Mercurial > hg > octave-lyh
view doc/interpreter/strings.txi @ 17489:0ad2f93fd83c
doc: Fix a typo in findobj docstring.
* scripts/plot/findobj.m: Use '3' instead of 'D' in findobj example of depth 3.
author | Rik <rik@octave.org> |
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date | Wed, 25 Sep 2013 08:13:30 -0700 |
parents | bc924baa2c4e |
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@c Copyright (C) 1996-2012 John W. Eaton @c @c This file is part of Octave. @c @c Octave is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it @c under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the @c Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at @c your option) any later version. @c @c Octave is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT @c ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or @c FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License @c for more details. @c @c You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License @c along with Octave; see the file COPYING. If not, see @c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. @node Strings @chapter Strings @cindex strings @cindex character strings @opindex " @opindex ' A @dfn{string constant} consists of a sequence of characters enclosed in either double-quote or single-quote marks. For example, both of the following expressions @example @group "parrot" 'parrot' @end group @end example @noindent represent the string whose contents are @samp{parrot}. Strings in Octave can be of any length. Since the single-quote mark is also used for the transpose operator (@pxref{Arithmetic Ops}) but double-quote marks have no other purpose in Octave, it is best to use double-quote marks to denote strings. Strings can be concatenated using the notation for defining matrices. For example, the expression @example [ "foo" , "bar" , "baz" ] @end example @noindent produces the string whose contents are @samp{foobarbaz}. @xref{Numeric Data Types}, for more information about creating matrices. @menu * Escape Sequences in String Constants:: * Character Arrays:: * Creating Strings:: * Comparing Strings:: * Manipulating Strings:: * String Conversions:: * Character Class Functions:: @end menu @node Escape Sequences in String Constants @section Escape Sequences in String Constants @cindex escape sequence notation In double-quoted strings, the backslash character is used to introduce @dfn{escape sequences} that represent other characters. For example, @samp{\n} embeds a newline character in a double-quoted string and @samp{\"} embeds a double quote character. In single-quoted strings, backslash is not a special character. Here is an example showing the difference: @example @group toascii ("\n") @result{} 10 toascii ('\n') @result{} [ 92 110 ] @end group @end example Here is a table of all the escape sequences used in Octave (within double quoted strings). They are the same as those used in the C programming language. @table @code @item \\ Represents a literal backslash, @samp{\}. @item \" Represents a literal double-quote character, @samp{"}. @item \' Represents a literal single-quote character, @samp{'}. @item \0 Represents the null character, control-@@, ASCII code 0. @item \a Represents the ``alert'' character, control-g, ASCII code 7. @item \b Represents a backspace, control-h, ASCII code 8. @item \f Represents a formfeed, control-l, ASCII code 12. @item \n Represents a newline, control-j, ASCII code 10. @item \r Represents a carriage return, control-m, ASCII code 13. @item \t Represents a horizontal tab, control-i, ASCII code 9. @item \v Represents a vertical tab, control-k, ASCII code 11. @item \@var{nnn} Represents the octal value @var{nnn}, where @var{nnn} are one to three digits between 0 and 7. For example, the code for the ASCII ESC (escape) character is @samp{\033}. @item \x@var{hh}@dots{} Represents the hexadecimal value @var{hh}, where @var{hh} are hexadecimal digits (@samp{0} through @samp{9} and either @samp{A} through @samp{F} or @samp{a} through @samp{f}). Like the same construct in @sc{ansi} C, the escape sequence continues until the first non-hexadecimal digit is seen. However, using more than two hexadecimal digits produces undefined results. @end table In a single-quoted string there is only one escape sequence: you may insert a single quote character using two single quote characters in succession. For example, @example @group 'I can''t escape' @result{} I can't escape @end group @end example In scripts the two different string types can be distinguished if necessary by using @code{is_dq_string} and @code{is_sq_string}. @DOCSTRING(is_dq_string) @DOCSTRING(is_sq_string) @node Character Arrays @section Character Arrays The string representation used by Octave is an array of characters, so internally the string @nospell{@qcode{"dddddddddd"}} is actually a row vector of length 10 containing the value 100 in all places (100 is the ASCII code of @qcode{"d"}). This lends itself to the obvious generalization to character matrices. Using a matrix of characters, it is possible to represent a collection of same-length strings in one variable. The convention used in Octave is that each row in a character matrix is a separate string, but letting each column represent a string is equally possible. The easiest way to create a character matrix is to put several strings together into a matrix. @example collection = [ "String #1"; "String #2" ]; @end example @noindent This creates a 2-by-9 character matrix. The function @code{ischar} can be used to test if an object is a character matrix. @DOCSTRING(ischar) To test if an object is a string (i.e., a character vector and not a character matrix) you can use the @code{ischar} function in combination with the @code{isvector} function as in the following example: @example @group ischar (collection) @result{} 1 ischar (collection) && isvector (collection) @result{} 0 ischar ("my string") && isvector ("my string") @result{} 1 @end group @end example One relevant question is, what happens when a character matrix is created from strings of different length. The answer is that Octave puts blank characters at the end of strings shorter than the longest string. It is possible to use a different character than the blank character using the @code{string_fill_char} function. @DOCSTRING(string_fill_char) This shows a problem with character matrices. It simply isn't possible to represent strings of different lengths. The solution is to use a cell array of strings, which is described in @ref{Cell Arrays of Strings}. @node Creating Strings @section Creating Strings The easiest way to create a string is, as illustrated in the introduction, to enclose a text in double-quotes or single-quotes. It is however possible to create a string without actually writing a text. The function @code{blanks} creates a string of a given length consisting only of blank characters (ASCII code 32). @DOCSTRING(blanks) @menu * Concatenating Strings:: * Converting Numerical Data to Strings:: @end menu @node Concatenating Strings @subsection Concatenating Strings Strings can be concatenated using matrix notation (@pxref{Strings}, @ref{Character Arrays}) which is often the most natural method. For example: @example @group fullname = [fname ".txt"]; email = ["<" user "@@" domain ">"]; @end group @end example @noindent In each case it is easy to see what the final string will look like. This method is also the most efficient. When using matrix concatenation the parser immediately begins joining the strings without having to process the overhead of a function call and the input validation of the associated function. Nevertheless, there are several other functions for concatenating string objects which can be useful in specific circumstances: @code{char}, @code{strvcat}, @code{strcat}, and @code{cstrcat}. Finally, the general purpose concatenation functions can be used: see @ref{XREFcat,,cat}, @ref{XREFhorzcat,,horzcat}, and @ref{XREFvertcat,,vertcat}. @itemize @bullet @item All string concatenation functions except @code{cstrcat} convert numerical input into character data by taking the corresponding ASCII character for each element, as in the following example: @example @group char ([98, 97, 110, 97, 110, 97]) @result{} banana @end group @end example @item @code{char} and @code{strvcat} concatenate vertically, while @code{strcat} and @code{cstrcat} concatenate horizontally. For example: @example @group char ("an apple", "two pears") @result{} an apple two pears @end group @group strcat ("oc", "tave", " is", " good", " for you") @result{} octave is good for you @end group @end example @item @code{char} generates an empty row in the output for each empty string in the input. @code{strvcat}, on the other hand, eliminates empty strings. @example @group char ("orange", "green", "", "red") @result{} orange green red @end group @group strvcat ("orange", "green", "", "red") @result{} orange green red @end group @end example @item All string concatenation functions except @code{cstrcat} also accept cell array data (@pxref{Cell Arrays}). @code{char} and @code{strvcat} convert cell arrays into character arrays, while @code{strcat} concatenates within the cells of the cell arrays: @example @group char (@{"red", "green", "", "blue"@}) @result{} red green blue @end group @group strcat (@{"abc"; "ghi"@}, @{"def"; "jkl"@}) @result{} @{ [1,1] = abcdef [2,1] = ghijkl @} @end group @end example @item @code{strcat} removes trailing white space in the arguments (except within cell arrays), while @code{cstrcat} leaves white space untouched. Both kinds of behavior can be useful as can be seen in the examples: @example @group strcat (["dir1";"directory2"], ["/";"/"], ["file1";"file2"]) @result{} dir1/file1 directory2/file2 @end group @group cstrcat (["thirteen apples"; "a banana"], [" 5$";" 1$"]) @result{} thirteen apples 5$ a banana 1$ @end group @end example Note that in the above example for @code{cstrcat}, the white space originates from the internal representation of the strings in a string array (@pxref{Character Arrays}). @end itemize @DOCSTRING(char) @DOCSTRING(strvcat) @DOCSTRING(strcat) @DOCSTRING(cstrcat) @node Converting Numerical Data to Strings @subsection Converting Numerical Data to Strings Apart from the string concatenation functions (@pxref{Concatenating Strings}) which cast numerical data to the corresponding ASCII characters, there are several functions that format numerical data as strings. @code{mat2str} and @code{num2str} convert real or complex matrices, while @code{int2str} converts integer matrices. @code{int2str} takes the real part of complex values and round fractional values to integer. A more flexible way to format numerical data as strings is the @code{sprintf} function (@pxref{Formatted Output}, @ref{XREFsprintf,,sprintf}). @DOCSTRING(mat2str) @DOCSTRING(num2str) @DOCSTRING(int2str) @node Comparing Strings @section Comparing Strings Since a string is a character array, comparisons between strings work element by element as the following example shows: @example @group GNU = "GNU's Not UNIX"; spaces = (GNU == " ") @result{} spaces = 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 @end group @end example @noindent To determine if two strings are identical it is necessary to use the @code{strcmp} function. It compares complete strings and is case sensitive. @code{strncmp} compares only the first @code{N} characters (with @code{N} given as a parameter). @code{strcmpi} and @code{strncmpi} are the corresponding functions for case-insensitive comparison. @DOCSTRING(strcmp) @DOCSTRING(strncmp) @DOCSTRING(strcmpi) @DOCSTRING(strncmpi) @DOCSTRING(validatestring) @node Manipulating Strings @section Manipulating Strings Octave supports a wide range of functions for manipulating strings. Since a string is just a matrix, simple manipulations can be accomplished using standard operators. The following example shows how to replace all blank characters with underscores. @example @group quote = ... "First things first, but not necessarily in that order"; quote( quote == " " ) = "_" @result{} quote = First_things_first,_but_not_necessarily_in_that_order @end group @end example For more complex manipulations, such as searching, replacing, and general regular expressions, the following functions come with Octave. @DOCSTRING(deblank) @DOCSTRING(strtrim) @DOCSTRING(strtrunc) @DOCSTRING(findstr) @DOCSTRING(strchr) @DOCSTRING(index) @DOCSTRING(rindex) @DOCSTRING(strfind) @DOCSTRING(strjoin) @DOCSTRING(strmatch) @DOCSTRING(strtok) @DOCSTRING(strsplit) @DOCSTRING(ostrsplit) @DOCSTRING(strread) @DOCSTRING(strrep) @DOCSTRING(substr) @DOCSTRING(regexp) @DOCSTRING(regexpi) @DOCSTRING(regexprep) @DOCSTRING(regexptranslate) @DOCSTRING(untabify) @node String Conversions @section String Conversions Octave supports various kinds of conversions between strings and numbers. As an example, it is possible to convert a string containing a hexadecimal number to a floating point number. @example @group hex2dec ("FF") @result{} 255 @end group @end example @DOCSTRING(bin2dec) @DOCSTRING(dec2bin) @DOCSTRING(dec2hex) @DOCSTRING(hex2dec) @DOCSTRING(dec2base) @DOCSTRING(base2dec) @DOCSTRING(num2hex) @DOCSTRING(hex2num) @DOCSTRING(str2double) @DOCSTRING(strjust) @DOCSTRING(str2num) @DOCSTRING(toascii) @DOCSTRING(tolower) @DOCSTRING(toupper) @DOCSTRING(do_string_escapes) @DOCSTRING(undo_string_escapes) @node Character Class Functions @section Character Class Functions Octave also provides the following character class test functions patterned after the functions in the standard C library. They all operate on string arrays and return matrices of zeros and ones. Elements that are nonzero indicate that the condition was true for the corresponding character in the string array. For example: @example @group isalpha ("!Q@@WERT^Y&") @result{} [ 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0 ] @end group @end example @DOCSTRING(isalnum) @DOCSTRING(isalpha) @DOCSTRING(isletter) @DOCSTRING(islower) @DOCSTRING(isupper) @DOCSTRING(isdigit) @DOCSTRING(isxdigit) @DOCSTRING(ispunct) @DOCSTRING(isspace) @DOCSTRING(iscntrl) @DOCSTRING(isgraph) @DOCSTRING(isprint) @DOCSTRING(isascii) @DOCSTRING(isstrprop)