Difference between revisions of "LlSubStringIndex"

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(whitespace, it's a feature of good code. Changed the snippets to work on an empty needle.)
m
Line 39: Line 39:
<lsl>integer index = llSubStringIndex("string data","TEST");
<lsl>integer index = llSubStringIndex("string data","TEST");
if(index == -1) {
if(index == -1) {
     llSay(0),"TEST was not found in the string");
     llSay(0,"TEST was not found in the string");
} else {
} else {
     llSay(0,"TEST was found in the string.");
     llSay(0,"TEST was found in the string.");

Revision as of 14:41, 4 October 2008

Summary

Function: integer llSubStringIndex( string source, string pattern );

Returns an integer that is the index of pattern in source.

• string source
• string pattern

If pattern is not found in source, -1 is returned.
The index of the first character in the string is 0

Caveats

  • Performs a literal match (case sensitive).
    • Wildcards and RegEx are not supported.
  • Attempting to match an empty string ("") will return 0 instead of -1.
  • There is no function to search the string from the end or search starting at a specific offset.
All Issues ~ Search JIRA for related Bugs

Examples

Matching against last names: <lsl> default {

   state_entry()
   {
       llSensorRepeat("", NULL_KEY, AGENT, PI, 96.0, 20);
   }
   
   sensor(integer NumDet)
   {
       integer i;
       
       //Loop through all the sensor data and match against " Linden", 
       //this causes it to match with any last name of Linden (since there can't be spaces before the firstname)
       //Alternatively you could match a firstname with "FirstName "
       for(i = 0; i < NumDet; ++i)
           if(~llSubStringIndex(llDetectedName(i), " Linden"))
               llInstantMessage(llDetectedKey(i), "Hello, I see you!");
   }

} </lsl>

Basic Example: <lsl>integer index = llSubStringIndex("string data","TEST"); if(index == -1) {

   llSay(0,"TEST was not found in the string");

} else {

   llSay(0,"TEST was found in the string.");
}</lsl>

Useful Snippets

Tests to see if one string contains a copy of another:

1. Concise & conventional:

<lsl> integer contains(string haystack, string needle) // http://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/llSubStringIndex {

   return 0 <= llSubStringIndex(haystack, needle);

} </lsl>

<lsl>integer startswith(string haystack, string needle) // http://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/llSubStringIndex {

   return llDeleteSubString(haystack, llStringLength(needle), -1) == needle;

}</lsl>

<lsl>integer endswith(string haystack, string needle) // http://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/llSubStringIndex {

   return llDeleteSubString(haystack, 0, ~llStringLength(needle)) == needle;

}</lsl>

Note: Some of the snippets above return a result without ever calling llSubStringIndex.

2. Clever & smaller (calculates contains in ~54 bytes rather than ~60):

<lsl>integer contains(string haystack, string needle) // http://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/llSubStringIndex {

   return ~llSubStringIndex(haystack, needle);

}</lsl>

Note: The llSubStringIndex function returns -1 only when not found and the ~ operator returns zero only for -1, so the clever combination ~llSubStringIndex returns zero only for not found, else nonzero for found.

Note: Smaller was not noticeably faster or slower when our Code Racer and Efficiency Tester harnesses measured the expression { contains("wiki.secondlife.com", "wiki"); }.

See Also

Functions

•  llListFindList Find a list in another list
•  llGetSubString Copy out part of a string of characters

Deep Notes

Search JIRA for related Issues

Signature

function integer llSubStringIndex( string source, string pattern );