I have the following string:
",'first string','more','even more'"
I want to transform this into an Array but obviously this is not valid due to the first comma. How can I remove the first comma from my string and make it a valid Array?
I’d like to end up with something like this:
myArray = ['first string','more','even more']
To remove the first character you would use:
var myOriginalString = ",'first string','more','even more'";
var myString = myOriginalString.substring(1);
I'm not sure this will be the result you're looking for though because you will still need to split it to create an array with it. Maybe something like:
var myString = myOriginalString.substring(1);
var myArray = myString.split(',');
Keep in mind, the ' character will be a part of each string in the split here.
In this specific case (there is always a single character at the start you want to remove) you'll want:
str.substring(1)
However, if you want to be able to detect if the comma is there and remove it if it is, then something like:
if (str[0] == ',') {
str = str.substring(1);
}
One-liner
str = str.replace(/^,/, '');
I'll be back.
var s = ",'first string','more','even more'";
var array = s.split(',').slice(1);
That's assuming the string you begin with is in fact a String, like you said, and not an Array of strings.
Assuming the string is called myStr:
// Strip start and end quotation mark and possible initial comma
myStr=myStr.replace(/^,?'/,'').replace(/'$/,'');
// Split stripping quotations
myArray=myStr.split("','");
Note that if a string can be missing in the list without even having its quotation marks present and you want an empty spot in the corresponding location in the array, you'll need to write the splitting manually for a robust solution.
var s = ",'first string','more','even more'";
s.split(/'?,'?/).filter(function(v) { return v; });
Results in:
["first string", "more", "even more'"]
First split with commas possibly surrounded by single quotes,
then filter the non-truthy (empty) parts out.
To turn a string into an array I usually use split()
> var s = ",'first string','more','even more'"
> s.split("','")
[",'first string", "more", "even more'"]
This is almost what you want. Now you just have to strip the first two and the last character:
> s.slice(2, s.length-1)
"first string','more','even more"
> s.slice(2, s.length-2).split("','");
["first string", "more", "even more"]
To extract a substring from a string I usually use slice() but substr() and substring() also do the job.
s=s.substring(1);
I like to keep stuff simple.
You can use directly replace function on javascript with regex or define a help function as in php ltrim(left) and rtrim(right):
1) With replace:
var myArray = ",'first string','more','even more'".replace(/^\s+/, '').split(/'?,?'/);
2) Help functions:
if (!String.prototype.ltrim) String.prototype.ltrim = function() {
return this.replace(/^\s+/, '');
};
if (!String.prototype.rtrim) String.prototype.rtrim = function() {
return this.replace(/\s+$/, '');
};
var myArray = ",'first string','more','even more'".ltrim().split(/'?,?'/).filter(function(el) {return el.length != 0});;
You can do and other things to add parameter to the help function with what you want to replace the char, etc.
this will remove the trailing commas and spaces
var str = ",'first string','more','even more'";
var trim = str.replace(/(^\s*,)|(,\s*$)/g, '');
remove leading or trailing characters:
function trimLeadingTrailing(inputStr, toRemove) {
// use a regex to match toRemove at the start (^)
// and at the end ($) of inputStr
const re = new Regex(`/^${toRemove}|{toRemove}$/`);
return inputStr.replace(re, '');
}
Related
I have a string that has the following format: <strong>FirstName LastName</strong>
How can I change this into an array with the first element firstName and second lastName?
I did this, but no luck, it won't produce the right result:
var data = [myString.split('<strong>')[1], myString.split('<strong>')[2]]
How can I produce ["firstName", "lastName"] for any string with that format?
In order to parse HTML, use the best HTML parser out there, the DOM itself!
// create a random element, it doesn't have to be 'strong' (e.g., it could be 'div')
var parser = document.createElement('strong');
// set the innerHTML to your string
parser.innerHTML = "<strong>FirstName LastName</strong>";
// get the text inside the element ("FirstName LastName")
var fullName = parser.textContent;
// split it into an array, separated by the space in between FirstName and LastName
var data = fullName.split(" ");
// voila!
console.log(data);
EDIT
As #RobG pointed out, you could also explicitly use a DOM parser rather than that of an element:
var parser = new DOMParser();
var doc = parser.parseFromString("<strong>FirstName LastName</strong>", "text/html");
console.log(doc.body.textContent.split(" "));
However, both methods work perfectly fine; it all comes down to preference.
Just match everything between <strong> and </strong>.
var matches = "<strong>FirstName LastName</strong>".match(/<strong>(.*)<\/strong>/);
console.log(matches[1].split(' '));
The preferred approach would be to use DOM methods; create an element and get the .textContent then match one or more word characters or split space character.
let str = '<strong>FirstName LastName</strong>';
let [,first, last] = str.split(/<[/\w\s-]+>|\s/g);
console.log(first, last);
/<[/\w\s-]+>|\s/g
Splits < followed by one or more word, space or dash characters characters followed by > character or space to match space between words in the string.
Comma operator , within destructuring assignment is used to omit that index from the result of .split() ["", "FirstName", "LastName", ""].
this is my approach of doing your problem. Hope it helps!
var str = "<strong>FirstName LastName</strong>";
var result = str.slice(0, -9).substr(8).split(" ");
Edit: it will only work for this specific example.
Another way to do this in case you had something other than an html
var string = "<strong>FirstName LastName</strong>";
string = string.slice(0, -9); // remove last 9 chars
string = string.substr(8); // remove first 8 chars
string = string.split(" "); // split into an array at space
console.log(string);
I am trying to get this result: 'Summer-is-here'. Why does the code below generate extra spaces? (Current result: '-Summer--Is- -Here-').
function spinalCase(str) {
var newA = str.split(/([A-Z][a-z]*)/).join("-");
return newA;
}
spinalCase("SummerIs Here");
You are using a variety of split where the regexp contains a capturing group (inside parentheses), which has a specific meaning, namely to include all the splitting strings in the result. So your result becomes:
["", "Summer", "", "Is", " ", "Here", ""]
Joining that with - gives you the result you see. But you can't just remove the unnecessary capture group from the regexp, because then the split would give you
["", "", " ", ""]
because you are splitting on zero-width strings, due to the * in your regexp. So this doesn't really work.
If you want to use split, try splitting on zero-width or space-only matches looking ahead to a uppercase letter:
> "SummerIs Here".split(/\s*(?=[A-Z])/)
^^^^^^^^^ LOOK-AHEAD
< ["Summer", "Is", "Here"]
Now you can join that to get the result you want, but without the lowercase mapping, which you could do with:
"SummerIs Here" .
split(/\s*(?=[A-Z])/) .
map(function(elt, i) { return i ? elt.toLowerCase() : elt; }) .
join('-')
which gives you want you want.
Using replace as suggested in another answer is also a perfectly viable solution. In terms of best practices, consider the following code from Ember:
var DECAMELIZE_REGEXP = /([a-z\d])([A-Z])/g;
var DASHERIZE_REGEXP = /[ _]/g;
function decamelize(str) {
return str.replace(DECAMELIZE_REGEXP, '$1_$2').toLowerCase();
}
function dasherize(str) {
return decamelize(str).replace(DASHERIZE_REGEXP, '-');
}
First, decamelize puts an underscore _ in between two-character sequences of lower-case letter (or digit) and upper-case letter. Then, dasherize replaces the underscore with a dash. This works perfectly except that it lower-cases the first word in the string. You can sort of combine decamelize and dasherize here with
var SPINALIZE_REGEXP = /([a-z\d])\s*([A-Z])/g;
function spinalCase(str) {
return str.replace(SPINALIZE_REGEXP, '$1-$2').toLowerCase();
}
You want to separate capitalized words, but you are trying to split the string on capitalized words that's why you get those empty strings and spaces.
I think you are looking for this :
var newA = str.match(/[A-Z][a-z]*/g).join("-");
([A-Z][a-z]*) *(?!$|[a-z])
You can simply do a replace by $1-.See demo.
https://regex101.com/r/nL7aZ2/1
var re = /([A-Z][a-z]*) *(?!$|[a-z])/g;
var str = 'SummerIs Here';
var subst = '$1-';
var result = str.replace(re, subst);
var newA = str.split(/ |(?=[A-Z])/).join("-");
You can change the regex like:
/ |(?=[A-Z])/ or /\s*(?=[A-Z])/
Result:
Summer-Is-Here
Remove strings with numbers and special characters using regular expression.Here is my code
var string = "[Account0].&[1]+[Account1].&[2]+[Account2].&[3]+[Account3].&[4]";
var numbers = string.match(/(\d+)/gi);
alert(numbers.join(','));
here output is : 0,1,1,2,2,3,3,4
But i want the following output 1,2,3,4
Can any one please help me.
Thanks,
Seemd what you want is [\d+], use exec like this,
var myRe = /\[(\d+)\]/gi;
var myArray, numbers = [];
while ((myArray = myRe.exec(string)) !== null) {
numbers.push(myArray[1]);
}
http://jsfiddle.net/xE265/
You can do:
string = "[Account0].&[1]+[Account1].&[2]+[Account2].&[3]+[Account3].&[4]";
repl = string.replace(/.*?\[(\d+)\][^\[]*/g, function($0, $1) { return $1 });
//=> "1234"
I guess the simplest solution in this case would be:
\[(\d+)\]
simply saying that you only want the digits enclosed by brackets.
Regards
I have this string for example:
str = "my name is john#doe oh.yeh";
the end result I am seeking is this Array:
strArr = ['my','name','is','john','&#doe','oh','&yeh'];
which means 2 rules apply:
split after each space " " (I know how)
if there are special characters ("." or "#") then also split but add the characther "&" before the word with the special character.
I know I can strArr = str.split(" ") for the first rule. but how do I do the other trick?
thanks,
Alon
Assuming the result should be '&doe' and not '&#doe', a simple solution would be to just replace all . and # with & split by spaces:
strArr = str.replace(/[.#]/g, ' &').split(/\s+/)
/\s+/ matches consecutive white spaces instead of just one.
If the result should be '&#doe' and '&.yeah' use the same regex and add a capture:
strArr = str.replace(/([.#])/g, ' &$1').split(/\s+/)
You have to use a Regular expression, to match all special characters at once. By "special", I assume that you mean "no letters".
var pattern = /([^ a-z]?)[a-z]+/gi; // Pattern
var str = "my name is john#doe oh.yeh"; // Input string
var strArr = [], match; // output array, temporary var
while ((match = pattern.exec(str)) !== null) { // <-- For each match
strArr.push( (match[1]?'&':'') + match[0]); // <-- Add to array
}
// strArr is now:
// strArr = ['my', 'name', 'is', 'john', '&#doe', 'oh', '&.yeh']
It does not match consecutive special characters. The pattern has to be modified for that. Eg, if you want to include all consecutive characters, use ([^ a-z]+?).
Also, it does nothing include a last special character. If you want to include this one as well, use [a-z]* and remove !== null.
use split() method. That's what you need:
http://www.w3schools.com/jsref/jsref_split.asp
Ok. i saw, you found it, i think:
1) first use split to the whitespaces
2) iterate through your array, split again in array members when you find # or .
3) iterate through your array again and str.replace("#", "&#") and str.replace(".","&.") when you find
I would think a combination of split() and replace() is what you are looking for:
str = "my name is john#doe oh.yeh";
strArr = str.replace('\W',' &');
strArr = strArr.split(' ');
That should be close to what you asked for.
This works:
array = string.replace(/#|\./g, ' &$&').split(' ');
Take a look at demo here: http://jsfiddle.net/M6fQ7/1/
I have a string like foobar1, foobaz2, barbar23, nobar100 I want only foobar, foobaz, barbar, nobar and ignoring the number part.
If you want to strip out things that are digits, a regex can do that for you:
var s = "foobar1";
s = s.replace(/\d/g, "");
alert(s);
// "foobar"
(\d is the regex class for "digit". We're replacing them with nothing.)
Note that as given, it will remove any digit anywhere in the string.
This can be done in JavaScript:
/^[^\d]+/.exec("foobar1")[0]
This will return all characters from the beginning of string until a number is found.
var str = 'foobar1, foobaz2, barbar23, nobar100';
console.log(str.replace(/\d/g, ''));
Find some more information about regular expressions in javascript...
This should do what you want:
var re = /[0-9]*/g;
var newvalue= oldvalue.replace(re,"");
This replaces al numbers in the entire string. If you only want to remove at the end then use this:
var re = /[0-9]*$/g;
I don't know how to do that in JQuery, but in JavaScript you can just use a regular expression string replace.
var yourString = "foobar1, foobaz2, barbar23, nobar100";
var yourStringMinusDigits = yourString.replace(/\d/g,"");