string - Manipulate strings
string option arg ?arg ...?
Performs one of several string operations, depending on
option. The legal options (which may be abbreviated) are:
- string cat
?string1? ?string2...?
- Concatenate the given strings just like placing them directly next
to each other and return the resulting compound string. If no
strings are present, the result is an empty string.
This primitive is occasionally handier than juxtaposition of
strings when mixed quoting is wanted, or when the aim is to return the
result of a concatenation without resorting to return -level
0, and is more efficient than building a list of arguments and using
join with an empty join string.
- string compare
?-nocase? ?-length length? string1
string2
- Perform a character-by-character comparison of strings string1 and
string2. Returns -1, 0, or 1, depending on whether string1
is lexicographically less than, equal to, or greater than string2.
If -length is specified, then only the first length
characters are used in the comparison. If -length is negative, it
is ignored. If -nocase is specified, then the strings are compared
in a case-insensitive manner.
- string equal
?-nocase? ?-length length? string1
string2
- Perform a character-by-character comparison of strings string1 and
string2. Returns 1 if string1 and string2 are
identical, or 0 when not. If -length is specified, then only the
first length characters are used in the comparison. If
-length is negative, it is ignored. If -nocase is specified,
then the strings are compared in a case-insensitive manner.
- string first
needleString haystackString ?startIndex?
- Search haystackString for a sequence of characters that exactly
match the characters in needleString. If found, return the index of
the first character in the first such match within haystackString.
If not found, return -1. If startIndex is specified (in any of the
forms described in STRING INDICES), then the search is constrained
to start with the character in haystackString specified by the
index. For example,
string first a 0a23456789abcdef 5
will return 10, but
string first a 0123456789abcdef 11
will return -1.
- string index
string charIndex
- Returns the charIndex'th character of the string argument. A
charIndex of 0 corresponds to the first character of the string.
charIndex may be specified as described in the STRING
INDICES section.
If charIndex is less than 0 or greater than or equal to the
length of the string then this command returns an empty string.
- string is
class ?-strict? ?-failindex varname?
string
- Returns 1 if string is a valid member of the specified character
class, otherwise returns 0. If -strict is specified, then an empty
string returns 0, otherwise an empty string will return 1 on any class. If
-failindex is specified, then if the function returns 0, the index
in the string where the class was no longer valid will be stored in the
variable named varname. The varname will not be set if
string is returns 1. The following character classes are recognized
(the class name can be abbreviated):
- alnum
- Any Unicode alphabet or digit character.
- alpha
- Any Unicode alphabet character.
- ascii
- Any character with a value less than \u0080 (those that are in the 7-bit
ascii range).
- boolean
- Any of the forms allowed to Tcl_GetBoolean.
- control
- Any Unicode control character.
- digit
- Any Unicode digit character. Note that this includes characters outside of
the [0-9] range.
- double
- Any of the forms allowed to Tcl_GetDoubleFromObj.
- entier
- Any of the valid string formats for an integer value of arbitrary size in
Tcl, with optional surrounding whitespace. The formats accepted are
exactly those accepted by the C routine Tcl_GetBignumFromObj.
- false
- Any of the forms allowed to Tcl_GetBoolean where the value is
false.
- graph
- Any Unicode printing character, except space.
- integer
- Any of the valid string formats for a 32-bit integer value in Tcl, with
optional surrounding whitespace. In case of overflow in the value, 0 is
returned and the varname will contain -1.
- list
- Any proper list structure, with optional surrounding whitespace. In case
of improper list structure, 0 is returned and the varname will
contain the index of the “element” where the list parsing
fails, or -1 if this cannot be determined.
- lower
- Any Unicode lower case alphabet character.
- print
- Any Unicode printing character, including space.
- punct
- Any Unicode punctuation character.
- space
- Any Unicode whitespace character, mongolian vowel separator (U+180e), zero
width space (U+200b), word joiner (U+2060) or zero width no-break space
(U+feff) (=BOM).
- true
- Any of the forms allowed to Tcl_GetBoolean where the value is
true.
- upper
- Any upper case alphabet character in the Unicode character set.
- wideinteger
- Any of the valid forms for a wide integer in Tcl, with optional
surrounding whitespace. In case of overflow in the value, 0 is returned
and the varname will contain -1.
- wordchar
- Any Unicode word character. That is any alphanumeric character, and any
Unicode connector punctuation characters (e.g. underscore).
- xdigit
- Any hexadecimal digit character ([0-9A-Fa-f]).
In the case of boolean, true and false, if
the function will return 0, then the varname will always be set to 0,
due to the varied nature of a valid boolean value.
- string last
needleString haystackString ?lastIndex?
- Search haystackString for a sequence of characters that exactly
match the characters in needleString. If found, return the index of
the first character in the last such match within haystackString.
If there is no match, then return -1. If lastIndex is specified (in
any of the forms described in STRING INDICES), then only the
characters in haystackString at or before the specified
lastIndex will be considered by the search. For example,
string last a 0a23456789abcdef 15
will return 10, but
string last a 0a23456789abcdef 9
will return 1.
- string length
string
- Returns a decimal string giving the number of characters in string.
Note that this is not necessarily the same as the number of bytes used to
store the string. If the value is a byte array value (such as those
returned from reading a binary encoded channel), then this will return the
actual byte length of the value.
- string map
?-nocase? mapping string
- Replaces substrings in string based on the key-value pairs in
mapping. mapping is a list of key value key value ...
as in the form returned by array get. Each instance of a key in the
string will be replaced with its corresponding value. If -nocase is
specified, then matching is done without regard to case differences. Both
key and value may be multiple characters. Replacement is
done in an ordered manner, so the key appearing first in the list will be
checked first, and so on. string is only iterated over once, so
earlier key replacements will have no affect for later key matches. For
example,
string map {abc 1 ab 2 a 3 1 0} 1abcaababcabababc
will return the string 01321221.
Note that if an earlier key is a prefix of a later one, it
will completely mask the later one. So if the previous example is reordered
like this,
string map {1 0 ab 2 a 3 abc 1} 1abcaababcabababc
it will return the string 02c322c222c.
- string match
?-nocase? pattern string
- See if pattern matches string; return 1 if it does, 0 if it
does not. If -nocase is specified, then the pattern attempts to
match against the string in a case insensitive manner. For the two strings
to match, their contents must be identical except that the following
special sequences may appear in pattern:
- *
- Matches any sequence of characters in string, including a null
string.
- ?
- Matches any single character in string.
- [chars]
- Matches any character in the set given by chars. If a sequence of
the form x-y appears in chars, then any
character between x and y, inclusive, will match. When used
with -nocase, the end points of the range are converted to lower
case first. Whereas {[A-z]} matches “_” when matching
case-sensitively (since “_” falls between the
“Z” and “a”), with -nocase this is
considered like {[A-Za-z]} (and probably what was meant in the first
place).
- \x
- Matches the single character x. This provides a way of avoiding the
special interpretation of the characters *?[]\ in
pattern.
- string range
string first last
- Returns a range of consecutive characters from string, starting
with the character whose index is first and ending with the
character whose index is last. An index of 0 refers to the first
character of the string. first and last may be specified as
for the index method. If first is less than zero then it is
treated as if it were zero, and if last is greater than or equal to
the length of the string then it is treated as if it were end. If
first is greater than last then an empty string is
returned.
- string repeat
string count
- Returns string repeated count number of times.
- string replace
string first last ?newstring?
- Removes a range of consecutive characters from string, starting
with the character whose index is first and ending with the
character whose index is last. An index of 0 refers to the first
character of the string. First and last may be specified as
for the index method. If newstring is specified, then it is
placed in the removed character range. If first is less than zero
then it is treated as if it were zero, and if last is greater than
or equal to the length of the string then it is treated as if it were
end. If first is greater than last or the length of
the initial string, or last is less than 0, then the initial string
is returned untouched.
- string reverse
string
- Returns a string that is the same length as string but with its
characters in the reverse order.
- string tolower
string ?first? ?last?
- Returns a value equal to string except that all upper (or title)
case letters have been converted to lower case. If first is
specified, it refers to the first char index in the string to start
modifying. If last is specified, it refers to the char index in the
string to stop at (inclusive). first and last may be
specified using the forms described in STRING INDICES.
- string totitle
string ?first? ?last?
- Returns a value equal to string except that the first character in
string is converted to its Unicode title case variant (or upper
case if there is no title case variant) and the rest of the string is
converted to lower case. If first is specified, it refers to the
first char index in the string to start modifying. If last is
specified, it refers to the char index in the string to stop at
(inclusive). first and last may be specified using the forms
described in STRING INDICES.
- string toupper
string ?first? ?last?
- Returns a value equal to string except that all lower (or title)
case letters have been converted to upper case. If first is
specified, it refers to the first char index in the string to start
modifying. If last is specified, it refers to the char index in the
string to stop at (inclusive). first and last may be
specified using the forms described in STRING INDICES.
- string trim
string ?chars?
- Returns a value equal to string except that any leading or trailing
characters present in the string given by chars are removed. If
chars is not specified then white space is removed (any character
for which string is space returns 1, and
" ").
- string trimleft
string ?chars?
- Returns a value equal to string except that any leading characters
present in the string given by chars are removed. If chars
is not specified then white space is removed (any character for which
string is space returns 1, and " ").
- string trimright
string ?chars?
- Returns a value equal to string except that any trailing characters
present in the string given by chars are removed. If chars
is not specified then white space is removed (any character for which
string is space returns 1, and " ").
These subcommands are currently supported, but are likely to go
away in a future release as their functionality is either virtually never
used or highly misleading.
- string bytelength
string
- Returns a decimal string giving the number of bytes used to represent
string in memory when encoded as Tcl's internal modified UTF-8; Tcl
may use other encodings for string as well, and does not guarantee
to only use a single encoding for a particular string. Because
UTF-8 uses a variable number of bytes to represent Unicode characters, the
byte length will not be the same as the character length in general. The
cases where a script cares about the byte length are rare.
In almost all cases, you should use the string length
operation (including determining the length of a Tcl byte array value).
Refer to the Tcl_NumUtfChars manual entry for more details on the
UTF-8 representation.
Formally, the string bytelength operation returns the
content of the length field of the Tcl_Obj structure, after
calling Tcl_GetString to ensure that the bytes field is
populated. This is highly unlikely to be useful to Tcl scripts, as Tcl's
internal encoding is not strict UTF-8, but rather a modified CESU-8 with a
denormalized NUL (identical to that used in a number of places by Java's
serialization mechanism) to enable basic processing with non-Unicode-aware C
functions. As this representation should only ever be used by Tcl's
implementation, the number of bytes used to store the representation is of
very low value (except to C extension code, which has direct access for the
purpose of memory management, etc.)
Compatibility note: it is likely that this subcommand will
be withdrawn in a future version of Tcl. It is better to use the encoding
convertto command to convert a string to a known encoding and then apply
string length to that.
string length [encoding convertto utf-8 $theString]
- string wordend
string charIndex
- Returns the index of the character just after the last one in the word
containing character charIndex of string. charIndex
may be specified using the forms in STRING INDICES. A word is
considered to be any contiguous range of alphanumeric (Unicode letters or
decimal digits) or underscore (Unicode connector punctuation) characters,
or any single character other than these.
- string wordstart
string charIndex
- Returns the index of the first character in the word containing character
charIndex of string. charIndex may be specified using
the forms in STRING INDICES. A word is considered to be any
contiguous range of alphanumeric (Unicode letters or decimal digits) or
underscore (Unicode connector punctuation) characters, or any single
character other than these.
When referring to indices into a string (e.g., for string
index or string range) the following formats are supported:
- integer
- For any index value that passes string is integer -strict, the char
specified at this integral index (e.g., 2 would refer to the
“c” in “abcd”).
- end
- The last char of the string (e.g., end would refer to the
“d” in “abcd”).
- end-N
- The last char of the string minus the specified integer offset N
(e.g., “end-1” would refer to the “c”
in “abcd”).
- end+N
- The last char of the string plus the specified integer offset N
(e.g., “end+-1” would refer to the “c”
in “abcd”).
- M+N
- The char specified at the integral index that is the sum of integer values
M and N (e.g., “1+1” would refer to the
“c” in “abcd”).
- M-N
- The char specified at the integral index that is the difference of integer
values M and N (e.g., “2-1” would refer
to the “b” in “abcd”).
In the specifications above, the integer value M contains
no trailing whitespace and the integer value N contains no leading
whitespace.
Test if the string in the variable string is a proper
non-empty prefix of the string foobar.
set length [string length $string]
if {$length == 0} {
set isPrefix 0
} else {
set isPrefix [string equal -length $length $string "foobar"]
}
case conversion, compare, index, match, pattern, string, word,
equal, ctype, character, reverse