `sub` in `s` with the character
## `by`.
##
## Optimized version of `replace <#replace,string,string,string>`_ for
## characters.
##
## See also:
## * `find func<#find,string,char,Natural,int>`_
## * `replaceWord func<#replaceWord,string,string,string>`_
## * `multiReplace func<#multiReplace,string,varargs[]>`_
result = newString(s.len)
var i = 0
while i < s.len:
if s[i] == sub: result[i] = by
else: result[i] = s[i]
inc(i)
func replaceWord*(s, sub: string, by = ""): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuReplaceWord".} =
## Replaces every occurrence of the string `sub` in `s` with the string `by`.
##
## Each occurrence of `sub` has to be surrounded by word boundaries
## (comparable to `\b` in regular expressions), otherwise it is not
## replaced.
if sub.len == 0: return s
const wordChars = {'a'..'z', 'A'..'Z', '0'..'9', '_', '\128'..'\255'}
result = ""
var a = initSkipTable(sub)
var i = 0
let last = s.high
let sublen = sub.len
if sublen > 0:
while true:
var j = find(a, s, sub, i, last)
if j < 0: break
# word boundary?
if (j == 0 or s[j-1] notin wordChars) and
(j+sub.len >= s.len or s[j+sub.len] notin wordChars):
add result, substr(s, i, j - 1)
add result, by
i = j + sublen
else:
add result, substr(s, i, j)
i = j + 1
# copy the rest:
add result, substr(s, i)
func multiReplace*(s: string, replacements: varargs[(string, string)]): string =
## Same as `replace<#replace,string,string,string>`_, but specialized for
## doing multiple replacements in a single pass through the input string.
##
## `multiReplace` scans the input string from left to right and replaces the
## matching substrings in the same order as passed in the argument list.
##
## The implications of the order of scanning the string and matching the
## replacements:
## - In case of multiple matches at a given position, the earliest
## replacement is applied.
## - Overlaps are not handled. After performing a replacement, the scan
## continues from the character after the matched substring. If the
## resulting string then contains a possible match starting in a newly
## placed substring, the additional replacement is not performed.
##
## If the resulting string is not longer than the original input string,
## only a single memory allocation is required.
##
runnableExamples:
# Swapping occurrences of 'a' and 'b':
doAssert multireplace("abba", [("a", "b"), ("b", "a")]) == "baab"
# The second replacement ("ab") is matched and performed first, the scan then
# continues from 'c', so the "bc" replacement is never matched and thus skipped.
doAssert multireplace("abc", [("bc", "x"), ("ab", "_b")]) == "_bc"
result = newStringOfCap(s.len)
var i = 0
var fastChk: set[char] = {}
for sub, by in replacements.items:
if sub.len > 0:
# Include first character of all replacements
fastChk.incl sub[0]
while i < s.len:
block sIteration:
# Assume most chars in s are not candidates for any replacement operation
if s[i] in fastChk:
for sub, by in replacements.items:
if sub.len > 0 and s.continuesWith(sub, i):
add result, by
inc(i, sub.len)
break sIteration
# No matching replacement found
# copy current character from s
add result, s[i]
inc(i)
func insertSep*(s: string, sep = '_', digits = 3): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuInsertSep".} =
## Inserts the separator `sep` after `digits` characters (default: 3)
## from right to left.
##
## Even though the algorithm works with any string `s`, it is only useful
## if `s` contains a number.
runnableExamples:
doAssert insertSep("1000000") == "1_000_000"
result = newStringOfCap(s.len)
let hasPrefix = isDigit(s[s.low]) == false
var idx: int
if hasPrefix:
result.add s[s.low]
for i in (s.low + 1)..s.high:
idx = i
if not isDigit(s[i]):
result.add s[i]
else:
break
let partsLen = s.len - idx
var L = (partsLen-1) div digits + partsLen
result.setLen(L + idx)
var j = 0
dec(L)
for i in countdown(partsLen-1, 0):
if j == digits:
result[L + idx] = sep
dec(L)
j = 0
result[L + idx] = s[i + idx]
inc(j)
dec(L)
func escape*(s: string, prefix = "\"", suffix = "\""): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuEscape".} =
## Escapes a string `s`.
##
## .. note:: The escaping scheme is different from
## `system.addEscapedChar`.
##
## * replaces `'\0'..'\31'` and `'\127'..'\255'` by `\xHH` where `HH` is its hexadecimal value
## * replaces ``\`` by `\\`
## * replaces `'` by `\'`
## * replaces `"` by `\"`
##
## The resulting string is prefixed with `prefix` and suffixed with `suffix`.
## Both may be empty strings.
##
## See also:
## * `addEscapedChar proc<system.html#addEscapedChar,string,char>`_
## * `unescape func<#unescape,string,string,string>`_ for the opposite
## operation
result = newStringOfCap(s.len + s.len shr 2)
result.add(prefix)
for c in items(s):
case c
of '\0'..'\31', '\127'..'\255':
add(result, "\\x")
add(result, toHex(ord(c), 2))
of '\\': add(result, "\\\\")
of '\'': add(result, "\\'")
of '\"': add(result, "\\\"")
else: add(result, c)
add(result, suffix)
func unescape*(s: string, prefix = "\"", suffix = "\""): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuUnescape".} =
## Unescapes a string `s`.
##
## This complements `escape func<#escape,string,string,string>`_
## as it performs the opposite operations.
##
## If `s` does not begin with `prefix` and end with `suffix` a
## ValueError exception will be raised.
result = newStringOfCap(s.len)
var i = prefix.len
if not s.startsWith(prefix):
raise newException(ValueError,
"String does not start with: " & prefix)
while true:
if i >= s.len-suffix.len: break
if s[i] == '\\':
if i+1 >= s.len:
result.add('\\')
break
case s[i+1]:
of 'x':
inc i, 2
var c = 0
i += parseutils.parseHex(s, c, i, maxLen = 2)
result.add(chr(c))
dec i, 2
of '\\':
result.add('\\')
of '\'':
result.add('\'')
of '\"':
result.add('\"')
else:
result.add("\\" & s[i+1])
inc(i, 2)
else:
result.add(s[i])
inc(i)
if not s.endsWith(suffix):
raise newException(ValueError,
"String does not end in: " & suffix)
func validIdentifier*(s: string): bool {.rtl, extern: "nsuValidIdentifier".} =
## Returns true if `s` is a valid identifier.
##
## A valid identifier starts with a character of the set `IdentStartChars`
## and is followed by any number of characters of the set `IdentChars`.
runnableExamples:
doAssert "abc_def08".validIdentifier
if s.len > 0 and s[0] in IdentStartChars:
for i in 1..s.len-1:
if s[i] notin IdentChars: return false
return true
# floating point formatting:
when not defined(js):
func c_snprintf(buf: cstring, n: csize_t, frmt: cstring): cint {.header: "<stdio.h>",
importc: "snprintf", varargs.}
type
FloatFormatMode* = enum
## The different modes of floating point formatting.
ffDefault, ## use the shorter floating point notation
ffDecimal, ## use decimal floating point notation
ffScientific ## use scientific notation (using `e` character)
func formatBiggestFloat*(f: BiggestFloat, format: FloatFormatMode = ffDefault,
precision: range[-1..32] = 16;
decimalSep = '.'): string {.rtl, extern: "nsu$1".} =
## Converts a floating point value `f` to a string.
##
## If `format == ffDecimal` then precision is the number of digits to
## be printed after the decimal point.
## If `format == ffScientific` then precision is the maximum number
## of significant digits to be printed.
## `precision`'s default value is the maximum number of meaningful digits
## after the decimal point for Nim's `biggestFloat` type.
##
## If `precision == -1`, it tries to format it nicely.
runnableExamples:
let x = 123.456
doAssert x.formatBiggestFloat() == "123.4560000000000"
doAssert x.formatBiggestFloat(ffDecimal, 4) == "123.4560"
doAssert x.formatBiggestFloat(ffScientific, 2) == "1.23e+02"
when nimvm:
discard "implemented in the vmops"
else:
when defined(js):
var precision = precision
if precision == -1:
# use the same default precision as c_snprintf
precision = 6
var res: cstring
case format
of ffDefault:
{.emit: "`res` = `f`.toString();".}
of ffDecimal:
{.emit: "`res` = `f`.toFixed(`precision`);".}
of ffScientific:
{.emit: "`res` = `f`.toExponential(`precision`);".}
result = $res
if 1.0 / f == -Inf:
# JavaScript removes the "-" from negative Zero, add it back here
result = "-" & $res
for i in 0 ..< result.len:
# Depending on the locale either dot or comma is produced,
# but nothing else is possible:
if result[i] in {'.', ','}: result[i] = decimalSep
else:
const floatFormatToChar: array[FloatFormatMode, char] = ['g', 'f', 'e']
var
frmtstr {.noinit.}: array[0..5, char]
buf {.noinit.}: array[0..2500, char]
L: cint
frmtstr[0] = '%'
if precision >= 0:
frmtstr[1] = '#'
frmtstr[2] = '.'
frmtstr[3] = '*'
frmtstr[4] = floatFormatToChar[format]
frmtstr[5] = '\0'
L = c_snprintf(cast[cstring](addr buf), csize_t(2501), cast[cstring](addr frmtstr), precision, f)
else:
frmtstr[1] = floatFormatToChar[format]
frmtstr[2] = '\0'
L = c_snprintf(cast[cstring](addr buf), csize_t(2501), cast[cstring](addr frmtstr), f)
result = newString(L)
for i in 0 ..< L:
# Depending on the locale either dot or comma is produced,
# but nothing else is possible:
if buf[i] in {'.', ','}: result[i] = decimalSep
else: result[i] = buf[i]
when defined(windows):
# VS pre 2015 violates the C standard: "The exponent always contains at
# least two digits, and only as many more digits as necessary to
# represent the exponent." [C11 §7.21.6.1]
# The following post-processing fixes this behavior.
if result.len > 4 and result[^4] == '+' and result[^3] == '0':
result[^3] = result[^2]
result[^2] = result[^1]
result.setLen(result.len - 1)
func formatFloat*(f: float, format: FloatFormatMode = ffDefault,
precision: range[-1..32] = 16; decimalSep = '.'): string {.
rtl, extern: "nsu$1".} =
## Converts a floating point value `f` to a string.
##
## If `format == ffDecimal` then precision is the number of digits to
## be printed after the decimal point.
## If `format == ffScientific` then precision is the maximum number
## of significant digits to be printed.
## `precision`'s default value is the maximum number of meaningful digits
## after the decimal point for Nim's `float` type.
##
## If `precision == -1`, it tries to format it nicely.
runnableExamples:
let x = 123.456
doAssert x.formatFloat() == "123.4560000000000"
doAssert x.formatFloat(ffDecimal, 4) == "123.4560"
doAssert x.formatFloat(ffScientific, 2) == "1.23e+02"
result = formatBiggestFloat(f, format, precision, decimalSep)
func trimZeros*(x: var string; decimalSep = '.') =
## Trim trailing zeros from a formatted floating point
## value `x` (must be declared as `var`).
##
## This modifies `x` itself, it does not return a copy.
runnableExamples:
var x = "123.456000000"
x.trimZeros()
doAssert x == "123.456"
let sPos = find(x, decimalSep)
if sPos >= 0:
var last = find(x, 'e', start = sPos)
last = if last >= 0: last - 1 else: high(x)
var pos = last
while pos >= 0 and x[pos] == '0': dec(pos)
if pos > sPos: inc(pos)
if last >= pos:
x.delete(pos..last)
type
BinaryPrefixMode* = enum ## The different names for binary prefixes.
bpIEC, # use the IEC/ISO standard prefixes such as kibi
bpColloquial # use the colloquial kilo, mega etc
func formatSize*(bytes: int64,
decimalSep = '.',
prefix = bpIEC,
includeSpace = false): string =
## Rounds and formats `bytes`.
##
## By default, uses the IEC/ISO standard binary prefixes, so 1024 will be
## formatted as 1KiB. Set prefix to `bpColloquial` to use the colloquial
## names from the SI standard (e.g. k for 1000 being reused as 1024).
##
## `includeSpace` can be set to true to include the (SI preferred) space
## between the number and the unit (e.g. 1 KiB).
##
## See also:
## * `strformat module<strformat.html>`_ for string interpolation and formatting
runnableExamples:
doAssert formatSize((1'i64 shl 31) + (300'i64 shl 20)) == "2.293GiB"
doAssert formatSize((2.234*1024*1024).int) == "2.234MiB"
doAssert formatSize(4096, includeSpace = true) == "4 KiB"
doAssert formatSize(4096, prefix = bpColloquial, includeSpace = true) == "4 kB"
doAssert formatSize(4096) == "4KiB"
doAssert formatSize(5_378_934, prefix = bpColloquial, decimalSep = ',') == "5,13MB"
const iecPrefixes = ["", "Ki", "Mi", "Gi", "Ti", "Pi", "Ei", "Zi", "Yi"]
const collPrefixes = ["", "k", "M", "G", "T", "P", "E", "Z", "Y"]
var
xb: int64 = bytes
fbytes: float
lastXb: int64 = bytes
matchedIndex = 0
prefixes: array[9, string]
if prefix == bpColloquial:
prefixes = collPrefixes
else:
prefixes = iecPrefixes
# Iterate through prefixes seeing if value will be greater than
# 0 in each case
for index in 1..<prefixes.len:
lastXb = xb
xb = bytes div (1'i64 shl (index*10))
matchedIndex = index
if xb == 0:
xb = lastXb
matchedIndex = index - 1
break
# xb has the integer number for the latest value; index should be correct
fbytes = bytes.float / (1'i64 shl (matchedIndex*10)).float
result = formatFloat(fbytes, format = ffDecimal, precision = 3,
decimalSep = decimalSep)
result.trimZeros(decimalSep)
if includeSpace:
result &= " "
result &= prefixes[matchedIndex]
result &= "B"
func formatEng*(f: BiggestFloat,
precision: range[0..32] = 10,
trim: bool = true,
siPrefix: bool = false,
unit: string = "",
decimalSep = '.',
useUnitSpace = false): string =
## Converts a floating point value `f` to a string using engineering notation.
##
## Numbers in of the range -1000.0<f<1000.0 will be formatted without an
## exponent. Numbers outside of this range will be formatted as a
## significand in the range -1000.0<f<1000.0 and an exponent that will always
## be an integer multiple of 3, corresponding with the SI prefix scale k, M,
## G, T etc for numbers with an absolute value greater than 1 and m, μ, n, p
## etc for numbers with an absolute value less than 1.
##
## The default configuration (`trim=true` and `precision=10`) shows the
## **shortest** form that precisely (up to a maximum of 10 decimal places)
## displays the value. For example, 4.100000 will be displayed as 4.1 (which
## is mathematically identical) whereas 4.1000003 will be displayed as
## 4.1000003.
##
## If `trim` is set to true, trailing zeros will be removed; if false, the
## number of digits specified by `precision` will always be shown.
##
## `precision` can be used to set the number of digits to be shown after the
## decimal point or (if `trim` is true) the maximum number of digits to be
## shown.
##
## ```nim
## formatEng(0, 2, trim=false) == "0.00"
## formatEng(0, 2) == "0"
## formatEng(0.053, 0) == "53e-3"
## formatEng(52731234, 2) == "52.73e6"
## formatEng(-52731234, 2) == "-52.73e6"
## ```
##
## If `siPrefix` is set to true, the number will be displayed with the SI
## prefix corresponding to the exponent. For example 4100 will be displayed
## as "4.1 k" instead of "4.1e3". Note that `u` is used for micro- in place
## of the greek letter mu (μ) as per ISO 2955. Numbers with an absolute
## value outside of the range 1e-18<f<1000e18 (1a<f<1000E) will be displayed
## with an exponent rather than an SI prefix, regardless of whether
## `siPrefix` is true.
##
## If `useUnitSpace` is true, the provided unit will be appended to the string
## (with a space as required by the SI standard). This behaviour is slightly
## different to appending the unit to the result as the location of the space
## is altered depending on whether there is an exponent.
##
## ```nim
## formatEng(4100, siPrefix=true, unit="V") == "4.1 kV"
## formatEng(4.1, siPrefix=true, unit="V") == "4.1 V"
## formatEng(4.1, siPrefix=true) == "4.1" # Note lack of space
## formatEng(4100, siPrefix=true) == "4.1 k"
## formatEng(4.1, siPrefix=true, unit="") == "4.1 " # Space with unit=""
## formatEng(4100, siPrefix=true, unit="") == "4.1 k"
## formatEng(4100) == "4.1e3"
## formatEng(4100, unit="V") == "4.1e3 V"
## formatEng(4100, unit="", useUnitSpace=true) == "4.1e3 " # Space with useUnitSpace=true
## ```
##
## `decimalSep` is used as the decimal separator.
##
## See also:
## * `strformat module<strformat.html>`_ for string interpolation and formatting
var
absolute: BiggestFloat
significand: BiggestFloat
fexponent: BiggestFloat
exponent: int
splitResult: seq[string]
suffix: string = ""
func getPrefix(exp: int): char =
## Get the SI prefix for a given exponent
##
## Assumes exponent is a multiple of 3; returns ' ' if no prefix found
const siPrefixes = ['a', 'f', 'p', 'n', 'u', 'm', ' ', 'k', 'M', 'G', 'T',
'P', 'E']
var index: int = (exp div 3) + 6
result = ' '
if index in low(siPrefixes)..high(siPrefixes):
result = siPrefixes[index]
# Most of the work is done with the sign ignored, so get the absolute value
absolute = abs(f)
significand = f
if absolute == 0.0:
# Simple case: just format it and force the exponent to 0
exponent = 0
result = significand.formatBiggestFloat(ffDecimal, precision,
decimalSep = '.')
else:
# Find the best exponent that's a multiple of 3
fexponent = floor(log10(absolute))
fexponent = 3.0 * floor(fexponent / 3.0)
# Adjust the significand for the new exponent
significand /= pow(10.0, fexponent)
# Adjust the significand and check whether it has affected
# the exponent
absolute = abs(significand)
if absolute >= 1000.0:
significand *= 0.001
fexponent += 3
# Components of the result:
result = significand.formatBiggestFloat(ffDecimal, precision,
decimalSep = '.')
exponent = fexponent.int()
splitResult = result.split('.')
result = splitResult[0]
# result should have at most one decimal character
if splitResult.len() > 1:
# If trim is set, we get rid of trailing zeros. Don't use trimZeros here as
# we can be a bit more efficient through knowledge that there will never be
# an exponent in this part.
if trim:
while splitResult[1].endsWith("0"):
# Trim last character
splitResult[1].setLen(splitResult[1].len-1)
if splitResult[1].len() > 0:
result &= decimalSep & splitResult[1]
else:
result &= decimalSep & splitResult[1]
# Combine the results accordingly
if siPrefix and exponent != 0:
var p = getPrefix(exponent)
if p != ' ':
suffix = " " & p
exponent = 0 # Exponent replaced by SI prefix
if suffix == "" and useUnitSpace:
suffix = " "
suffix &= unit
if exponent != 0:
result &= "e" & $exponent
result &= suffix
func findNormalized(x: string, inArray: openArray[string]): int =
var i = 0
while i < high(inArray):
if cmpIgnoreStyle(x, inArray[i]) == 0: return i
inc(i, 2) # incrementing by 1 would probably lead to a
# security hole...
return -1
func invalidFormatString(formatstr: string) {.noinline.} =
raise newException(ValueError, "invalid format string: " & formatstr)
func addf*(s: var string, formatstr: string, a: varargs[string, `$`]) {.rtl,
extern: "nsuAddf".} =
## The same as `add(s, formatstr % a)`, but more efficient.
const PatternChars = {'a'..'z', 'A'..'Z', '0'..'9', '\128'..'\255', '_'}
var i = 0
var num = 0
while i < len(formatstr):
if formatstr[i] == '$' and i+1 < len(formatstr):
case formatstr[i+1]
of '#':
if num > a.high: invalidFormatString(formatstr)
add s, a[num]
inc i, 2
inc num
of '$':
add s, '$'
inc(i, 2)
of '1'..'9', '-':
var j = 0
inc(i) # skip $
var negative = formatstr[i] == '-'
if negative: inc i
while i < formatstr.len and formatstr[i] in Digits:
j = j * 10 + ord(formatstr[i]) - ord('0')
inc(i)
let idx = if not negative: j-1 else: a.len-j
if idx < 0 or idx > a.high: invalidFormatString(formatstr)
add s, a[idx]
of '{':
var j = i+2
var k = 0
var negative = formatstr[j] == '-'
if negative: inc j
var isNumber = 0
while j < formatstr.len and formatstr[j] notin {'\0', '}'}:
if formatstr[j] in Digits:
k = k * 10 + ord(formatstr[j]) - ord('0')
if isNumber == 0: isNumber = 1
else:
isNumber = -1
inc(j)
if isNumber == 1:
let idx = if not negative: k-1 else: a.len-k
if idx < 0 or idx > a.high: invalidFormatString(formatstr)
add s, a[idx]
else:
var x = findNormalized(substr(formatstr, i+2, j-1), a)
if x >= 0 and x < high(a): add s, a[x+1]
else: invalidFormatString(formatstr)
i = j+1
of 'a'..'z', 'A'..'Z', '\128'..'\255', '_':
var j = i+1
while j < formatstr.len and formatstr[j] in PatternChars: inc(j)
var x = findNormalized(substr(formatstr, i+1, j-1), a)
if x >= 0 and x < high(a): add s, a[x+1]
else: invalidFormatString(formatstr)
i = j
else:
invalidFormatString(formatstr)
else:
add s, formatstr[i]
inc(i)
func `%`*(formatstr: string, a: openArray[string]): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuFormatOpenArray".} =
## Interpolates a format string with the values from `a`.
##
## The `substitution`:idx: operator performs string substitutions in
## `formatstr` and returns a modified `formatstr`. This is often called
## `string interpolation`:idx:.
##
## This is best explained by an example:
##
## ```nim
## "$1 eats $2." % ["The cat", "fish"]
## ```
##
## Results in:
##
## ```nim
## "The cat eats fish."
## ```
##
## The substitution variables (the thing after the `$`) are enumerated
## from 1 to `a.len`.
## To produce a verbatim `$`, use `$$`.
## The notation `$#` can be used to refer to the next substitution
## variable:
##
## ```nim
## "$# eats $#." % ["The cat", "fish"]
## ```
##
## Substitution variables can also be words (that is
## `[A-Za-z_]+[A-Za-z0-9_]*`) in which case the arguments in `a` with even
## indices are keys and with odd indices are the corresponding values.
## An example:
##
## ```nim
## "$animal eats $food." % ["animal", "The cat", "food", "fish"]
## ```
##
## Results in:
##
## ```nim
## "The cat eats fish."
## ```
##
## The variables are compared with `cmpIgnoreStyle`. `ValueError` is
## raised if an ill-formed format string has been passed to the `%` operator.
##
## See also:
## * `strformat module<strformat.html>`_ for string interpolation and formatting
result = newStringOfCap(formatstr.len + a.len shl 4)
addf(result, formatstr, a)
func `%`*(formatstr, a: string): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuFormatSingleElem".} =
## This is the same as `formatstr % [a]` (see
## `% func<#%25,string,openArray[string]>`_).
result = newStringOfCap(formatstr.len + a.len)
addf(result, formatstr, [a])
func format*(formatstr: string, a: varargs[string, `$`]): string {.rtl,
extern: "nsuFormatVarargs".} =
## This is the same as `formatstr % a` (see
## `% func<#%25,string,openArray[string]>`_) except that it supports
## auto stringification.
##
## See also:
## * `strformat module<strformat.html>`_ for string interpolation and formatting
result = newStringOfCap(formatstr.len + a.len)
addf(result, formatstr, a)
func strip*(s: string, leading = true, trailing = true,
chars: set[char] = Whitespace): string {.rtl, extern: "nsuStrip".} =
## Strips leading or trailing `chars` (default: whitespace characters)
## from `s` and returns the resulting string.
##
## If `leading` is true (default), leading `chars` are stripped.
## If `trailing` is true (default), trailing `chars` are stripped.
## If both are false, the string is returned unchanged.
##
## See also:
## * `strip proc<strbasics.html#strip,string,set[char]>`_ Inplace version.
## * `stripLineEnd func<#stripLineEnd,string>`_
runnableExamples:
let a = " vhellov "
let b = strip(a)
doAssert b == "vhellov"
doAssert a.strip(leading = false) == " vhellov"
doAssert a.strip(trailing = false) == "vhellov "
doAssert b.strip(chars = {'v'}) == "hello"
doAssert b.strip(leading = false, chars = {'v'}) == "vhello"
let c = "blaXbla"
doAssert c.strip(chars = {'b', 'a'}) == "laXbl"
doAssert c.strip(chars = {'b', 'a', 'l'}) == "X"
var
first = 0
last = len(s)-1
if leading:
while first <= last and s[first] in chars: inc(first)
if trailing:
while last >= first and s[last] in chars: dec(last)
result = substr(s, first, last)
func stripLineEnd*(s: var string) =
## Strips one of these suffixes from `s` in-place:
## `\r, \n, \r\n, \f, \v` (at most once instance).
## For example, can be useful in conjunction with `osproc.execCmdEx`.
## aka: `chomp`:idx:
runnableExamples:
var s = "foo\n\n"
s.stripLineEnd
doAssert s == "foo\n"
s = "foo\r\n"
s.stripLineEnd
doAssert s == "foo"
if s.len > 0:
case s[^1]
of '\n':
if s.len > 1 and s[^2] == '\r':
s.setLen s.len-2
else:
s.setLen s.len-1
of '\r', '\v', '\f':
s.setLen s.len-1
else:
discard
iterator tokenize*(s: string, seps: set[char] = Whitespace): tuple[
token: string, isSep: bool] =
## Tokenizes the string `s` into substrings.
##
## Substrings are separated by a substring containing only `seps`.
## Example:
##
## ```nim
## for word in tokenize(" this is an example "):
## writeLine(stdout, word)
## ```
##
## Results in:
##
## ```nim
## (" ", true)
## ("this", false)
## (" ", true)
## ("is", false)
## (" ", true)
## ("an", false)
## (" ", true)
## ("example", false)
## (" ", true)
## ```
var i = 0
while true:
var j = i
var isSep = j < s.len and s[j] in seps
while j < s.len and (s[j] in seps) == isSep: inc(j)
if j > i:
yield (substr(s, i, j-1), isSep)
else:
break
i = j
func isEmptyOrWhitespace*(s: string): bool {.rtl,
extern: "nsuIsEmptyOrWhitespace".} =
## Checks if `s` is empty or consists entirely of whitespace characters.
result = s.allCharsInSet(Whitespace)
|