I'm receiving this JSON:
JSON: {
"status_code" : 200,
"status" : "ok",
"data" : [
{
"zona" : "Narvarte",
"hora" : "",
"id_zona" : 1423,
"proxdia" : "Lunes 20 de Febrero, 2017",
"coor" : "(19.452187074041884, -99.1457748413086),(19.443769985032485, -99.14852142333984),(19.443446242121073, -99.13787841796875),(19.450244707639662, -99.13822174072266)",
"dias" : "Lunes"
}, ...]
Which I'm storing in this struct:
struct RutaItem {
var idZona: Int
var dias: String
var proxDia: String
var hora: String
var coor: String
var zona: String
}
then I created an array of [RutaItem] where I'm storing the structs
var rutaItemArray = [RutaItem]()
Once the data has been stored the structs inside rutaItemArray look like this:
[pixan.RutaItem(idZona: 1423, dias: "Lunes", proxDia: "Lunes 20 de Febrero, 2017", hora: "", coor: "(19.452187074041884, -99.1457748413086),(19.443769985032485, -99.14852142333984),(19.443446242121073, -99.13787841796875),(19.450244707639662, -99.13822174072266)", zona: "Narvarte")...]
What I need to do now is to use the String inside each index of rutaItemArray.coor to generate an MKPolygonObject, so first I would need to convert the long String into 4 CLLocationCoordinate2D objects and put those 4 coordinate objects inside an array for each item, then use the array indexes to generate the polygon.for the different areas.
Can somebody help me with this problem?
You can use regular expression pattern matching.
Explanations inline:
let coordString = "(19.452187074041884, -99.1457748413086), (19.443769985032485, -99.14852142333984),(19.443446242121073, -99.13787841796875),(19.450244707639662, -99.13822174072266)"
// Regular expression pattern for "( ... , ... )"
let pattern = "\\((.+?),(.+?)\\)"
let regex = try! NSRegularExpression(pattern: pattern)
// We need an NSString, compare http://stackoverflow.com/a/27880748/1187415
let nsString = coordString as NSString
// Enumerate all matches and create an array:
let coords = regex.matches(in: coordString, range: NSRange(location: 0, length: nsString.length))
.flatMap { match -> CLLocationCoordinate2D? in
// This closure is called for each match.
// Extract x and y coordinate from match, remove leading and trailing whitespace:
let xString = nsString.substring(with: match.rangeAt(1)).trimmingCharacters(in: .whitespaces)
let yString = nsString.substring(with: match.rangeAt(2)).trimmingCharacters(in: .whitespaces)
// Convert to floating point numbers, skip invalid entries:
guard let x = Double(xString), let y = Double(yString) else { return nil }
// Return CLLocationCoordinate2D:
return CLLocationCoordinate2D(latitude: x, longitude: y)
}
Here's what I came up with. You can adapt it to fit your structure.
import Foundation
let input = "(19.452187074041884, -99.1457748413086),(19.443769985032485, -99.14852142333984),(19.443446242121073, -99.13787841796875),(19.450244707639662, -99.13822174072266)"
// Remove leading `(` and trailing `)`
let trimmedInput = String(input.characters.dropLast().dropFirst())
let coordStrings = trimmedInput.components(separatedBy: "),(")
let coords: [CLLocationCoordinate2D] = coordStrings.map{ coordsString in
let coords = coordsString.components(separatedBy: ", ")
precondition(coords.count == 2, "There should be exactly 2 coords.")
guard let lat = Double(coords[0]),
let long = Double(coords[1]) else {
fatalError("One of the coords isn't a valid Double: \(coords)")
}
return CLLocationCoordinate2D(latitude: lat, longitude: long)
}
print(coords)
Trying to run a simple calculation via a function in my class. I simply want to add bill1 + bill2 and print the total amount spent on bills. So (bill1 + bill2 = total). And then print the total amount.
Current error states - "Code after 'return' will never be executed." Now, is my location for my print in the wrong location or did I declare my variables incorrectly? Should I be using vars instead of lets?
What do you recommend for my function in order to calculate and print the result?
class BillsCalculator
{
let nameOfBill1: String = "Medical"
let nameOfBill1: String = "Hulu"
let monthlyBillAmount1: Double = 34.25
let monthlyBillAmount2: Double = 7.99
let calculateTotalsPerMonth: Double = 0.0
//calculateTotalPerMonth ( = monthlyBillAmount_1 + monthlyBillAmount_2 + 3)
func calculateTotalsPerMonth(monthlyBillAmount: Double, monthlyBillAmount2: Double) -> Double
{
//totalBillsPerMonth = add(monthlyBillAmount1 + monthlyBillAmount2)
return totalBillsPerMonth(monthlyBillAmount1 + monthlyBillAmount2)
*Error println("You spend \(totalBillsPerMonth)")
}
}
First: "Code after 'return' will never be executed."
Yes it will not, after you call return you exit the function and return to the function that call it, you probably have an warning in XCode warning you about telling you that
Second: "Should I be using vars instead of lets"
If the value changes you MUST use var, if it does not you SHOULD use let.
Some problems I can see in your code:
class BillsCalculator
{
//use _ in the beginning of the name for class variables
//eg. _nameOfBill instead nameOfBill1
//It is not wrong use nameOfBill1 is just not recommended
//if nameOfBill1 change use var
let nameOfBill1: String = "Medical"
//Why is this declare twice
let nameOfBill1: String = "Hulu"
//Those values look like change should be var
var monthlyBillAmount1: Double = 34.25
var monthlyBillAmount2: Double = 7.99
var calculateTotalsPerMonth: Double = 0.0
func calculateTotalsPerMonth(monthlyBillAmount: Double, monthlyBillAmount2: Double) -> Double
{
totalBillsPerMonth = add(monthlyBillAmount1 + monthlyBillAmount2)
//print before return
println("You spend \(totalBillsPerMonth)")
return totalBillsPerMonth(monthlyBillAmount1 + monthlyBillAmount2)
}
}
Here you should either print the value of your total bill or return that value. As you just want to print the total bill amount so I would recommend you to just print, not to return anything. You can refer the below code.
class BillsCalculator
{
let nameOfBill1: String = "Medical"
let nameOfBill1: String = "Hulu"
let monthlyBillAmount1: Double = 34.25
let monthlyBillAmount2: Double = 7.99
let calculateTotalsPerMonth: Double = 0.0
//calculateTotalPerMonth ( = monthlyBillAmount_1 + monthlyBillAmount_2 + 3)
func calculateTotalsPerMonth(monthlyBillAmount: Double, monthlyBillAmount2: Double) -> Double
{
calculateTotalsPerMonth= add(monthlyBillAmount1 + monthlyBillAmount2)
println("You spend : "+totalBillsPerMonth);
}
}
One tiny error in your code
let nameOfBill1: String = "Medical"
let nameOfBill1: String = "Hulu"
These two variables have the same name, perhaps one should be:
let nameOfBill2: String = "Hulu"
And yes return is always the last line in the function, so any codes after return will never be executed. If you only want to get the total of two bills, you can simply do this:
func calculateTotalsPerMonth(monthlyBillAmount: Double, monthlyBillAmount2: Double) -> Double {
//println("You spend \(totalBillsPerMonth)")
return monthlyBillAmount1 + monthlyBillAmount2
}
and call this function with your bill variables, like:
let bill1 = 34.25
let bill2 = 7.99
let totalBill = calculateTotalsPerMonth(bill1, bill2)
println("You spent \(totalBill)")
Swift is a very smart language, and it is type safe. You can remove the type if you want, more like a personal programming style thing.
let bill1: Double = 34.25
let bill1 = 34.25
They both will be type "Double"
As others have said, you need to put your println statement before return since returns ends the execution of the method; thus println will never be run.
However, I would suggest a few changes to your current approach:
// A bill is an object - why not encapsulate it in a struct.
struct Bill {
let name: String
let amount: Double
}
// Using structs is generally preferred, unless you need inheritance and/or
// references to your BillsCalculator objects.
struct BillsCalculator {
let bill1: Bill
let bill2: Bill
// Using a read-only computed property means you don't need to set
// the total to have an initial value of zero.
var totalBilled: Double {
return bill1.amount + bill2.amount
}
}
// Since you're probably going to want to reuse BillsCalculator,
// don't have each bill set already. Instead, use BillsCalculator's
// initialiser and pass in bills.
let bill1 = Bill(name: "Medical", amount: 34.25)
let bill2 = Bill(name: "Hulu", amount: 7.99)
let cal = BillsCalculator(bill1: bill1, bill2: bill2)
print("You've spend \(cal.totalBilled) this month")
I have not yet been able to figure out how to get a substring of a String in Swift:
var str = “Hello, playground”
func test(str: String) -> String {
return str.substringWithRange( /* What goes here? */ )
}
test (str)
I'm not able to create a Range in Swift. Autocomplete in the Playground isn’t super helpful - this is what it suggests:
return str.substringWithRange(aRange: Range<String.Index>)
I haven't found anything in the Swift Standard Reference Library that helps. Here was another wild guess:
return str.substringWithRange(Range(0, 1))
And this:
let r:Range<String.Index> = Range<String.Index>(start: 0, end: 2)
return str.substringWithRange(r)
I've seen other answers (Finding index of character in Swift String) that seem to suggest that since String is a bridge type for NSString, the "old" methods should work, but it's not clear how - e.g., this doesn't work either (doesn't appear to be valid syntax):
let x = str.substringWithRange(NSMakeRange(0, 3))
Thoughts?
You can use the substringWithRange method. It takes a start and end String.Index.
var str = "Hello, playground"
str.substringWithRange(Range<String.Index>(start: str.startIndex, end: str.endIndex)) //"Hello, playground"
To change the start and end index, use advancedBy(n).
var str = "Hello, playground"
str.substringWithRange(Range<String.Index>(start: str.startIndex.advancedBy(2), end: str.endIndex.advancedBy(-1))) //"llo, playgroun"
You can also still use the NSString method with NSRange, but you have to make sure you are using an NSString like this:
let myNSString = str as NSString
myNSString.substringWithRange(NSRange(location: 0, length: 3))
Note: as JanX2 mentioned, this second method is not safe with unicode strings.
Swift 2
Simple
let str = "My String"
let subStr = str[str.startIndex.advancedBy(3)...str.startIndex.advancedBy(7)]
//"Strin"
Swift 3
let startIndex = str.index(str.startIndex, offsetBy: 3)
let endIndex = str.index(str.startIndex, offsetBy: 7)
str[startIndex...endIndex] // "Strin"
str.substring(to: startIndex) // "My "
str.substring(from: startIndex) // "String"
Swift 4
substring(to:) and substring(from:) are deprecated in Swift 4.
String(str[..<startIndex]) // "My "
String(str[startIndex...]) // "String"
String(str[startIndex...endIndex]) // "Strin"
At the time I'm writing, no extension is perfectly Swift 4.2 compatible, so here is one that covers all the needs I could think of:
extension String {
func substring(from: Int?, to: Int?) -> String {
if let start = from {
guard start < self.count else {
return ""
}
}
if let end = to {
guard end >= 0 else {
return ""
}
}
if let start = from, let end = to {
guard end - start >= 0 else {
return ""
}
}
let startIndex: String.Index
if let start = from, start >= 0 {
startIndex = self.index(self.startIndex, offsetBy: start)
} else {
startIndex = self.startIndex
}
let endIndex: String.Index
if let end = to, end >= 0, end < self.count {
endIndex = self.index(self.startIndex, offsetBy: end + 1)
} else {
endIndex = self.endIndex
}
return String(self[startIndex ..< endIndex])
}
func substring(from: Int) -> String {
return self.substring(from: from, to: nil)
}
func substring(to: Int) -> String {
return self.substring(from: nil, to: to)
}
func substring(from: Int?, length: Int) -> String {
guard length > 0 else {
return ""
}
let end: Int
if let start = from, start > 0 {
end = start + length - 1
} else {
end = length - 1
}
return self.substring(from: from, to: end)
}
func substring(length: Int, to: Int?) -> String {
guard let end = to, end > 0, length > 0 else {
return ""
}
let start: Int
if let end = to, end - length > 0 {
start = end - length + 1
} else {
start = 0
}
return self.substring(from: start, to: to)
}
}
And then, you can use:
let string = "Hello,World!"
string.substring(from: 1, to: 7)gets you: ello,Wo
string.substring(to: 7)gets you: Hello,Wo
string.substring(from: 3)gets you: lo,World!
string.substring(from: 1, length: 4)gets you: ello
string.substring(length: 4, to: 7)gets you: o,Wo
Updated substring(from: Int?, length: Int) to support starting from zero.
NOTE: #airspeedswift makes some very insightful points on the trade-offs of this approach, particularly the hidden performance impacts. Strings are not simple beasts, and getting to a particular index may take O(n) time, which means a loop that uses a subscript can be O(n^2). You have been warned.
You just need to add a new subscript function that takes a range and uses advancedBy() to walk to where you want:
import Foundation
extension String {
subscript (r: Range<Int>) -> String {
get {
let startIndex = self.startIndex.advancedBy(r.startIndex)
let endIndex = startIndex.advancedBy(r.endIndex - r.startIndex)
return self[Range(start: startIndex, end: endIndex)]
}
}
}
var s = "Hello, playground"
println(s[0...5]) // ==> "Hello,"
println(s[0..<5]) // ==> "Hello"
(This should definitely be part of the language. Please dupe rdar://17158813)
For fun, you can also add a + operator onto the indexes:
func +<T: ForwardIndex>(var index: T, var count: Int) -> T {
for (; count > 0; --count) {
index = index.succ()
}
return index
}
s.substringWithRange(s.startIndex+2 .. s.startIndex+5)
(I don't know yet if this one should be part of the language or not.)
SWIFT 2.0
simple:
let myString = "full text container"
let substring = myString[myString.startIndex..<myString.startIndex.advancedBy(3)] // prints: ful
SWIFT 3.0
let substring = myString[myString.startIndex..<myString.index(myString.startIndex, offsetBy: 3)] // prints: ful
SWIFT 4.0
Substring operations return an instance of the Substring type, instead of String.
let substring = myString[myString.startIndex..<myString.index(myString.startIndex, offsetBy: 3)] // prints: ful
// Convert the result to a String for long-term storage.
let newString = String(substring)
It is much more simple than any of the answers here, once you find the right syntax.
I want to take away the [ and ]
let myString = "[ABCDEFGHI]"
let startIndex = advance(myString.startIndex, 1) //advance as much as you like
let endIndex = advance(myString.endIndex, -1)
let range = startIndex..<endIndex
let myNewString = myString.substringWithRange( range )
result will be "ABCDEFGHI"
the startIndex and endIndex could also be used in
let mySubString = myString.substringFromIndex(startIndex)
and so on!
PS: As indicated in the remarks, there are some syntax changes in swift 2 which comes with xcode 7 and iOS9!
Please look at this page
For example to find the first name (up to the first space) in my full name:
let name = "Joris Kluivers"
let start = name.startIndex
let end = find(name, " ")
if end {
let firstName = name[start..end!]
} else {
// no space found
}
start and end are of type String.Index here and are used to create a Range<String.Index> and used in the subscript accessor (if a space is found at all in the original string).
It's hard to create a String.Index directly from an integer position as used in the opening post. This is because in my name each character would be of equal size in bytes. But characters using special accents in other languages could have used several more bytes (depending on the encoding used). So what byte should the integer refer to?
It's possible to create a new String.Index from an existing one using the methods succ and pred which will make sure the correct number of bytes are skipped to get to the next code point in the encoding. However in this case it's easier to search for the index of the first space in the string to find the end index.
Since String is a bridge type for NSString, the "old" methods should work, but it's not clear how - e.g., this doesn't work either (doesn't appear to be valid syntax):
let x = str.substringWithRange(NSMakeRange(0, 3))
To me, that is the really interesting part of your question. String is bridged to NSString, so most NSString methods do work directly on a String. You can use them freely and without thinking. So, for example, this works just as you expect:
// delete all spaces from Swift String stateName
stateName = stateName.stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString(" ", withString:"")
But, as so often happens, "I got my mojo workin' but it just don't work on you." You just happened to pick one of the rare cases where a parallel identically named Swift method exists, and in a case like that, the Swift method overshadows the Objective-C method. Thus, when you say str.substringWithRange, Swift thinks you mean the Swift method rather than the NSString method — and then you are hosed, because the Swift method expects a Range<String.Index>, and you don't know how to make one of those.
The easy way out is to stop Swift from overshadowing like this, by casting explicitly:
let x = (str as NSString).substringWithRange(NSMakeRange(0, 3))
Note that no significant extra work is involved here. "Cast" does not mean "convert"; the String is effectively an NSString. We are just telling Swift how to look at this variable for purposes of this one line of code.
The really weird part of this whole thing is that the Swift method, which causes all this trouble, is undocumented. I have no idea where it is defined; it is not in the NSString header and it's not in the Swift header either.
The short answer is that this is really hard in Swift right now. My hunch is that there is still a bunch of work for Apple to do on convenience methods for things like this.
String.substringWithRange() is expecting a Range<String.Index> parameter, and as far as I can tell there isn't a generator method for the String.Index type. You can get String.Index values back from aString.startIndex and aString.endIndex and call .succ() or .pred() on them, but that's madness.
How about an extension on the String class that takes good old Ints?
extension String {
subscript (r: Range<Int>) -> String {
get {
let subStart = advance(self.startIndex, r.startIndex, self.endIndex)
let subEnd = advance(subStart, r.endIndex - r.startIndex, self.endIndex)
return self.substringWithRange(Range(start: subStart, end: subEnd))
}
}
func substring(from: Int) -> String {
let end = countElements(self)
return self[from..<end]
}
func substring(from: Int, length: Int) -> String {
let end = from + length
return self[from..<end]
}
}
let mobyDick = "Call me Ishmael."
println(mobyDick[8...14]) // Ishmael
let dogString = "This 🐶's name is Patch."
println(dogString[5..<6]) // 🐶
println(dogString[5...5]) // 🐶
println(dogString.substring(5)) // 🐶's name is Patch.
println(dogString.substring(5, length: 1)) // 🐶
Update: Swift beta 4 resolves the issues below!
As it stands [in beta 3 and earlier], even Swift-native strings have some issues with handling Unicode characters. The dog icon above worked, but the following doesn't:
let harderString = "1:1️⃣"
for character in harderString {
println(character)
}
Output:
1
:
1
️
⃣
In new Xcode 7.0 use
//: Playground - noun: a place where people can play
import UIKit
var name = "How do you use String.substringWithRange?"
let range = name.startIndex.advancedBy(0)..<name.startIndex.advancedBy(10)
name.substringWithRange(range)
//OUT:
You can use this extensions to improve substringWithRange
Swift 2.3
extension String
{
func substringWithRange(start: Int, end: Int) -> String
{
if (start < 0 || start > self.characters.count)
{
print("start index \(start) out of bounds")
return ""
}
else if end < 0 || end > self.characters.count
{
print("end index \(end) out of bounds")
return ""
}
let range = Range(start: self.startIndex.advancedBy(start), end: self.startIndex.advancedBy(end))
return self.substringWithRange(range)
}
func substringWithRange(start: Int, location: Int) -> String
{
if (start < 0 || start > self.characters.count)
{
print("start index \(start) out of bounds")
return ""
}
else if location < 0 || start + location > self.characters.count
{
print("end index \(start + location) out of bounds")
return ""
}
let range = Range(start: self.startIndex.advancedBy(start), end: self.startIndex.advancedBy(start + location))
return self.substringWithRange(range)
}
}
Swift 3
extension String
{
func substring(start: Int, end: Int) -> String
{
if (start < 0 || start > self.characters.count)
{
print("start index \(start) out of bounds")
return ""
}
else if end < 0 || end > self.characters.count
{
print("end index \(end) out of bounds")
return ""
}
let startIndex = self.characters.index(self.startIndex, offsetBy: start)
let endIndex = self.characters.index(self.startIndex, offsetBy: end)
let range = startIndex..<endIndex
return self.substring(with: range)
}
func substring(start: Int, location: Int) -> String
{
if (start < 0 || start > self.characters.count)
{
print("start index \(start) out of bounds")
return ""
}
else if location < 0 || start + location > self.characters.count
{
print("end index \(start + location) out of bounds")
return ""
}
let startIndex = self.characters.index(self.startIndex, offsetBy: start)
let endIndex = self.characters.index(self.startIndex, offsetBy: start + location)
let range = startIndex..<endIndex
return self.substring(with: range)
}
}
Usage:
let str = "Hello, playground"
let substring1 = str.substringWithRange(0, end: 5) //Hello
let substring2 = str.substringWithRange(7, location: 10) //playground
Sample Code for how to get substring in Swift 2.0
(i) Substring from starting index
Input:-
var str = "Swift is very powerful language!"
print(str)
str = str.substringToIndex(str.startIndex.advancedBy(5))
print(str)
Output:-
Swift is very powerful language!
Swift
(ii) Substring from particular index
Input:-
var str = "Swift is very powerful language!"
print(str)
str = str.substringFromIndex(str.startIndex.advancedBy(6)).substringToIndex(str.startIndex.advancedBy(2))
print(str)
Output:-
Swift is very powerful language!
is
I hope it will help you!
Easy solution with little code.
Make an extension that includes basic subStringing that nearly all other languages have:
extension String {
func subString(start: Int, end: Int) -> String {
let startIndex = self.index(self.startIndex, offsetBy: start)
let endIndex = self.index(startIndex, offsetBy: end)
let finalString = self.substring(from: startIndex)
return finalString.substring(to: endIndex)
}
}
Simply call this with
someString.subString(start: 0, end: 6)
This works in my playground :)
String(seq: Array(str)[2...4])
Updated for Xcode 7. Adds String extension:
Use:
var chuck: String = "Hello Chuck Norris"
chuck[6...11] // => Chuck
Implementation:
extension String {
/**
Subscript to allow for quick String substrings ["Hello"][0...1] = "He"
*/
subscript (r: Range<Int>) -> String {
get {
let start = self.startIndex.advancedBy(r.startIndex)
let end = self.startIndex.advancedBy(r.endIndex - 1)
return self.substringWithRange(start..<end)
}
}
}
try this in playground
var str:String = "Hello, playground"
let range = Range(start:advance(str.startIndex,1), end: advance(str.startIndex,8))
it will give you "ello, p"
However where this gets really interesting is that if you make the last index bigger than the string in playground it will show any strings that you defined after str :o
Range() appears to be a generic function so that it needs to know the type it is dealing with.
You also have to give it the actual string your interested in playgrounds as it seems to hold all stings in a sequence one after another with their variable name afterwards.
So
var str:String = "Hello, playground"
var str2:String = "I'm the next string"
let range = Range(start:advance(str.startIndex,1), end: advance(str.startIndex,49))
gives "ello, playground�str���I'm the next string�str2�"
works even if str2 is defined with a let
:)
Rob Napier had already given a awesome answer using subscript. But i felt one drawback in that as there is no check for out of bound conditions. This can tend to crash. So i modified the extension and here it is
extension String {
subscript (r: Range<Int>) -> String? { //Optional String as return value
get {
let stringCount = self.characters.count as Int
//Check for out of boundary condition
if (stringCount < r.endIndex) || (stringCount < r.startIndex){
return nil
}
let startIndex = self.startIndex.advancedBy(r.startIndex)
let endIndex = self.startIndex.advancedBy(r.endIndex - r.startIndex)
return self[Range(start: startIndex, end: endIndex)]
}
}
}
Output below
var str2 = "Hello, World"
var str3 = str2[0...5]
//Hello,
var str4 = str2[0..<5]
//Hello
var str5 = str2[0..<15]
//nil
So i suggest always to check for the if let
if let string = str[0...5]
{
//Manipulate your string safely
}
In Swift3
For ex: a variable "Duke James Thomas", we need to get "James".
let name = "Duke James Thomas"
let range: Range<String.Index> = name.range(of:"James")!
let lastrange: Range<String.Index> = img.range(of:"Thomas")!
var middlename = name[range.lowerBound..<lstrange.lowerBound]
print (middlename)
Taking a page from Rob Napier, I developed these Common String Extensions, two of which are:
subscript (r: Range<Int>) -> String
{
get {
let startIndex = advance(self.startIndex, r.startIndex)
let endIndex = advance(self.startIndex, r.endIndex - 1)
return self[Range(start: startIndex, end: endIndex)]
}
}
func subString(startIndex: Int, length: Int) -> String
{
var start = advance(self.startIndex, startIndex)
var end = advance(self.startIndex, startIndex + length)
return self.substringWithRange(Range<String.Index>(start: start, end: end))
}
Usage:
"Awesome"[3...7] //"some"
"Awesome".subString(3, length: 4) //"some"
This is how you get a range from a string:
var str = "Hello, playground"
let startIndex = advance(str.startIndex, 1)
let endIndex = advance(startIndex, 8)
let range = startIndex..<endIndex
let substr = str[range] //"ello, pl"
The key point is that you are passing a range of values of type String.Index (this is what advance returns) instead of integers.
The reason why this is necessary, is that strings in Swift don't have random access (because of variable length of Unicode characters basically). You also can't do str[1]. String.Index is designed to work with their internal structure.
You can create an extension with a subscript though, that does this for you, so you can just pass a range of integers (see e.g. Rob Napier's answer).
I tried to come up with something Pythonic.
All the subscripts here are great, but the times I really need something simple is usually when I want to count from back, e.g. string.endIndex.advancedBy(-1)
It supports nil values, for both start and end index, where nil would mean index at 0 for start, string.characters.count for end.
extension String {
var subString: (Int?) -> (Int?) -> String {
return { (start) in
{ (end) in
let startIndex = start ?? 0 < 0 ? self.endIndex.advancedBy(start!) : self.startIndex.advancedBy(start ?? 0)
let endIndex = end ?? self.characters.count < 0 ? self.endIndex.advancedBy(end!) : self.startIndex.advancedBy(end ?? self.characters.count)
return startIndex > endIndex ? "" : self.substringWithRange(startIndex ..< endIndex)
}
}
}
}
let dog = "Dog‼🐶"
print(dog.subString(nil)(-1)) // Dog!!
EDIT
A more elegant solution:
public extension String {
struct Substring {
var start: Int?
var string: String
public subscript(end: Int?) -> String {
let startIndex = start ?? 0 < 0 ? string.endIndex.advancedBy(start!) : string.startIndex.advancedBy(start ?? 0)
let endIndex = end ?? string.characters.count < 0 ? string.endIndex.advancedBy(end!) : string.startIndex.advancedBy(end ?? string.characters.count)
return startIndex > endIndex ? "" : string.substringWithRange(startIndex ..< endIndex)
}
}
public subscript(start: Int?) -> Substring {
return Substring(start: start, string: self)
}
}
let dog = "Dog‼🐶"
print(dog[nil][-1]) // Dog!!
First create the range, then the substring. You can use fromIndex..<toIndex syntax like so:
let range = fullString.startIndex..<fullString.startIndex.advancedBy(15) // 15 first characters of the string
let substring = fullString.substringWithRange(range)
here is a example to get video-Id only .i.e (6oL687G0Iso) from the whole URL in swift
let str = "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oL687G0Iso&list=PLKmzL8Ib1gsT-5LN3V2h2H14wyBZTyvVL&index=2"
var arrSaprate = str.componentsSeparatedByString("v=")
let start = arrSaprate[1]
let rangeOfID = Range(start: start.startIndex,end:start.startIndex.advancedBy(11))
let substring = start[rangeOfID]
print(substring)
let startIndex = text.startIndex
var range = startIndex.advancedBy(1) ..< text.endIndex.advancedBy(-4)
let substring = text.substringWithRange(range)
Full sample you can see here
http://www.learnswiftonline.com/reference-guides/string-reference-guide-for-swift/
shows that this works well:
var str = "abcd"
str = str.substringToIndex(1)
Well, I had the same issue and solved with the "bridgeToObjectiveC()" function:
var helloworld = "Hello World!"
var world = helloworld.bridgeToObjectiveC().substringWithRange(NSMakeRange(6,6))
println("\(world)") // should print World!
Please note that in the example, substringWithRange in conjunction with NSMakeRange take the part of the string starting at index 6 (character "W") and finishing at index 6 + 6 positions ahead (character "!")
Cheers.
You can use any of the substring methods in a Swift String extension I wrote https://bit.ly/JString.
var string = "hello"
var sub = string.substringFrom(3) // or string[3...5]
println(sub)// "lo"
If you have an NSRange, bridging to NSString works seamlessly. For example, I was doing some work with UITextFieldDelegate and I quickly wanted to compute the new string value when it asked if it should replace the range.
func textField(textField: UITextField, shouldChangeCharactersInRange range: NSRange, replacementString string: String) -> Bool {
let newString = (textField.text as NSString).stringByReplacingCharactersInRange(range, withString: string)
println("Got new string: ", newString)
}
Simple extension for String:
extension String {
func substringToIndex(index: Int) -> String {
return self[startIndex...startIndex.advancedBy(min(index, characters.count - 1))]
}
}
If you don't care about performance... this is probably the most concise solution in Swift 4
extension String {
subscript(range: CountableClosedRange<Int>) -> String {
return enumerated().filter{$0.offset >= range.first! && $0.offset < range.last!}
.reduce(""){$0 + String($1.element)}
}
}
It enables you to do something like this:
let myStr = "abcd"
myStr[0..<2] // produces "ab"