Mercurial > hg > octave-nkf
view scripts/strings/strchr.m @ 20038:9fc020886ae9
maint: Clean up m-files to follow Octave coding conventions.
Try to trim long lines to < 80 chars.
Use '##' for single line comments.
Use '(...)' around tests for if/elseif/switch/while.
Abut cell indexing operator '{' next to variable.
Abut array indexing operator '(' next to variable.
Use space between negation operator '!' and following expression.
Use two newlines between endfunction and start of %!test or %!demo code.
Remove unnecessary parens grouping between short-circuit operators.
Remove stray extra spaces (typos) between variables and assignment operators.
Remove stray extra spaces from ends of lines.
author | Rik <rik@octave.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 23 Feb 2015 14:54:39 -0800 |
parents | 4197fc428c7d |
children | df437a52bcaf |
line wrap: on
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## Copyright (C) 2008-2015 Jaroslav Hajek ## ## 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} {@var{idx} =} strchr (@var{str}, @var{chars}) ## @deftypefnx {Function File} {@var{idx} =} strchr (@var{str}, @var{chars}, @var{n}) ## @deftypefnx {Function File} {@var{idx} =} strchr (@var{str}, @var{chars}, @var{n}, @var{direction}) ## @deftypefnx {Function File} {[@var{i}, @var{j}] =} strchr (@dots{}) ## Search for the string @var{str} for occurrences of characters from ## the set @var{chars}. The return value(s), as well as the @var{n} and ## @var{direction} arguments behave identically as in @code{find}. ## ## This will be faster than using regexp in most cases. ## ## @seealso{find} ## @end deftypefn function varargout = strchr (str, chars, varargin) if (nargin < 2) print_usage (); elseif (! ischar (str)) error ("strchr: STR argument must be a string or string array"); elseif (! ischar (chars)) error ("strchr: CHARS argument must be a string"); endif if (isempty (chars)) mask = false (size (str)); elseif (length (chars) <= 4) ## With a few characters, it pays off to build the mask incrementally. ## We do it via a for loop to save memory. mask = str == chars(1); for i = 2:length (chars) mask |= str == chars(i); endfor else ## Index the str into a mask of valid values. ## This is slower than it could be because of the +1 issue. f = false (256, 1); f(uint8 (chars) + 1) = true; ## Default goes via double -- unnecessarily long. si = uint32 (str); ## in-place is faster than str+1 ++si; mask = reshape (f(si), size (str)); endif varargout = cell (1, nargout); varargout{1} = []; [varargout{:}] = find (mask, varargin{:}); endfunction %!assert (strchr ("Octave is the best software", ""), zeros (1,0)) %!assert (strchr ("Octave is the best software", "best"), [3, 6, 9, 11, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 23, 27]) %!assert (strchr ("Octave is the best software", "software"), [3, 4, 6, 9, 11, 13, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27]) ## Test input validation %!error strchr () %!error strchr (1) %!error <STR argument must be a string> strchr (1, "aeiou") %!error <CHARS argument must be a string> strchr ("aeiou", 1)