Mercurial > hg > octave-nkf
view scripts/strings/substr.m @ 20376:196871335aa8
Allow call with empty argument list in strcat related functions (bug #44981)
* libinterp/corefcn/strfns.cc (strvcat): return an empty string for an empty
argument list. Simply dropping the input checking, will return an empty
string. This makes it more consistent with cat(), vertcat, and horzcat()
functions, which return [] for this cases. It makes it easier to support
"strcat (cell{:})" when cell is empty.
* scripts/strings/cstrcat.m, scripts/strings/strcat.m: same as above. But
because [cellstr{:}] when cellstr is empty returns double ([]), we
specifically return "".
author | Carnë Draug <carandraug@octave.org> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 01 May 2015 16:21:39 +0100 |
parents | 9fc020886ae9 |
children | df437a52bcaf |
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## Copyright (C) 1996-2015 Kurt Hornik ## ## This file is part of Octave. ## ## Octave is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it ## under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ## the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at ## your option) any later version. ## ## Octave is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but ## WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ## MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU ## General Public License for more details. ## ## You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ## along with Octave; see the file COPYING. If not, see ## <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. ## -*- texinfo -*- ## @deftypefn {Function File} {} substr (@var{s}, @var{offset}) ## @deftypefnx {Function File} {} substr (@var{s}, @var{offset}, @var{len}) ## Return the substring of @var{s} which starts at character number ## @var{offset} and is @var{len} characters long. ## ## Position numbering for offsets begins with 1. If @var{offset} is negative, ## extraction starts that far from the end of the string. ## ## If @var{len} is omitted, the substring extends to the end of @var{S}. A ## negative value for @var{len} extracts to within @var{len} characters of ## the end of the string ## ## Examples: ## ## @example ## @group ## substr ("This is a test string", 6, 9) ## @result{} "is a test" ## substr ("This is a test string", -11) ## @result{} "test string" ## substr ("This is a test string", -11, -7) ## @result{} "test" ## @end group ## @end example ## ## This function is patterned after the equivalent function in Perl. ## @end deftypefn ## Author: Kurt Hornik <Kurt.Hornik@wu-wien.ac.at> ## Adapted-By: jwe function t = substr (s, offset, len) if (nargin < 2 || nargin > 3) print_usage (); endif if (! ischar (s)) error ("substr: S must be a string or string array"); elseif (! isscalar (offset) || (nargin == 3 && ! isscalar (len))) error ("substr: OFFSET and LEN must be scalar integers"); endif offset = fix (offset); nc = columns (s); if (abs (offset) > nc || offset == 0) error ("substr: OFFSET = %d out of range", offset); endif if (offset <= 0) offset += nc + 1; endif if (nargin == 2) eos = nc; else len = fix (len); if (len < 0) eos = nc + len; else eos = offset + len - 1; endif endif if (eos > nc) error ("substr: length LEN = %d out of range", len); elseif (offset > eos && len != 0) error ("substr: No overlap with chosen values of OFFSET and LEN"); endif t = s(:, offset:eos); endfunction %!assert (substr ("This is a test string", 6, 9), "is a test") %!assert (substr ("This is a test string", -11), "test string") %!assert (substr ("This is a test string", -11, 4), "test") %!assert (substr ("This is a test string", -11, -7), "test") %!assert (substr ("This is a test string", 1, -7), "This is a test") %!assert (isempty (substr ("This is a test string", 1, 0))) ## Test input validation %!error substr () %!error substr ("foo", 2, 3, 4) %!error substr (ones (5, 1), 1, 1) %!error substr ("foo", ones (2,2)) %!error substr ("foo", 1, ones (2,2)) %!error substr ("foo", 0) %!error substr ("foo", 5) %!error substr ("foo", 1, 5) %!error substr ("foo", -1, 5) %!error substr ("foo", 2, -5)