Difference between revisions of "LlList2String"

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|func_id=188|func_sleep=0.0|func_energy=10.0
|func_id=188|func_sleep=0.0|func_energy=10.0
|func=llList2String|return_type=string|p1_type=list|p1_name=src|p2_type=integer|p2_name=index
|func=llList2String|return_type=string|p1_type=list|p1_name=src|p2_type=integer|p2_name=index
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{{LSL Tip|Please read [[User:Kireji_Haiku/How_to_deal_with_lists_in_LSL|this intro of how to iterate over a list in LSL]].}}
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|return_text=that is at {{LSLP|index}} in {{LSLP|src}}.
|return_text=that is at {{LSLP|index}} in {{LSLP|src}}.

Revision as of 13:18, 5 November 2012

Summary

Function: string llList2String( list src, integer index );
0.0 Forced Delay
10.0 Energy

Returns a string that is at index in src.

• list src List containing the element of interest.
• integer index Index of the element of interest.

index supports negative indexes.
If index describes a location not in src then null string is returned.
If the type of the element at index in src is not a string it is typecast to a string.

KBcaution.png Important: Please read this intro of how to iterate over a list in LSL.

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.

Caveats

  • If index is out of bounds the script continues to execute without an error message.
  • When using this function to typecast a list element to a string it will truncated float based types to 6 decimal places.

Examples

<lsl>//This code demonstrates the differences in typecasting in LSL (and demonstrates how to use the llList2* functions). // Best viewed in Chat History (ctrl-h) default {

   state_entry()
   {
       list my_list = ["a", "0xFF", "0xFF.FF", "1.0e3", 1, 2.0, <1,2,3>, <1,2,3,4>, llGetOwner()];
       integer i = 0;
       integer end = llGetListLength(my_list);
       for (; i<end; ++i)
       {
           llOwnerSay("string=" + llList2String(my_list,i)
                       + "\n   integer=" + (string)llList2Integer(my_list,i) + " OR " +(string)((integer)llList2String(my_list,i))
                       + "\n   float=" + (string)llList2Float(my_list,i) + " OR " +(string)((float)llList2String(my_list,i))
                       + "\n   vector=" + (string)llList2Vector(my_list,i) + " OR " +(string)((vector)llList2String(my_list,i))
                       + "\n   rot=" + (string)llList2Rot(my_list,i) + " OR " +(string)((rotation)llList2String(my_list,i))
                       + "\n   key=" + (string)llList2Key(my_list,i) + " OR " +(string)((key)llList2String(my_list,i)) );
       }
   }
}</lsl>

Notes

  • If you wish to extract a string from a list that you know will contain only a single item (for example if you extract a single entry from a list using llList2List()), then instead of using llList2String(myList, 0) you may wish to considering using the more efficient (string)myList as it will produce the same result for single-entry lists with less memory usage due to eliminating a function-call.
  • To convert a string of hexadecimal notation to integer, call llList2Integer and it will automatically cast the value as decimal integer. To convert that integer back to a string of hexadecimal notation, use a user function like hex.

See Also

Functions

•  llDumpList2String
•  llGetListEntryType
•  llList2Float
•  llList2Integer
•  llList2Key

Articles

•  Negative Index

Deep Notes

Signature

function string llList2String( list src, integer index );