if i have an NSString eg->
string(102)"?xml etc
How to remove all chars upto and including the double quote. I want to remove the string(102)"
Doing this NSString* newString = [str substringFromIndex:13] works but is not ideal
NSRange range = [str rangeOfString:#"\""];
NSString *newString = [str substringFromIndex:range.location + range.length];
Is one way.
Related
I want to replace a single character at a particular position in a string.
Example
String: 123-456-7890
Desired Output: 123-406-7890 (Replacing 5 at fifth position with 0)
https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/Cocoa/Reference/Foundation/Classes/NSString_Class/
visit here and read all about string
Use stringByReplacingCharactersInRange:withString:, forming the NSRange variable to indicate the 5th position.
NSString *phoneNumber = #"123-456-7890";
NSString *newString = [phoneNumber stringByReplacingCharactersInRange:NSMakeRange(5, 1) withString:#"0"];
NSLog(#"%#", newString);
Output: 123-406-7890
Read all about NSString.
for replacing string there are lots of way:
NSString *str = [yourString stringByReplacingOccuranceOfString:#"5" withString:#"0"];
second way first get range of string like:
NSRange range = [yourSting rangeOfString:#"5"];
NSString *first = [yourString substringToIndex:range.location];
NSString *second = [yourString substringFromIndex:range.location+range.length];
NSString *yourNewStr = [NSString stringWithFormat:#"%#0%#",first,second];
Tere are lots of other using string operation but First one is best in that.
Get the range (i.e. index) of first occurrence of the substring.
Then replace at that range with your desired replace value.
NSString *originalString = #"123 456 789";
NSRange r = [originalString rangeOfString:#"5"];
NSString *newString = [originalString stringByReplacingCharactersInRange:r withString:#"0"];
If you want to actually replace the 5th character rather than just any 5 you need to make a range first.
NSRange range = NSMakeRange(5, 1);
NSString *newString = [initialString stringByReplacingCharactersInRange:range withString:#"0"];
Edit: Corrected make range length
you can use :-
NSString *replacechar = #"0";
NSString *newString= [String stringByReplacingCharactersInRange:NSMakeRange(5,1) withString:replacechar];
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;
}
I have a string say "Allentown, pa"
How to remove the white space in between , and pa using objective c?
This will remove all space from myString.
NSString *newString = [myString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#" " withString:#""];
Here is a proper and documented way of removing white spaces from your string.
whitespaceCharacterSet Apple Documentation for iOS says:
Returns a character set containing only the in-line whitespace characters space (U+0020) and tab (U+0009).
+ (id)whitespaceCharacterSet
Return Value
A character set containing only the in-line whitespace characters space (U+0020) and tab (U+0009).
Discussion
This set doesn’t contain the newline or carriage return characters.
Availability
Available in iOS 2.0 and later.
You can use this documented way:
[yourString stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet whitespaceCharacterSet]];
Hope this helps you.
If you need any more help then please let me know on this.
Probably the solution in one of the answers in Collapse sequences of white space into a single character and trim string:
NSString *whitespaceString = #" String with whitespaces ";
NSString *trimmedString = [whitespaceString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#" " withString:#""];
If you want to white-space and new-line character as well then use "whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet" instead of "whitespaceCharacterSet"
NSCharacterSet *whitespace = [NSCharacterSet whitespaceCharacterSet];
NSString *trimmedString = [temp.text stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:whitespace];
NSLog(#"Value of the text field is %#",trimmedString);
myStr = [myStr stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#" " withString:#""];
NSString *sample = #" string with whitespaces";
NSString *escapeWhiteSpaces = [sample stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet whitespaceCharacterSet]];
- (NSString *)removeWhitespaces {
return [[self componentsSeparatedByCharactersInSet:
[NSCharacterSet whitespaceCharacterSet]]
componentsJoinedByString:#""];
}
In my case NSString was added Zero Width Space(i i used some library). so solution worked for me.
NSMutableString *newString=[[newString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"\u200B" withString:#""] mutableCopy];
#"\u200B" is Zero width space character value.
Here is the proper way to remove extra whitespaces from string which is coming in between.
NSString *yourString = #"Allentown, pa";
NSCharacterSet *whitespaces = [NSCharacterSet whitespaceCharacterSet];
NSPredicate *noEmptyStrings = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:#"SELF != ''"];
NSArray *parts = [yourString componentsSeparatedByCharactersInSet:whitespaces];
NSArray *filteredArray = [parts filteredArrayUsingPredicate:noEmptyStrings];
yourString = [filteredArray componentsJoinedByString:#" "];
you can use remove function to remove any substring from the string
- (NSString*)remove:(NSString*)textToRemove fromString:(NSString*)input {
return [input stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:textToRemove withString:#""];
}
I have tried all the solutions here, none of them could remove the whitespace generated by the Chinese PinYin Input method.
After some debugging, I found this working:
NSString *newString = [myString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"\342\200\206" withString:#""];
I have googled what the '\342\200\206' is, but failed.
Whatever, it works for me.
Hi there is the swift version of the solution with extension :
extension String{
func deleteSpaces() -> String{
return self.stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString(" ", withString: "")
}
}
And Just call
(yourString as! String).deleteSpaces()
Swift 3:
var word: String = "Hello world"
let removeWhiteSpace = word.stringByRemovingWhitespaces
word = "Helloworld"
Hi all i want extract the last part from string which is a four digit number '03276' i:e http://www.abc.com/news/read/welcome-new-gig/03276
how can i do that.
You can also use
NSString *sub = [#"http://www.abc.com/news/read/welcome-new-gig/03276" lastPathComponent];
If you know how many characters you need, you can do something like this:
NSString *string = #"http://www.abc.com/news/read/welcome-new-gig/03276";
NSString *subString = [string substringFromIndex:[string length] - 5];
If you just know that it's the part after the last slash, you can do this:
NSString *string = #"http://www.abc.com/news/read/welcome-new-gig/03276";
NSString *subString = [[string componentsSeparatedByString:#"/"] lastObject];
Since *nix uses the same path separators as URL's this will be valid as well.
[#"http://www.abc.com/news/read/welcome-new-gig/03276" lastPathComponent]
If you know the length of the number, and it's not gonna change, it can be as easy as:
NSString *result = [string substringFromIndex:[string length] - 4];
If the last part of the string is always the same length (5 characters) you could use this method to extract the last part:
- (NSString *)substringFromIndex:(NSUInteger)anIndex
Use the length of the string to determine the start index.
Something like this:
NSString *inputStr = #"http://www.abc.com/news/read/welcome-new-gig/03276";
NSString *newStr = [inputStr substringFromIndex:[inputStr length]-5];
NSLog(#"These are the last five characters of the string: %#", newStr);
(Code not tested)
NSString *str = #"http://www.abc.com/news/read/welcome-new-gig/03276";
NSArray *arr = [str componentSeparatedBy:#"gig/"];
NSString *strSubStringDigNum = [arr objectAtIndex:1];
strSubStringDigNum will have the value 03276
Try this:
NSString *myUrl = #"http://www.abc.com/news/read/welcome-new-gig/03276";
NSString *number = [[myUrl componentsSeparatedByString:#"/"] objectAtIndex: 5];
Let's assume I have the string
NSString* myString = #"Hello,";
How can I remove the comma without leaving a space? I have tried:
NSString* newString = [myString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"," withString:#""];
and
NSString* newString = [myString stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:[NSCharacterSet punctuationCharacterSet]];
But both are leaving spaces.
I just ran the following as a test
NSString * myString = #"Hello,";
NSString * newString = [myString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString:#"," withString:#""];
NSLog(#"%#xx",newString);
And I get 2010-04-05 18:51:18.885 TestString[6823:a0f] Helloxx as output. There is no space left.
NSString *newString = [myString substringToIndex:5];
That will ensure that there are only 5 characters in the string, but beware that this will also throw an exception if there are not at least 5 characters in the string to begin with. How are you handling this string? Is it being displayed to the user? Is it being written to a file? The code that you posted does not reproduce the error, so perhaps you should post the code that you are having a problem with.
the other way u can use.. by stringByReplacingCharactersInRange
token = [token stringByReplacingCharactersInRange:NSMakeRange(i, 1) withString:#"*"];
"token"is your want to replace the NSString and "i" is you want to change NSString by "*"