- string.split
- String.prototype.split()
- Syntax
- Parameters
- Return value
- Description
- Examples
- Using split()
- Removing spaces from a string
- Returning a limited number of splits
- Splitting with a RegExp to include parts of the separator in the result
- Reversing a String using split()
- String resources
- String
- Kotlin
- String array
- Kotlin
- Quantity strings (plurals)
- Kotlin
- Format and style
- Handle special characters
- Formatting strings
- Kotlin
- Styling with HTML markup
- Kotlin
- Kotlin
- Styling with spannables
- Kotlin
- Kotlin
- Kotlin
- Styling with annotations
- Example — adding a custom typeface
- Kotlin
- Annotation spans and text parceling
- Kotlin
- Kotlin
string.split
Имею string = «ПОНЕДЕЛЬНИК. 10 Февраль. TLC HD»
в первом случае имею CannelParse.lenght() = 0;
во втором — vgd.lenght() = 5;
Не могу понять почему первый вариант выдает 0. Точка это именно точка, символ с кодом 46 , смотрел файл через HEX редактор
Все равно на выходе имею 0.
Если сделать так
Вылетает приложение. string.split()
Есть обычный текстовый файл, в нем строки вида: Param1 = value Хочу их разделить в массив, делаю.
AsyncTask объясните пожалуйста
При описаний класса наследника AsyncTask мы в угловых скобках указываем три типа данных: 1. Тип.
Split Action Bar не работает
Здравствуйте, я создал иконку в actionbar, файл res/menu/menu_main.xml и хочу чтобы она находилась.
Split(«,») Очень долго работает
Можно ли оптимизировать как то? Хочу получить String . «key». от этого оставляю только .
String
Здравствуйте. Решил заняться локализацией своего приложения (никогда ранее не занимался этим), до.
String-array
много файлов string-array в values можно ли и как к ним обращаться по номеру?
string.xml
Все стринговые данные для приложения хранятся в string.xml Это классно работает если у вас не.
Генератор String
Добрый день, уважаемые форумчане. Уже который день пытаюсь решить маленькую проблему, но не.
Источник
String.prototype.split()
The split() method divides a String into an ordered list of substrings, puts these substrings into an array, and returns the array. The division is done by searching for a pattern; where the pattern is provided as the first parameter in the method’s call.
Syntax
Parameters
The pattern describing where each split should occur. The separator can be a simple string or it can be a regular expression.
- The simplest case is when separator is just a single character; this is used to split a delimited string. For example, a string containing tab separated values (TSV) could be parsed by passing a tab character as the separator, like this: myString.split(«\t») .
- If separator contains multiple characters, that entire character sequence must be found in order to split.
- If separator is omitted or does not occur in str , the returned array contains one element consisting of the entire string.
- If separator appears at the beginning (or end) of the string, it still has the effect of splitting. The result is an empty (i.e. zero length) string, which appears at the first (or last) position of the returned array.
- If separator is an empty string ( «» ), str is converted to an array of each of its UTF-16 «characters».
Warning: When the empty string ( «» ) is used as a separator, the string is not split by user-perceived characters (grapheme clusters) or unicode characters (codepoints), but by UTF-16 codeunits. This destroys surrogate pairs. See “How do you get a string to a character array in JavaScript?” on StackOverflow.
A non-negative integer specifying a limit on the number of substrings to be included in the array. If provided, splits the string at each occurrence of the specified separator , but stops when limit entries have been placed in the array. Any leftover text is not included in the array at all.
- The array may contain fewer entries than limit if the end of the string is reached before the limit is reached.
- If limit is 0 , [] is returned.
Return value
An Array of strings, split at each point where the separator occurs in the given string.
Description
When found, separator is removed from the string, and the substrings are returned in an array.
If separator is a regular expression with capturing parentheses, then each time separator matches, the results (including any undefined results) of the capturing parentheses are spliced into the output array.
If the separator is an array, then that Array is coerced to a String and used as a separator.
Examples
Using split()
When the string is empty, split() returns an array containing one empty string, rather than an empty array. If the string and separator are both empty strings, an empty array is returned.
The following example defines a function that splits a string into an array of strings using separator . After splitting the string, the function logs messages indicating the original string (before the split), the separator used, the number of elements in the array, and the individual array elements.
This example produces the following output:
Removing spaces from a string
In the following example, split() looks for zero or more spaces, followed by a semicolon, followed by zero or more spaces—and, when found, removes the spaces and the semicolon from the string. nameList is the array returned as a result of split() .
This logs two lines; the first line logs the original string, and the second line logs the resulting array.
Returning a limited number of splits
In the following example, split() looks for spaces in a string and returns the first 3 splits that it finds.
This script displays the following:
Splitting with a RegExp to include parts of the separator in the result
If separator is a regular expression that contains capturing parentheses («) , matched results are included in the array.
This script displays the following:
Note: \d matches the character class for digits between 0 and 9.
Reversing a String using split()
Warning: This is not a robust way to reverse a string:
It doesn’t work if the string contains grapheme clusters, even when using a unicode-aware split. (Use, for example, esrever instead.)
Bonus: use === operator to test if the original string was a palindrome.
Источник
String resources
A string resource provides text strings for your application with optional text styling and formatting. There are three types of resources that can provide your application with strings:
String XML resource that provides a single string. String Array XML resource that provides an array of strings. Quantity Strings (Plurals) XML resource that carries different strings for pluralization.
All strings are capable of applying some styling markup and formatting arguments. For information about styling and formatting strings, see the section about Formatting and Styling.
String
A single string that can be referenced from the application or from other resource files (such as an XML layout).
Note: A string is a simple resource that is referenced using the value provided in the name attribute (not the name of the XML file). So, you can combine string resources with other simple resources in the one XML file, under one element.
file location: res/values/filename.xml
The filename is arbitrary. The element’s name is used as the resource ID. compiled resource datatype: Resource pointer to a String . resource reference: In Java: R.string.string_name
In XML: @string/string_name syntax: elements: Required. This must be the root node.
A string, which can include styling tags. Beware that you must escape apostrophes and quotation marks. For more information about how to properly style and format your strings see Formatting and Styling, below.
name String. A name for the string. This name is used as the resource ID. example: XML file saved at res/values/strings.xml :
This layout XML applies a string to a View:
This application code retrieves a string:
Kotlin
You can use either getString(int) or getText(int) to retrieve a string. getText(int) retains any rich text styling applied to the string.
String array
An array of strings that can be referenced from the application.
Note: A string array is a simple resource that is referenced using the value provided in the name attribute (not the name of the XML file). As such, you can combine string array resources with other simple resources in the one XML file, under one element.
file location: res/values/filename.xml
The filename is arbitrary. The element’s name is used as the resource ID. compiled resource datatype: Resource pointer to an array of String s. resource reference: In Java: R.array.string_array_name
In XML: @[package:]array/string_array_name syntax: elements: Required. This must be the root node.
Defines an array of strings. Contains one or more elements.
name String. A name for the array. This name is used as the resource ID to reference the array. A string, which can include styling tags. The value can be a reference to another string resource. Must be a child of a element. Beware that you must escape apostrophes and quotation marks. See Formatting and Styling, below, for information about to properly style and format your strings.
example: XML file saved at res/values/strings.xml :
This application code retrieves a string array:
Kotlin
Quantity strings (plurals)
Different languages have different rules for grammatical agreement with quantity. In English, for example, the quantity 1 is a special case. We write «1 book», but for any other quantity we’d write «n books». This distinction between singular and plural is very common, but other languages make finer distinctions. The full set supported by Android is zero , one , two , few , many , and other .
The rules for deciding which case to use for a given language and quantity can be very complex, so Android provides you with methods such as getQuantityString() to select the appropriate resource for you.
Although historically called «quantity strings» (and still called that in API), quantity strings should only be used for plurals. It would be a mistake to use quantity strings to implement something like Gmail’s «Inbox» versus «Inbox (12)» when there are unread messages, for example. It might seem convenient to use quantity strings instead of an if statement, but it’s important to note that some languages (such as Chinese) don’t make these grammatical distinctions at all, so you’ll always get the other string.
The selection of which string to use is made solely based on grammatical necessity. In English, a string for zero is ignored even if the quantity is 0, because 0 isn’t grammatically different from 2, or any other number except 1 («zero books», «one book», «two books», and so on). Conversely, in Korean only the other string is ever used.
Don’t be misled either by the fact that, say, two sounds like it could only apply to the quantity 2: a language may require that 2, 12, 102 (and so on) are all treated like one another but differently to other quantities. Rely on your translator to know what distinctions their language actually insists upon.
It’s often possible to avoid quantity strings by using quantity-neutral formulations such as «Books: 1». This makes your life and your translators’ lives easier, if it’s an acceptable style for your application.
Note: A plurals collection is a simple resource that is referenced using the value provided in the name attribute (not the name of the XML file). As such, you can combine plurals resources with other simple resources in the one XML file, under one element.
file location: res/values/filename.xml
The filename is arbitrary. The
element’s name is used as the resource ID. resource reference: In Java: R.plurals.plural_name syntax: elements: Required. This must be the root node.
A collection of strings, of which, one string is provided depending on the amount of something. Contains one or more elements.
name String. A name for the pair of strings. This name is used as the resource ID. A plural or singular string. The value can be a reference to another string resource. Must be a child of a
element. Beware that you must escape apostrophes and quotation marks. See Formatting and Styling, below, for information about to properly style and format your strings.
quantity Keyword. A value indicating when this string should be used. Valid values, with non-exhaustive examples in parentheses:
Value | Description |
---|---|
zero | When the language requires special treatment of the number 0 (as in Arabic). |
one | When the language requires special treatment of numbers like one (as with the number 1 in English and most other languages; in Russian, any number ending in 1 but not ending in 11 is in this class). |
two | When the language requires special treatment of numbers like two (as with 2 in Welsh, or 102 in Slovenian). |
few | When the language requires special treatment of «small» numbers (as with 2, 3, and 4 in Czech; or numbers ending 2, 3, or 4 but not 12, 13, or 14 in Polish). |
many | When the language requires special treatment of «large» numbers (as with numbers ending 11-99 in Maltese). |
other | When the language does not require special treatment of the given quantity (as with all numbers in Chinese, or 42 in English). |
example: XML file saved at res/values/strings.xml :
XML file saved at res/values-pl/strings.xml :
Kotlin
When using the getQuantityString() method, you need to pass the count twice if your string includes string formatting with a number. For example, for the string %d songs found , the first count parameter selects the appropriate plural string and the second count parameter is inserted into the %d placeholder. If your plural strings do not include string formatting, you don’t need to pass the third parameter to getQuantityString .
Format and style
Here are a few important things you should know about how to properly format and style your string resources.
Handle special characters
When a string contains characters that have special usage in XML, you must escape the characters according to the standard XML/HTML escaping rules. If you need to escape a character that has special meaning in Android you should use a preceding backslash.
By default Android will collapse sequences of whitespace characters into a single space. You can avoid this by enclosing the relevant part of your string in double quotes. In this case all whitespace characters (including new lines) will get preserved within the quoted region. Double quotes will allow you to use regular single unescaped quotes as well.
Character | Escaped form(s) |
---|---|
@ | \@ |
? | \? |
New line | \n |
Tab | \t |
U+XXXX Unicode character | \uXXXX |
Single quote ( ‘ ) | |
Double quote ( » ) | \» Note that surrounding the string with single quotes does not work. Whitespace collapsing and Android escaping happens after your resource file gets parsed as XML. This means that (space, punctuation space, Unicode Em space) all collapse to a single space ( » » ), because they are all Unicode spaces after the file is parsed as an XML. To preserve those spaces as they are, you can either quote them ( » » ) or use Android escaping ( \u0032 \u8200 \u8195 ). Note: From XML parser’s perspective, there is no difference between «Test this» and «Test this» whatsoever. Both forms will not show any quotes but trigger Android whitespace-preserving quoting (that will have no practical effect in this case). Formatting stringsIf you need to format your strings, then you can do so by putting your format arguments in the string resource, as demonstrated by the following example resource. In this example, the format string has two arguments: %1$s is a string and %2$d is a decimal number. Then, format the string by calling getString(int, Object. ) . For example: KotlinStyling with HTML markupYou can add styling to your strings with HTML markup. For example: The following HTML elements are supported:
If you aren’t applying formatting, you can set TextView text directly by calling setText(java.lang.CharSequence) . In some cases, however, you may want to create a styled text resource that is also used as a format string. Normally, this doesn’t work because the format(String, Object. ) and getString(int, Object. ) methods strip all the style information from the string. The work-around to this is to write the HTML tags with escaped entities, which are then recovered with fromHtml(String) , after the formatting takes place. For example:
In this formatted string, a element is added. Notice that the opening bracket is HTML-escaped, using the notation. Then format the string as usual, but also call fromHtml(String) to convert the HTML text into styled text: KotlinBecause the fromHtml(String) method formats all HTML entities, be sure to escape any possible HTML characters in the strings you use with the formatted text, using htmlEncode(String) . For instance, if you are formatting a string that contains characters such as » fromHtml(String) , the characters come out the way they were originally written. For example: KotlinStyling with spannablesA Spannable is a text object that you can style with typeface properties such as color and font weight. You use SpannableStringBuilder to build your text and then apply styles defined in the android.text.style package to the text. You can use the following helper methods to set up much of the work of creating spannable text: KotlinThe following bold , italic , and color methods wrap the helper methods above and demonstrate specific examples of applying styles defined in the android.text.style package. You can create similar methods to do other types of text styling. KotlinHere’s an example of how to chain these methods together to apply various styles to individual words within a phrase: KotlinThe core-ktx Kotlin module also contains extension functions that make working with spans even easier. You can check out the android.text package documentation on GitHub to learn more. For more information on working with spans, see the following links: Styling with annotations
Example — adding a custom typefaceLoad the string resource and find the annotations with the font key. Then create a custom span and replace the existing span. KotlinIf you’re using the same text multiple times, you should construct the SpannableString object once and reuse it as needed to avoid potential performance and memory issues. For more examples of annotation usage, see Styling internationalized text in Android Annotation spans and text parcelingBecause Annotation spans are also ParcelableSpans , the key-value pairs are parceled and unparceled. As long as the receiver of the parcel knows how to interpret the annotations, you can use Annotation spans to apply custom styling to the parceled text. To keep your custom styling when you pass the text to an Intent Bundle, you first need to add Annotation spans to your text. You can do this in the XML resources via the tag, as shown in the example above, or in code by creating a new Annotation and setting it as a span, as shown below: KotlinRetrieve the text from the Bundle as a SpannableString and then parse the annotations attached, as shown in the example above. KotlinFor more information on text styling, see the following links: Content and code samples on this page are subject to the licenses described in the Content License. Java is a registered trademark of Oracle and/or its affiliates. Источник |