I want to extract the phone number from a NSString.
For ex: In the string Call John # 994-456-9966, i want to extract 994-456-9966.
I have tried code like,
NSString *nameRegex =#"(\(\d{3}\)\s?)?\d{3}[-\s\.]\d{4}";
NSPredicate *nameTest = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:#"ANY keywords.name CONTAINS[c] %#",nameRegex];
validationResult=[nameTest evaluateWithObject:phoneNo];
but i couldnt get exact result. Can anyone help me? Thanks in advance.
This is what you are looking for, I think:
NSString *myString = #"John # 123-456-7890";
NSString *myRegex = #"\\d{3}-\\d{3}-\\d{4}";
NSRange range = [myString rangeOfString:myRegex options:NSRegularExpressionSearch];
NSString *phoneNumber = nil;
if (range.location != NSNotFound) {
phoneNumber = [myString substringWithRange:range];
NSLog(#"%#", phoneNumber);
} else {
NSLog(#"No phone number found");
}
You can rely on the default Regular Expression search mechanism built into Cocoa. This way you will be able to extract the range corresponding to the phone number, if present.
Remember do alway double-escape backslashes when creating regular expressions.
Adapt your regex accordingly to the part of the phone number you'd like to extract.
Edit
Cocoa provides really simple tools for handling regular expressions. For more complex needs, you should look at the powerful RegexKitLite extension for Cocoa projects.
You can check the official NSDataDetector in iOS 4.0
phoneLinkDetector = [[NSDataDetector alloc] initWithTypes:
(NSTextCheckingTypeLink | NSTextCheckingTypePhoneNumber) error:nil];
NSUInteger numberOfPhoneLink = [[self phoneLinkDetector] numberOfMatchesInString:tweet
options:0 range:NSMakeRange(0, tweet.length)];
NSString * number = #"(555) 555-555 Office";
NSString * strippedNumber = [number stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"[^0-9]" withString:#"" options:NSRegularExpressionSearch range:NSMakeRange(0, [number length])];
Result: 555555555
if u need just the number u can filter out the special characters and use nsscanner
NSString *numberString = #"Call John # 994-456-9966";
NSString *filteredString=[numberString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"-" withString:#""];
NSScanner *aScanner = [NSScanner scannerWithString:filteredString];
[aScanner scanInteger:anInteger];
Assume that you are having "#" symbol in all phone numbers.
NSString *list = #"Call John # 994-456-9966";
NSArray *listItems = [list componentsSeparatedByString:#"#"]
or
You can use the NSScanner to extract the phone number.
EDIT:After seeing the comments.
Assume that you are having only 12 characters in your mobile numbers.
length=get the total length of the string.
index=length-12;
NSString *str=[myString substringFromIndex:index];
Related
I am new in objective and I'm facing my first problem, and I can not continue my first project.
it's quite simple, I have a NSString :
NSString *myString = #"<font face='Helvetica' size=25 color='#d79198'> Here is some text !</font>";
what I want to do is to get the value of the size "25" which is always 2 char long, so I can calculate my UILabel size.
i know how to detect if there is the substring I am looking for "size=" using :
if ([string rangeOfString:#"bla"].location == NSNotFound)
but I have not found or not understand how to extract the string #"size=XX" and then get the XX as a NSString from *myString
Thank for any help.
NSString *myString = #"<font face='Helvetica' size=25 color='#d79198'> Here is some text !</font>";
NSRange range = [myString rangeOfString:#"size="];
if (range.location != NSNotFound)
{
NSLog(#"Found \"size=\" at %d", range.location);
NSString *sizeString = [myString substringWithRange:NSMakeRange(range.location+5, 2)];
NSLog(#"sizeString: %#", sizeString);
}
This should do the trick. You could also at the end do this: int sizeFont = [sizeString intValue];
NSString *myString = #"<font face='Helvetica' size=25 color='#d79198'> Here is some text !</font>";
if ([myString rangeOfString:#"size"].location != NSNotFound)
{
myString = [myString substringFromIndex:[myString rangeOfString:#"size"].location];
myString = [myString substringToIndex:[myString rangeOfString:#" "].location]; // Now , myString ---> size=25 color='#d79198'> Here is some text !</font>
myString = [myString substringFromIndex:[myString length]-2];// Now, myString ---> size=25
NSLog(#"myString -- %#",myString); // Now, myString ---> 25
}
If you have string like stack:overflow then use it as follow :
NSString *Base=#"stack:overflow"
NSString *one = [[Base componentsSeparatedByString:#":"] objectAtIndex:0];
NSString *two = [[Base componentsSeparatedByString:#":"] objectAtIndex:1];
In this case one = stack and two=overflow
Part of an HTML page? Then use the tool that is designed for the task.
You could calculate the range of the number yourself or use a very simple regular expression to get the substring, something like
(?<=size\=)\d*
This means that you are searching for digits (\d*) that is preceded by "size=" ((?<=size\=))
Which using NSRegularExpression would be
NSError *error = NULL;
NSRegularExpression *regex =
[NSRegularExpression regularExpressionWithPattern:#"(?<=size\\=)\\d*"
options:0
error:&error];
NSTextCheckingResult *match =
[regex firstMatchInString:myString
options:0
range:NSMakeRange(0, [myString length])];
NSString *sizeText = [myString substringWithRange:match.range];
Finally you should convert the text "25" into a number using
NSInteger size = [sizeText integerValue];
Use componentsSeparatedByString: method...
NSString *myString = #"<font face='Helvetica' size=25 color='#d79198'> Here is some text !</font>";
NSString *theSizeString = [[[[myString componentsSeparatedByString:#" "] objectAtIndex:2] componentsSeparatedByString:#"="] objectAtIndex:1];
NSLog(#"The sizestring:%#",theSizeString);
I think it will be helpful to you.
You can get the range of the string #"size=". The range has location and length. So what you need next is to call on the myString the substringWithRange: method. The parameter would be an NSRage starting from the location+length of #"size=" and length of 2.
I have the following NSMutableString:
#"1*2*3*4*5"
I want to find the first * and remove everything after it, so my string = #"1"; How do I do this?
NSMutableString *string = [NSMutableString stringWithString:#"1*2*3*4*5"];
NSRange range = [string rangeOfString:#"*"];
if (range.location != NSNotFound)
{
[string deleteCharactersInRange:NSMakeRange(range.location, [string length] - range.location)];
}
You could try to divide this string by a separator and get the first object
NSString *result = [[MyString componentsSeparatedByString:#"*"]objectAtIndex:0];
After calling componentsSeparatedByString:#"*" you'll get the array of strings, separated by *,and the first object is right what you need.
Here's yet another strategy, using the very flexible NSScanner.
NSString* beginning;
NSScanner* scanner = [NSScanner scannerWithString:#"1*2*3*4*5"];
[scanner scanUpToString:#"*" intoString:&beginning];
You could use -rangeOfString: to find the index of the first asterisk and use that with -substringToIndex: to extract a substring from the original input. Something like this perhaps...
NSMutableString *input = #"1*2*3*4*5";
// Finds the range of the first instance. See NSString docs for more options.
NSRange firstAsteriskRange = [input rangeOfString:#"*"];
NSString *trimmedString = [input substringToIndex:firstAsteriskRange.location + 1];
NSString * str=[zoneDict objectForKey:#"name"];
NSLog(#"==========string zone::==========%#",str);
// str="(GMT +3:00) Baghdad, Riyadh, Moscow, St. Petersbur";
How can I get the 3:00 value from the above string?
NSString *str = #"(GMT -3:00) Baghdad, Riyadh, Moscow, St. Petersbur";
NSRange endRange = [str rangeOfString:#")"];
NSString *timeString = [str substringWithRange:NSMakeRange(5, endRange.location-5)];
NSRange separatorRange = [timeString rangeOfString:#":"];
NSInteger hourInt = [[timeString substringWithRange:NSMakeRange(0, separatorRange.location)] intValue];
NSLog(#"Hour:%d",hourInt);
Rather than trying to extract the time offset from the string, is there any way you could store actual time zone data in your zoneDict? For example you could store NSTimeZone instances instead.
If all you have is the string, you could use an NSRegularExpression object and extract the relevant information using a regular expression instead.
If you could explain further what you're trying to do then there may be an alternative way to achieve what you want.
I like to use -[NSString componentsSeparatedByString]:
NSString *str = #"(GMT -3:00) Baghdad, Riyadh, Moscow, St. Petersbur";
NSArray *myWords = [myString componentsSeparatedByString:#")"];
NSString *temp1 = [myWords objectAtIndex:0];
if ([temp1 rangeOfString:#"-"].location == NSNotFound) {
NSArray *temp2 = [temp1 componentsSeparatedByString:#"+"];
NSString *temp3 = [temp2 objectAtIndex:1];
NSLog(#"Your String - %#", temp3);
}
else {
NSArray *temp2 = [temp1 componentsSeparatedByString:#"-"];
NSString *temp3 = [temp2 objectAtIndex:1];
NSLog(#"Your String - %#", temp3);
}
Output:
Your String - 3:00
Using regular expressions is the better option in my view (if you are forced to extract the '3' only). The regular expression string would contain something like "\d?" but don't quote me on that, you'll have to look up the exact string. Perhaps someone on here could provide the exact string.
I have a string that contains words with consonants and vowels. How can I extract only consonants from the string?
NSString *str = #"consonants.";
Result must be:
cnsnnts
You could make a character set with all the vowels (#"aeiouy")
+ (id)characterSetWithCharactersInString:(NSString *)aString
then use the
- (NSString *)stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:(NSCharacterSet *)set
method.
EDIT: This will only remove vowels at the beginning and end of the string as pointed out in the other post, what you could do instead is use
- (NSArray *)componentsSeparatedByCharactersInSet:(NSCharacterSet *)separator
then stick the components back together. You may also need to include capitalized versions of the vowels in the set, and if you want to also deal with accents (à á è è ê ì etc...) you'll probably have to include that also.
Unfortunately stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet wont work as it only trim leading and ending characters, but you could try using a regular expression and substitution like this:
[[NSRegularExpression
regularExpressionWithPattern:#"[^bcdefghjklmnpqrstvwx]"
options:NSRegularExpressionCaseInsensitive
error:NULL]
stringByReplacingMatchesInString:str
options:0
range:NSMakeRange(0, [str length])
withTemplate:#""]
You probably want to tune the regex and options for your needs.
Possible, for sure not-optimal, solution. I'm printing intermediate results for your learning. Take care of memory allocation (I didn't care). Hopefully someone will send you a better solution, but you can copy and paste this for the moment.
NSString *test = #"Try to get all consonants";
NSMutableString *found = [[NSMutableString alloc] init];
NSInteger loc = 0;
NSCharacterSet *consonants = [NSCharacterSet characterSetWithCharactersInString:#"bcdfghjklmnpqrstvwxyz"];
while(loc!=NSNotFound && loc<[test length]) {
NSRange r = [[test lowercaseString] rangeOfCharacterFromSet:consonants options:0 range:NSMakeRange(loc, [test length]-loc)];
if(r.location!=NSNotFound) {
NSString *temp = [test substringWithRange:r];
NSLog(#"Range: %# Temp: %#",NSStringFromRange(r), temp);
[found appendString:temp];
loc=r.location+r.length;
} else {
loc=NSNotFound;
}
}
NSLog(#"Found: %#",found);
Here is a NSString category that does the job:
- (NSString *)consonants
{
NSString *result = [NSString stringWithString:self];
NSCharacterSet *characterSet = [NSCharacterSet characterSetWithCharactersInString:#"aeiou"];
while(1)
{
NSRange range = [result rangeOfCharacterFromSet:characterSet options:NSCaseInsensitiveSearch];
if(range.location == NSNotFound)
break;
result = [result stringByReplacingCharactersInRange:range withString:#""];
}
return result;
}
All,
I have a dictionary with two keys and values. I need to extract bits and pieces from them and place them into seperate strings.
{
IP = "192.168.17.1";
desc = "VUWI-VUWI-ABC_Dry_Cleaning-R12-01";
}
That is what the dictionary looks like when I call description.
I want the new output to be like this:
NSString *IP = #"192.168.17.1";
NSString *desc = #"ABC Dry Cleaning"; //note: I need to get rid of the underscores
NSString *type = #"R";
NSString *num = #"12";
NSString *ident = #"01";
How would I achieve this?
I've read through the Apple developer docs on NSRegularExpression but I find it hard to understand. I'm sure once I get some help once here I can figure it out in the future, I just need to get started.
Thanks in advance.
Okay, so first, you have to get the object associated with each key:
NSString *ip = [dic objectForKey:#"IP"]; //Btw, you shouldn't start a variable's name with a capital letter.
NSString *tempDesc = [dic objectForKey:#"desc"];
Then, what I would do is split the string in tempDesc, based on the character -.
NSArray *tmpArray = [tempDesc componentsSeparatedByString:#"-"];
Then you just have to get the strings or substrings you're interested in, and reformat them as needed:
NSString *desc = [[tmpArray objectAtIndex:2] stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"_" withString:#" "];
NSString *type = [[tmpArray objectAtIndex:3] substringToIndex:1];
NSString *num = [[tmpArray objectAtIndex:3] substringFromIndex:1];
NSString *ident = [tmpArray objectAtIndex:4];
As you can see, this works perfectly without using NSRegularExpression.