Data.String
- Package
- purescript-strings
- Repository
- purescript/purescript-strings
Re-exports from Data.String.CodePoints
#uncons Source
uncons :: String -> Maybe { head :: CodePoint, tail :: String }
Returns a record with the first code point and the remaining code points of the string. Returns Nothing if the string is empty. Operates in constant space and time.
>>> uncons "๐๐ c ๐"
Just { head: CodePoint 0x1D400, tail: "๐ c ๐" }
>>> uncons ""
Nothing
#toCodePointArray Source
toCodePointArray :: String -> Array CodePoint
Creates an array of code points from a string. Operates in space and time linear to the length of the string.
>>> codePointArray = toCodePointArray "b ๐๐"
>>> codePointArray
[CodePoint 0x62, CodePoint 0x20, CodePoint 0x1D400, CodePoint 0x1D400]
>>> map singleton codePointArray
["b", " ", "๐", "๐"]
#takeWhile Source
takeWhile :: (CodePoint -> Boolean) -> String -> String
Returns a string containing the leading sequence of code points which all match the given predicate from the string. Operates in constant space and in time linear to the length of the string.
>>> takeWhile (\c -> fromEnum c == 0x1D400) "๐๐ b c ๐"
"๐๐"
#take Source
take :: Int -> String -> String
Returns a string containing the given number of code points from the beginning of the given string. If the string does not have that many code points, returns the empty string. Operates in constant space and in time linear to the given number.
>>> take 3 "b ๐๐ c ๐"
"b ๐"
-- compare to Data.String:
>>> take 3 "b ๐๐ c ๐"
"b ๏ฟฝ"
#stripSuffix Source
stripSuffix :: Pattern -> String -> Maybe String
If the string ends with the given suffix, return the portion of the
string left after removing it, as a Just
value. Otherwise, return
Nothing
.
stripSuffix (Pattern ".exe") "psc.exe" == Just "psc"
stripSuffix (Pattern ".exe") "psc" == Nothing
#stripPrefix Source
stripPrefix :: Pattern -> String -> Maybe String
If the string starts with the given prefix, return the portion of the string left after removing it, as a Just value. Otherwise, return Nothing.
stripPrefix (Pattern "http:") "http://purescript.org" == Just "//purescript.org"
stripPrefix (Pattern "http:") "https://purescript.org" == Nothing
#splitAt Source
splitAt :: Int -> String -> { after :: String, before :: String }
Splits a string into two substrings, where before
contains the code
points up to (but not including) the given index, and after
contains the
rest of the string, from that index on.
>>> splitAt 3 "b ๐๐ c ๐"
{ before: "b ๐", after: "๐ c ๐" }
Thus the length of (splitAt i s).before
will equal either i
or
length s
, if that is shorter. (Or if i
is negative the length will be
0.)
In code:
length (splitAt i s).before == min (max i 0) (length s)
(splitAt i s).before <> (splitAt i s).after == s
splitAt i s == {before: take i s, after: drop i s}
#lastIndexOf' Source
lastIndexOf' :: Pattern -> Int -> String -> Maybe Int
Returns the number of code points preceding the first match of the given pattern in the string. Pattern matches following the given index will be ignored.
Giving a negative index is equivalent to giving 0 and giving an index greater than the number of code points in the string is equivalent to searching in the whole string.
Returns Nothing when no matches are found.
>>> lastIndexOf' (Pattern "๐") (-1) "b ๐๐ c ๐"
Nothing
>>> lastIndexOf' (Pattern "๐") 0 "b ๐๐ c ๐"
Nothing
>>> lastIndexOf' (Pattern "๐") 5 "b ๐๐ c ๐"
Just 3
>>> lastIndexOf' (Pattern "๐") 8 "b ๐๐ c ๐"
Just 7
>>> lastIndexOf' (Pattern "o") 5 "b ๐๐ c ๐"
Nothing
#lastIndexOf Source
lastIndexOf :: Pattern -> String -> Maybe Int
Returns the number of code points preceding the last match of the given pattern in the string. Returns Nothing when no matches are found.
>>> lastIndexOf (Pattern "๐") "b ๐๐ c ๐"
Just 7
>>> lastIndexOf (Pattern "o") "b ๐๐ c ๐"
Nothing
#indexOf' Source
indexOf' :: Pattern -> Int -> String -> Maybe Int
Returns the number of code points preceding the first match of the given pattern in the string. Pattern matches preceding the given index will be ignored. Returns Nothing when no matches are found.
>>> indexOf' (Pattern "๐") 4 "b ๐๐ c ๐"
Just 7
>>> indexOf' (Pattern "o") 4 "b ๐๐ c ๐"
Nothing
#fromCodePointArray Source
fromCodePointArray :: Array CodePoint -> String
Creates a string from an array of code points. Operates in space and time linear to the length of the array.
>>> codePointArray = toCodePointArray "c ๐"
>>> codePointArray
[CodePoint 0x63, CodePoint 0x20, CodePoint 0x1D400]
>>> fromCodePointArray codePointArray
"c ๐"
#dropWhile Source
dropWhile :: (CodePoint -> Boolean) -> String -> String
Drops the leading sequence of code points which all match the given predicate from the string. Operates in constant space and in time linear to the length of the string.
>>> dropWhile (\c -> fromEnum c == 0x1D400) "๐๐ b c ๐"
" b c ๐"
#drop Source
drop :: Int -> String -> String
Drops the given number of code points from the beginning of the string. If the string does not have that many code points, returns the empty string. Operates in constant space and in time linear to the given number.
>>> drop 5 "๐๐ b c"
"c"
-- compared to Data.String:
>>> drop 5 "๐๐ b c"
"b c" -- because "๐" occupies 2 code units
#countPrefix Source
countPrefix :: (CodePoint -> Boolean) -> String -> Int
Returns the number of code points in the leading sequence of code points which all match the given predicate. Operates in constant space and in time linear to the length of the string.
>>> countPrefix (\c -> fromEnum c == 0x1D400) "๐๐ b c ๐"
2
#codePointFromChar Source
codePointFromChar :: Char -> CodePoint
Creates a CodePoint from a given Char.
>>> codePointFromChar 'B'
CodePoint 0x42 -- represents 'B'
#codePointAt Source
codePointAt :: Int -> String -> Maybe CodePoint
Returns the first code point of the string after dropping the given number of code points from the beginning, if there is such a code point. Operates in constant space and in time linear to the given index.
>>> codePointAt 1 "๐๐๐๐"
Just (CodePoint 0x1D400) -- represents "๐"
-- compare to Data.String:
>>> charAt 1 "๐๐๐๐"
Just '๏ฟฝ'
Re-exports from Data.String.Common
#trim Source
trim :: String -> String
Removes whitespace from the beginning and end of a string, including whitespace characters and line terminators.
trim " Hello \n World\n\t " == "Hello \n World"
#replaceAll Source
replaceAll :: Pattern -> Replacement -> String -> String
Replaces all occurences of the pattern with the replacement string.
replaceAll (Pattern "<=") (Replacement "โค") "a <= b <= c" == "a โค b โค c"
#replace Source
replace :: Pattern -> Replacement -> String -> String
Replaces the first occurence of the pattern with the replacement string.
replace (Pattern "<=") (Replacement "โค") "a <= b <= c" == "a โค b <= c"
#localeCompare Source
localeCompare :: String -> String -> Ordering
Compare two strings in a locale-aware fashion. This is in contrast to
the Ord
instance on String
which treats strings as arrays of code
units:
"รค" `localeCompare` "b" == LT
"รค" `compare` "b" == GT
Re-exports from Data.String.Pattern
#Replacement Source
newtype Replacement
A newtype used in cases to specify a replacement for a pattern.
Constructors
Instances
- Modules
- Data.
Char - Data.
Char. Gen - Data.
String - Data.
String. CaseInsensitive - Data.
String. CodePoints - Data.
String. CodeUnits - Data.
String. Common - Data.
String. Gen - Data.
String. NonEmpty - Data.
String. NonEmpty. CaseInsensitive - Data.
String. NonEmpty. CodePoints - Data.
String. NonEmpty. CodeUnits - Data.
String. NonEmpty. Internal - Data.
String. Pattern - Data.
String. Regex - Data.
String. Regex. Flags - Data.
String. Regex. Unsafe - Data.
String. Unsafe