llDeleteSubString

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Summary

Function: string llDeleteSubString( string src, integer start, integer end );

Returns a string that is the result of removing characters from src string from the start to end positions that you specify.

• string src
• integer start start index
• integer end end index

start & end support negative indexes. The operation includes the characters at both start and end positions that you stated.

Specification

Index Positive Negative
First 0 -length
Last length - 1 -1

Indexes

  • Positive indexes count from the beginning, the first item being indexed as 0, the last as (length - 1).
  • Negative indexes count from the far end, the first item being indexed as -length, the last as -1.

Note that the counting of the characters starts at 0.

Using 0,0 as start and end positions would delete the first character only.

Using negative numbers causes backwards counting.

-1 is shortform for the last character in a string.

Ergo, using 0, -1 as start and end positions would delete the entire string.

Granted, wondering how to use this can be bewildering at times : with random text strings being handled by your script, you may wonder how you can know what positions you should be starting and ending the deletion at. To resolve this conundrum, some people may wish to consider simply using Strife Ouzuka's str_replace

Caveats

  • If either start or end are out of bounds the script continues to execute without an error message.
  • start & end will form an exclusion range when start is past end (Approximately: start > end).
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Examples

<lsl> default {

   state_entry()
   {
       string ex = "abcdefghi";
       llDeleteSubString(ex, 4, 7); //Incorrect!
   }

}</lsl> <lsl> default {

   state_entry()
   {
       string ex = "abcdefghi";
       ex = llDeleteSubString(ex, 4, 7); //Correct
       llSay(0, ex); //Would say "abcdi"
   }

} </lsl> <lsl> //-- special case default {

   state_entry()
   {
       string ex = "abcdefghi";
       llSay( 0, llDeleteSubString(ex, 4, 7) ); //Would say "abcdi"
       //-- acceptable if you do NOT want to change the contents of 'ex', only the output
   }

}

</lsl>

Notes

Ranges & Indexes

The easiest way to explain how ranges work is to make all indexes positive. Negative indexes are just a way of counting from the tail end instead of the beginning, all negative indexes have a corresponding equivalent positive index (assuming they are in range). Positive indexes past length (after the last index), or negative indexes past the beginning (before the first index) are valid and the effects are predictable and reliable: the entries are treated as if they were there but were removed just before output.

  • If start <= end then the range operated on starts at start and ends at end. [start, end]
  • Exclusion range: If start > end then the range operated on starts at 0 and goes to end and then starts again at start and goes to -1. [0, end] + [start, -1]
    • If end is a negative index past the beginning, then the operating range would be [start, -1].
    • If end is a positive index past the end, then the operating range would be [0, end].
    • If both start and end are out of bounds then the function would have no operating range (effectively inverting what the function is supposed to do).

See negative indexes for more information.

See Also

Deep Notes

Search JIRA for related Issues

Signature

function string llDeleteSubString( string src, integer start, integer end );