View Source String (Elixir v1.17.0)
Strings in Elixir are UTF-8 encoded binaries.
Strings in Elixir are a sequence of Unicode characters,
typically written between double quoted strings, such
as "hello"
and "héllò"
.
In case a string must have a double-quote in itself,
the double quotes must be escaped with a backslash,
for example: "this is a string with \"double quotes\""
.
You can concatenate two strings with the <>/2
operator:
iex> "hello" <> " " <> "world"
"hello world"
The functions in this module act according to The Unicode Standard, Version 15.1.0.
Interpolation
Strings in Elixir also support interpolation. This allows
you to place some value in the middle of a string by using
the #{}
syntax:
iex> name = "joe"
iex> "hello #{name}"
"hello joe"
Any Elixir expression is valid inside the interpolation.
If a string is given, the string is interpolated as is.
If any other value is given, Elixir will attempt to convert
it to a string using the String.Chars
protocol. This
allows, for example, to output an integer from the interpolation:
iex> "2 + 2 = #{2 + 2}"
"2 + 2 = 4"
In case the value you want to interpolate cannot be converted to a string, because it doesn't have a human textual representation, a protocol error will be raised.
Escape characters
Besides allowing double-quotes to be escaped with a backslash, strings also support the following escape characters:
\0
- Null byte\a
- Bell\b
- Backspace\t
- Horizontal tab\n
- Line feed (New lines)\v
- Vertical tab\f
- Form feed\r
- Carriage return\e
- Command Escape\s
- Space\#
- Returns the#
character itself, skipping interpolation\\
- Single backslash\xNN
- A byte represented by the hexadecimalNN
\uNNNN
- A Unicode code point represented byNNNN
\u{NNNNNN}
- A Unicode code point represented byNNNNNN
Note it is generally not advised to use \xNN
in Elixir
strings, as introducing an invalid byte sequence would
make the string invalid. If you have to introduce a
character by its hexadecimal representation, it is best
to work with Unicode code points, such as \uNNNN
. In fact,
understanding Unicode code points can be essential when doing
low-level manipulations of string, so let's explore them in
detail next.
Unicode and code points
In order to facilitate meaningful communication between computers across multiple languages, a standard is required so that the ones and zeros on one machine mean the same thing when they are transmitted to another. The Unicode Standard acts as an official registry of virtually all the characters we know: this includes characters from classical and historical texts, emoji, and formatting and control characters as well.
Unicode organizes all of the characters in its repertoire into code charts, and each character is given a unique numerical index. This numerical index is known as a Code Point.
In Elixir you can use a ?
in front of a character literal to reveal
its code point:
iex> ?a
97
iex> ?ł
322
Note that most Unicode code charts will refer to a code point by its
hexadecimal (hex) representation, e.g. 97
translates to 0061
in hex,
and we can represent any Unicode character in an Elixir string by
using the \u
escape character followed by its code point number:
iex> "\u0061" === "a"
true
iex> 0x0061 = 97 = ?a
97
The hex representation will also help you look up information about a
code point, e.g. https://codepoints.net/U+0061
has a data sheet all about the lower case a
, a.k.a. code point 97.
Remember you can get the hex presentation of a number by calling
Integer.to_string/2
:
iex> Integer.to_string(?a, 16)
"61"
UTF-8 encoded and encodings
Now that we understand what the Unicode standard is and what code points are, we can finally talk about encodings. Whereas the code point is what we store, an encoding deals with how we store it: encoding is an implementation. In other words, we need a mechanism to convert the code point numbers into bytes so they can be stored in memory, written to disk, and such.
Elixir uses UTF-8 to encode its strings, which means that code points are encoded as a series of 8-bit bytes. UTF-8 is a variable width character encoding that uses one to four bytes to store each code point. It is capable of encoding all valid Unicode code points. Let's see an example:
iex> string = "héllo"
"héllo"
iex> String.length(string)
5
iex> byte_size(string)
6
Although the string above has 5 characters, it uses 6 bytes, as two bytes
are used to represent the character é
.
Grapheme clusters
This module also works with the concept of grapheme cluster
(from now on referenced as graphemes). Graphemes can consist
of multiple code points that may be perceived as a single character
by readers. For example, "é" can be represented either as a single
"e with acute" code point, as seen above in the string "héllo"
,
or as the letter "e" followed by a "combining acute accent"
(two code points):
iex> string = "\u0065\u0301"
"é"
iex> byte_size(string)
3
iex> String.length(string)
1
iex> String.codepoints(string)
["e", "́"]
iex> String.graphemes(string)
["é"]
Although it looks visually the same as before, the example above is made of two characters, it is perceived by users as one.
Graphemes can also be two characters that are interpreted as one by some languages. For example, some languages may consider "ch" as a single character. However, since this information depends on the locale, it is not taken into account by this module.
In general, the functions in this module rely on the Unicode Standard, but do not contain any of the locale specific behavior. More information about graphemes can be found in the Unicode Standard Annex #29.
For converting a binary to a different encoding and for Unicode
normalization mechanisms, see Erlang's :unicode
module.
String and binary operations
To act according to the Unicode Standard, many functions in this module run in linear time, as they need to traverse the whole string considering the proper Unicode code points.
For example, String.length/1
will take longer as
the input grows. On the other hand, Kernel.byte_size/1
always runs
in constant time (i.e. regardless of the input size).
This means often there are performance costs in using the functions in this module, compared to the more low-level operations that work directly with binaries:
Kernel.binary_part/3
- retrieves part of the binaryKernel.bit_size/1
andKernel.byte_size/1
- size related functionsKernel.is_bitstring/1
andKernel.is_binary/1
- type-check function- Plus a number of functions for working with binaries (bytes)
in the
:binary
module
A utf8
modifier is also available inside the binary syntax <<>>
.
It can be used to match code points out of a binary/string:
iex> <<eacute::utf8>> = "é"
iex> eacute
233
See the Patterns and Guards guide and the documentation for
<<>>
for more information on binary pattern matching.
You can also fully convert a string into a list of integer code points,
known as "charlists" in Elixir, by calling String.to_charlist/1
:
iex> String.to_charlist("héllo")
[104, 233, 108, 108, 111]
If you would rather see the underlying bytes of a string, instead of
its codepoints, a common trick is to concatenate the null byte <<0>>
to it:
iex> "héllo" <> <<0>>
<<104, 195, 169, 108, 108, 111, 0>>
Alternatively, you can view a string's binary representation by
passing an option to IO.inspect/2
:
IO.inspect("héllo", binaries: :as_binaries)
#=> <<104, 195, 169, 108, 108, 111>>
Self-synchronization
The UTF-8 encoding is self-synchronizing. This means that if malformed data (i.e., data that is not possible according to the definition of the encoding) is encountered, only one code point needs to be rejected.
This module relies on this behavior to ignore such invalid
characters. For example, length/1
will return
a correct result even if an invalid code point is fed into it.
In other words, this module expects invalid data to be detected
elsewhere, usually when retrieving data from the external source.
For example, a driver that reads strings from a database will be
responsible to check the validity of the encoding. String.chunk/2
can be used for breaking a string into valid and invalid parts.
Compile binary patterns
Many functions in this module work with patterns. For example,
String.split/3
can split a string into multiple strings given
a pattern. This pattern can be a string, a list of strings or
a compiled pattern:
iex> String.split("foo bar", " ")
["foo", "bar"]
iex> String.split("foo bar!", [" ", "!"])
["foo", "bar", ""]
iex> pattern = :binary.compile_pattern([" ", "!"])
iex> String.split("foo bar!", pattern)
["foo", "bar", ""]
The compiled pattern is useful when the same match will be done over and over again. Note though that the compiled pattern cannot be stored in a module attribute as the pattern is generated at runtime and does not survive compile time.
Summary
Types
A single Unicode code point encoded in UTF-8. It may be one or more bytes.
Multiple code points that may be perceived as a single character by readers
A UTF-8 encoded binary.
Functions
Returns the grapheme at the position
of the given UTF-8 string
.
If position
is greater than string
length, then it returns nil
.
Computes the bag distance between two strings.
Returns a substring starting at (or after) start_bytes
and of at most
the given size_bytes
.
Converts the first character in the given string to
uppercase and the remainder to lowercase according to mode
.
Splits the string into chunks of characters that share a common trait.
Returns a list of code points encoded as strings.
Searches if string
contains any of the given contents
.
Converts all characters in the given string to lowercase according to mode
.
Returns a string subject
repeated n
times.
Returns true
if string
ends with any of the suffixes given.
Returns true
if string1
is canonically equivalent to string2
.
Returns the first grapheme from a UTF-8 string,
nil
if the string is empty.
Returns Unicode graphemes in the string as per Extended Grapheme Cluster algorithm.
Computes the Jaro distance (similarity) between two strings.
Returns the last grapheme from a UTF-8 string,
nil
if the string is empty.
Returns the number of Unicode graphemes in a UTF-8 string.
Checks if string
matches the given regular expression.
Returns a keyword list that represents an edit script.
Returns the next code point in a string.
Returns the next grapheme in a string.
Returns the size (in bytes) of the next grapheme.
Converts all characters in string
to Unicode normalization
form identified by form
.
Returns a new string padded with a leading filler
which is made of elements from the padding
.
Returns a new string padded with a trailing filler
which is made of elements from the padding
.
Checks if a string contains only printable characters up to character_limit
.
Returns a new string created by replacing occurrences of pattern
in
subject
with replacement
.
Returns a new string created by replacing all invalid bytes with replacement
("�"
by default).
Replaces all leading occurrences of match
by replacement
of match
in string
.
Replaces prefix in string
by replacement
if it matches match
.
Replaces suffix in string
by replacement
if it matches match
.
Replaces all trailing occurrences of match
by replacement
in string
.
Reverses the graphemes in given string.
Returns a substring from the offset given by the start of the range to the offset given by the end of the range.
Returns a substring starting at the offset start
, and of the given length
.
Divides a string into substrings at each Unicode whitespace occurrence with leading and trailing whitespace ignored. Groups of whitespace are treated as a single occurrence. Divisions do not occur on non-breaking whitespace.
Divides a string into parts based on a pattern.
Splits a string into two at the specified offset. When the offset given is negative, location is counted from the end of the string.
Returns an enumerable that splits a string on demand.
Returns true
if string
starts with any of the prefixes given.
Converts a string to an existing atom or creates a new one.
Converts a string into a charlist.
Converts a string to an existing atom or raises if the atom does not exist.
Returns a float whose text representation is string
.
Returns an integer whose text representation is string
.
Returns an integer whose text representation is string
in base base
.
Returns a string where all leading and trailing Unicode whitespaces have been removed.
Returns a string where all leading and trailing to_trim
characters have been
removed.
Returns a string where all leading Unicode whitespaces have been removed.
Returns a string where all leading to_trim
characters have been removed.
Returns a string where all trailing Unicode whitespaces has been removed.
Returns a string where all trailing to_trim
characters have been removed.
Converts all characters in the given string to uppercase according to mode
.
Checks whether string
contains only valid characters.
Types
@type codepoint() :: t()
A single Unicode code point encoded in UTF-8. It may be one or more bytes.
@type grapheme() :: t()
Multiple code points that may be perceived as a single character by readers
@type pattern() :: t() | [nonempty_binary()] | (compiled_search_pattern :: :binary.cp())
Pattern used in functions like replace/4
and split/3
.
It must be one of:
- a string
- an empty list
- a list containing non-empty strings
- a compiled search pattern created by
:binary.compile_pattern/1
@type t() :: binary()
A UTF-8 encoded binary.
The types String.t()
and binary()
are equivalent to analysis tools.
Although, for those reading the documentation, String.t()
implies
it is a UTF-8 encoded binary.
Functions
Returns the grapheme at the position
of the given UTF-8 string
.
If position
is greater than string
length, then it returns nil
.
Examples
iex> String.at("elixir", 0)
"e"
iex> String.at("elixir", 1)
"l"
iex> String.at("elixir", 10)
nil
iex> String.at("elixir", -1)
"r"
iex> String.at("elixir", -10)
nil
Computes the bag distance between two strings.
Returns a float value between 0 and 1 representing the bag
distance between string1
and string2
.
The bag distance is meant to be an efficient approximation of the distance between two strings to quickly rule out strings that are largely different.
The algorithm is outlined in the "String Matching with Metric Trees Using an Approximate Distance" paper by Ilaria Bartolini, Paolo Ciaccia, and Marco Patella.
Examples
iex> String.bag_distance("abc", "")
0.0
iex> String.bag_distance("abcd", "a")
0.25
iex> String.bag_distance("abcd", "ab")
0.5
iex> String.bag_distance("abcd", "abc")
0.75
iex> String.bag_distance("abcd", "abcd")
1.0
@spec byte_slice(t(), integer(), non_neg_integer()) :: t()
Returns a substring starting at (or after) start_bytes
and of at most
the given size_bytes
.
This function works on bytes and then adjusts the string to eliminate truncated codepoints. This is useful when you have a string and you need to guarantee it does not exceed a certain amount of bytes.
If the offset is greater than the number of bytes in the string, then it
returns ""
. Similar to String.slice/2
, a negative start_bytes
will be adjusted to the end of the string (but in bytes).
This function does not guarantee the string won't have invalid codepoints, it only guarantees to remove truncated codepoints immediately at the beginning or the end of the slice.
Examples
Consider the string "héllo". Let's see its representation:
iex> inspect("héllo", binaries: :as_binaries)
"<<104, 195, 169, 108, 108, 111>>"
Although the string has 5 characters, it is made of 6 bytes. Now imagine
we want to get only the first two bytes. To do so, let's use binary_slice/3
,
which is unaware of codepoints:
iex> binary_slice("héllo", 0, 2)
<<104, 195>>
As you can see, this operation is unsafe and returns an invalid string.
That's because we cut the string in the middle of the bytes representing
"é". On the other hand, we could use String.slice/3
:
iex> String.slice("héllo", 0, 2)
"hé"
While the above is correct, it has 3 bytes. If you have a requirement where you need at most 2 bytes, the result would also be invalid. In such scenarios, you can use this function, which will slice the given bytes, but clean up the truncated codepoints:
iex> String.byte_slice("héllo", 0, 2)
"h"
Truncated codepoints at the beginning are also cleaned up:
iex> String.byte_slice("héllo", 2, 3)
"llo"
Note that, if you want to work on raw bytes, then you must use binary_slice/3
instead.
Converts the first character in the given string to
uppercase and the remainder to lowercase according to mode
.
mode
may be :default
, :ascii
, :greek
or :turkic
. The :default
mode
considers all non-conditional transformations outlined in the Unicode standard.
:ascii
capitalizes only the letters A to Z. :greek
includes the context
sensitive mappings found in Greek. :turkic
properly handles the letter i
with the dotless variant.
Also see upcase/2
and capitalize/2
for other conversions. If you want
a variation of this function that does not lowercase the rest of string,
see Erlang's :string.titlecase/1
.
Examples
iex> String.capitalize("abcd")
"Abcd"
iex> String.capitalize("ABCD")
"Abcd"
iex> String.capitalize("fin")
"Fin"
iex> String.capitalize("olá")
"Olá"
Splits the string into chunks of characters that share a common trait.
The trait can be one of two options:
:valid
- the string is split into chunks of valid and invalid character sequences:printable
- the string is split into chunks of printable and non-printable character sequences
Returns a list of binaries each of which contains only one kind of characters.
If the given string is empty, an empty list is returned.
Examples
iex> String.chunk(<<?a, ?b, ?c, 0>>, :valid)
["abc\0"]
iex> String.chunk(<<?a, ?b, ?c, 0, 0xFFFF::utf16>>, :valid)
["abc\0", <<0xFFFF::utf16>>]
iex> String.chunk(<<?a, ?b, ?c, 0, 0x0FFFF::utf8>>, :printable)
["abc", <<0, 0x0FFFF::utf8>>]
Returns a list of code points encoded as strings.
To retrieve code points in their natural integer
representation, see to_charlist/1
. For details about
code points and graphemes, see the String
module
documentation.
Examples
iex> String.codepoints("olá")
["o", "l", "á"]
iex> String.codepoints("оптими зации")
["о", "п", "т", "и", "м", "и", " ", "з", "а", "ц", "и", "и"]
iex> String.codepoints("ἅἪῼ")
["ἅ", "Ἢ", "ῼ"]
iex> String.codepoints("\u00e9")
["é"]
iex> String.codepoints("\u0065\u0301")
["e", "́"]
Searches if string
contains any of the given contents
.
contents
can be either a string, a list of strings,
or a compiled pattern. If contents
is a list, this
function will search if any of the strings in contents
are part of string
.
Searching for a string in a list
If you want to check if
string
is listed incontents
, wherecontents
is a list, useEnum.member?(contents, string)
instead.
Examples
iex> String.contains?("elixir of life", "of")
true
iex> String.contains?("elixir of life", ["life", "death"])
true
iex> String.contains?("elixir of life", ["death", "mercury"])
false
The argument can also be a compiled pattern:
iex> pattern = :binary.compile_pattern(["life", "death"])
iex> String.contains?("elixir of life", pattern)
true
An empty string will always match:
iex> String.contains?("elixir of life", "")
true
iex> String.contains?("elixir of life", ["", "other"])
true
An empty list will never match:
iex> String.contains?("elixir of life", [])
false
iex> String.contains?("", [])
false
Be aware that this function can match within or across grapheme boundaries.
For example, take the grapheme "é" which is made of the characters
"e" and the acute accent. The following returns true
:
iex> String.contains?(String.normalize("é", :nfd), "e")
true
However, if "é" is represented by the single character "e with acute"
accent, then it will return false
:
iex> String.contains?(String.normalize("é", :nfc), "e")
false
Converts all characters in the given string to lowercase according to mode
.
mode
may be :default
, :ascii
, :greek
or :turkic
. The :default
mode considers
all non-conditional transformations outlined in the Unicode standard. :ascii
lowercases only the letters A to Z. :greek
includes the context sensitive
mappings found in Greek. :turkic
properly handles the letter i with the dotless variant.
Also see upcase/2
and capitalize/2
for other conversions.
Examples
iex> String.downcase("ABCD")
"abcd"
iex> String.downcase("AB 123 XPTO")
"ab 123 xpto"
iex> String.downcase("OLÁ")
"olá"
The :ascii
mode ignores Unicode characters and provides a more
performant implementation when you know the string contains only
ASCII characters:
iex> String.downcase("OLÁ", :ascii)
"olÁ"
The :greek
mode properly handles the context sensitive sigma in Greek:
iex> String.downcase("ΣΣ")
"σσ"
iex> String.downcase("ΣΣ", :greek)
"σς"
And :turkic
properly handles the letter i with the dotless variant:
iex> String.downcase("Iİ")
"ii̇"
iex> String.downcase("Iİ", :turkic)
"ıi"
@spec duplicate(t(), non_neg_integer()) :: t()
Returns a string subject
repeated n
times.
Inlined by the compiler.
Examples
iex> String.duplicate("abc", 0)
""
iex> String.duplicate("abc", 1)
"abc"
iex> String.duplicate("abc", 2)
"abcabc"
Returns true
if string
ends with any of the suffixes given.
suffixes
can be either a single suffix or a list of suffixes.
Examples
iex> String.ends_with?("language", "age")
true
iex> String.ends_with?("language", ["youth", "age"])
true
iex> String.ends_with?("language", ["youth", "elixir"])
false
An empty suffix will always match:
iex> String.ends_with?("language", "")
true
iex> String.ends_with?("language", ["", "other"])
true
Returns true
if string1
is canonically equivalent to string2
.
It performs Normalization Form Canonical Decomposition (NFD) on the strings before comparing them. This function is equivalent to:
String.normalize(string1, :nfd) == String.normalize(string2, :nfd)
If you plan to compare multiple strings, multiple times in a row, you may normalize them upfront and compare them directly to avoid multiple normalization passes.
Examples
iex> String.equivalent?("abc", "abc")
true
iex> String.equivalent?("man\u0303ana", "mañana")
true
iex> String.equivalent?("abc", "ABC")
false
iex> String.equivalent?("nø", "nó")
false
Returns the first grapheme from a UTF-8 string,
nil
if the string is empty.
Examples
iex> String.first("elixir")
"e"
iex> String.first("եոգլի")
"ե"
iex> String.first("")
nil
Returns Unicode graphemes in the string as per Extended Grapheme Cluster algorithm.
The algorithm is outlined in the Unicode Standard Annex #29, Unicode Text Segmentation.
For details about code points and graphemes, see the String
module documentation.
Examples
iex> String.graphemes("Ńaïve")
["Ń", "a", "ï", "v", "e"]
iex> String.graphemes("\u00e9")
["é"]
iex> String.graphemes("\u0065\u0301")
["é"]
Computes the Jaro distance (similarity) between two strings.
Returns a float value between 0.0
(equates to no similarity) and 1.0
(is an exact match) representing Jaro
distance between string1
and string2
.
The Jaro distance metric is designed and best suited for short
strings such as person names. Elixir itself uses this function
to provide the "did you mean?" functionality. For instance, when you
are calling a function in a module and you have a typo in the
function name, we attempt to suggest the most similar function
name available, if any, based on the jaro_distance/2
score.
Examples
iex> String.jaro_distance("Dwayne", "Duane")
0.8222222222222223
iex> String.jaro_distance("even", "odd")
0.0
iex> String.jaro_distance("same", "same")
1.0
Returns the last grapheme from a UTF-8 string,
nil
if the string is empty.
It traverses the whole string to find its last grapheme.
Examples
iex> String.last("")
nil
iex> String.last("elixir")
"r"
iex> String.last("եոգլի")
"ի"
@spec length(t()) :: non_neg_integer()
Returns the number of Unicode graphemes in a UTF-8 string.
Examples
iex> String.length("elixir")
6
iex> String.length("եոգլի")
5
Checks if string
matches the given regular expression.
Examples
iex> String.match?("foo", ~r/foo/)
true
iex> String.match?("bar", ~r/foo/)
false
Elixir also provides text-based match operator =~/2
and function Regex.match?/2
as
alternatives to test strings against regular expressions.
Returns a keyword list that represents an edit script.
Check List.myers_difference/2
for more information.
Examples
iex> string1 = "fox hops over the dog"
iex> string2 = "fox jumps over the lazy cat"
iex> String.myers_difference(string1, string2)
[eq: "fox ", del: "ho", ins: "jum", eq: "ps over the ", del: "dog", ins: "lazy cat"]
Returns the next code point in a string.
The result is a tuple with the code point and the
remainder of the string or nil
in case
the string reached its end.
As with other functions in the String
module, next_codepoint/1
works with binaries that are invalid UTF-8. If the string starts
with a sequence of bytes that is not valid in UTF-8 encoding, the
first element of the returned tuple is a binary with the first byte.
Examples
iex> String.next_codepoint("olá")
{"o", "lá"}
iex> invalid = "\x80\x80OK" # first two bytes are invalid in UTF-8
iex> {_, rest} = String.next_codepoint(invalid)
{<<128>>, <<128, 79, 75>>}
iex> String.next_codepoint(rest)
{<<128>>, "OK"}
Comparison with binary pattern matching
Binary pattern matching provides a similar way to decompose a string:
iex> <<codepoint::utf8, rest::binary>> = "Elixir"
"Elixir"
iex> codepoint
69
iex> rest
"lixir"
though not entirely equivalent because codepoint
comes as
an integer, and the pattern won't match invalid UTF-8.
Binary pattern matching, however, is simpler and more efficient, so pick the option that better suits your use case.
Returns the next grapheme in a string.
The result is a tuple with the grapheme and the
remainder of the string or nil
in case
the String reached its end.
Examples
iex> String.next_grapheme("olá")
{"o", "lá"}
iex> String.next_grapheme("")
nil
@spec next_grapheme_size(t()) :: {pos_integer(), t()} | nil
Returns the size (in bytes) of the next grapheme.
The result is a tuple with the next grapheme size in bytes and
the remainder of the string or nil
in case the string
reached its end.
Examples
iex> String.next_grapheme_size("olá")
{1, "lá"}
iex> String.next_grapheme_size("")
nil
Converts all characters in string
to Unicode normalization
form identified by form
.
Invalid Unicode codepoints are skipped and the remaining of
the string is converted. If you want the algorithm to stop
and return on invalid codepoint, use :unicode.characters_to_nfd_binary/1
,
:unicode.characters_to_nfc_binary/1
, :unicode.characters_to_nfkd_binary/1
,
and :unicode.characters_to_nfkc_binary/1
instead.
Normalization forms :nfkc
and :nfkd
should not be blindly applied
to arbitrary text. Because they erase many formatting distinctions,
they will prevent round-trip conversion to and from many legacy
character sets.
Forms
The supported forms are:
:nfd
- Normalization Form Canonical Decomposition. Characters are decomposed by canonical equivalence, and multiple combining characters are arranged in a specific order.:nfc
- Normalization Form Canonical Composition. Characters are decomposed and then recomposed by canonical equivalence.:nfkd
- Normalization Form Compatibility Decomposition. Characters are decomposed by compatibility equivalence, and multiple combining characters are arranged in a specific order.:nfkc
- Normalization Form Compatibility Composition. Characters are decomposed and then recomposed by compatibility equivalence.
Examples
iex> String.normalize("yêṩ", :nfd)
"yêṩ"
iex> String.normalize("leña", :nfc)
"leña"
iex> String.normalize("fi", :nfkd)
"fi"
iex> String.normalize("fi", :nfkc)
"fi"
@spec pad_leading(t(), non_neg_integer(), t() | [t()]) :: t()
Returns a new string padded with a leading filler
which is made of elements from the padding
.
Passing a list of strings as padding
will take one element of the list
for every missing entry. If the list is shorter than the number of inserts,
the filling will start again from the beginning of the list.
Passing a string padding
is equivalent to passing the list of graphemes in it.
If no padding
is given, it defaults to whitespace.
When count
is less than or equal to the length of string
,
given string
is returned.
Raises ArgumentError
if the given padding
contains a non-string element.
Examples
iex> String.pad_leading("abc", 5)
" abc"
iex> String.pad_leading("abc", 4, "12")
"1abc"
iex> String.pad_leading("abc", 6, "12")
"121abc"
iex> String.pad_leading("abc", 5, ["1", "23"])
"123abc"
@spec pad_trailing(t(), non_neg_integer(), t() | [t()]) :: t()
Returns a new string padded with a trailing filler
which is made of elements from the padding
.
Passing a list of strings as padding
will take one element of the list
for every missing entry. If the list is shorter than the number of inserts,
the filling will start again from the beginning of the list.
Passing a string padding
is equivalent to passing the list of graphemes in it.
If no padding
is given, it defaults to whitespace.
When count
is less than or equal to the length of string
,
given string
is returned.
Raises ArgumentError
if the given padding
contains a non-string element.
Examples
iex> String.pad_trailing("abc", 5)
"abc "
iex> String.pad_trailing("abc", 4, "12")
"abc1"
iex> String.pad_trailing("abc", 6, "12")
"abc121"
iex> String.pad_trailing("abc", 5, ["1", "23"])
"abc123"
@spec printable?(t(), 0) :: true
@spec printable?(t(), pos_integer() | :infinity) :: boolean()
Checks if a string contains only printable characters up to character_limit
.
Takes an optional character_limit
as a second argument. If character_limit
is 0
, this
function will return true
.
Examples
iex> String.printable?("abc")
true
iex> String.printable?("abc" <> <<0>>)
false
iex> String.printable?("abc" <> <<0>>, 2)
true
iex> String.printable?("abc" <> <<0>>, 0)
true
Returns a new string created by replacing occurrences of pattern
in
subject
with replacement
.
The subject
is always a string.
The pattern
may be a string, a list of strings, a regular expression, or a
compiled pattern.
The replacement
may be a string or a function that receives the matched
pattern and must return the replacement as a string or iodata.
By default it replaces all occurrences but this behavior can be controlled
through the :global
option; see the "Options" section below.
Options
:global
- (boolean) iftrue
, all occurrences ofpattern
are replaced withreplacement
, otherwise only the first occurrence is replaced. Defaults totrue
Examples
iex> String.replace("a,b,c", ",", "-")
"a-b-c"
iex> String.replace("a,b,c", ",", "-", global: false)
"a-b,c"
The pattern may also be a list of strings and the replacement may also be a function that receives the matches:
iex> String.replace("a,b,c", ["a", "c"], fn <<char>> -> <<char + 1>> end)
"b,b,d"
When the pattern is a regular expression, one can give \N
or
\g{N}
in the replacement
string to access a specific capture in the
regular expression:
iex> String.replace("a,b,c", ~r/,(.)/, ",\\1\\g{1}")
"a,bb,cc"
Note that we had to escape the backslash escape character (i.e., we used \\N
instead of just \N
to escape the backslash; same thing for \\g{N}
). By
giving \0
, one can inject the whole match in the replacement string.
A compiled pattern can also be given:
iex> pattern = :binary.compile_pattern(",")
iex> String.replace("a,b,c", pattern, "[]")
"a[]b[]c"
When an empty string is provided as a pattern
, the function will treat it as
an implicit empty string between each grapheme and the string will be
interspersed. If an empty string is provided as replacement
the subject
will be returned:
iex> String.replace("ELIXIR", "", ".")
".E.L.I.X.I.R."
iex> String.replace("ELIXIR", "", "")
"ELIXIR"
Be aware that this function can replace within or across grapheme boundaries. For example, take the grapheme "é" which is made of the characters "e" and the acute accent. The following will replace only the letter "e", moving the accent to the letter "o":
iex> String.replace(String.normalize("é", :nfd), "e", "o")
"ó"
However, if "é" is represented by the single character "e with acute" accent, then it won't be replaced at all:
iex> String.replace(String.normalize("é", :nfc), "e", "o")
"é"
Returns a new string created by replacing all invalid bytes with replacement
("�"
by default).
Examples
iex> String.replace_invalid("asd" <> <<0xFF::8>>)
"asd�"
iex> String.replace_invalid("nem rán bề bề")
"nem rán bề bề"
iex> String.replace_invalid("nem rán b" <> <<225, 187>> <> " bề")
"nem rán b� bề"
iex> String.replace_invalid("nem rán b" <> <<225, 187>> <> " bề", "ERROR!")
"nem rán bERROR! bề"
Replaces all leading occurrences of match
by replacement
of match
in string
.
Returns the string untouched if there are no occurrences.
If match
is ""
, this function raises an ArgumentError
exception: this
happens because this function replaces all the occurrences of match
at
the beginning of string
, and it's impossible to replace "multiple"
occurrences of ""
.
Examples
iex> String.replace_leading("hello world", "hello ", "")
"world"
iex> String.replace_leading("hello hello world", "hello ", "")
"world"
iex> String.replace_leading("hello world", "hello ", "ola ")
"ola world"
iex> String.replace_leading("hello hello world", "hello ", "ola ")
"ola ola world"
This function can replace across grapheme boundaries. See replace/3
for more information and examples.
Replaces prefix in string
by replacement
if it matches match
.
Returns the string untouched if there is no match. If match
is an empty
string (""
), replacement
is just prepended to string
.
Examples
iex> String.replace_prefix("world", "hello ", "")
"world"
iex> String.replace_prefix("hello world", "hello ", "")
"world"
iex> String.replace_prefix("hello hello world", "hello ", "")
"hello world"
iex> String.replace_prefix("world", "hello ", "ola ")
"world"
iex> String.replace_prefix("hello world", "hello ", "ola ")
"ola world"
iex> String.replace_prefix("hello hello world", "hello ", "ola ")
"ola hello world"
iex> String.replace_prefix("world", "", "hello ")
"hello world"
This function can replace across grapheme boundaries. See replace/3
for more information and examples.
Replaces suffix in string
by replacement
if it matches match
.
Returns the string untouched if there is no match. If match
is an empty
string (""
), replacement
is just appended to string
.
Examples
iex> String.replace_suffix("hello", " world", "")
"hello"
iex> String.replace_suffix("hello world", " world", "")
"hello"
iex> String.replace_suffix("hello world world", " world", "")
"hello world"
iex> String.replace_suffix("hello", " world", " mundo")
"hello"
iex> String.replace_suffix("hello world", " world", " mundo")
"hello mundo"
iex> String.replace_suffix("hello world world", " world", " mundo")
"hello world mundo"
iex> String.replace_suffix("hello", "", " world")
"hello world"
This function can replace across grapheme boundaries. See replace/3
for more information and examples.
Replaces all trailing occurrences of match
by replacement
in string
.
Returns the string untouched if there are no occurrences.
If match
is ""
, this function raises an ArgumentError
exception: this
happens because this function replaces all the occurrences of match
at
the end of string
, and it's impossible to replace "multiple" occurrences of
""
.
Examples
iex> String.replace_trailing("hello world", " world", "")
"hello"
iex> String.replace_trailing("hello world world", " world", "")
"hello"
iex> String.replace_trailing("hello world", " world", " mundo")
"hello mundo"
iex> String.replace_trailing("hello world world", " world", " mundo")
"hello mundo mundo"
This function can replace across grapheme boundaries. See replace/3
for more information and examples.
Reverses the graphemes in given string.
Examples
iex> String.reverse("abcd")
"dcba"
iex> String.reverse("hello world")
"dlrow olleh"
iex> String.reverse("hello ∂og")
"go∂ olleh"
Keep in mind reversing the same string twice does not necessarily yield the original string:
iex> "̀e"
"̀e"
iex> String.reverse("̀e")
"è"
iex> String.reverse(String.reverse("̀e"))
"è"
In the first example the accent is before the vowel, so it is considered two graphemes. However, when you reverse it once, you have the vowel followed by the accent, which becomes one grapheme. Reversing it again will keep it as one single grapheme.
Returns a substring from the offset given by the start of the range to the offset given by the end of the range.
This function works on Unicode graphemes. For example, slicing the first
three characters of the string "héllo" will return "hél", which internally
is represented by more than three bytes. Use String.byte_slice/3
if you
want to slice by a given number of bytes, while respecting the codepoint
boundaries. If you want to work on raw bytes, check Kernel.binary_part/3
or Kernel.binary_slice/3
instead.
If the start of the range is not a valid offset for the given
string or if the range is in reverse order, returns ""
.
If the start or end of the range is negative, the whole string is traversed first in order to convert the negative indices into positive ones.
Examples
iex> String.slice("elixir", 1..3)
"lix"
iex> String.slice("elixir", 1..10)
"lixir"
iex> String.slice("elixir", -4..-1)
"ixir"
iex> String.slice("elixir", -4..6)
"ixir"
iex> String.slice("elixir", -100..100)
"elixir"
For ranges where start > stop
, you need to explicitly
mark them as increasing:
iex> String.slice("elixir", 2..-1//1)
"ixir"
iex> String.slice("elixir", 1..-2//1)
"lixi"
You can use ../0
as a shortcut for 0..-1//1
, which returns
the whole string as is:
iex> String.slice("elixir", ..)
"elixir"
The step can be any positive number. For example, to get every 2 characters of the string:
iex> String.slice("elixir", 0..-1//2)
"eii"
If the first position is after the string ends or after the last position of the range, it returns an empty string:
iex> String.slice("elixir", 10..3//1)
""
iex> String.slice("a", 1..1500)
""
@spec slice(t(), integer(), non_neg_integer()) :: grapheme()
Returns a substring starting at the offset start
, and of the given length
.
This function works on Unicode graphemes. For example, slicing the first
three characters of the string "héllo" will return "hél", which internally
is represented by more than three bytes. Use String.byte_slice/3
if you
want to slice by a given number of bytes, while respecting the codepoint
boundaries. If you want to work on raw bytes, check Kernel.binary_part/3
or Kernel.binary_slice/3
instead.
If the offset is greater than string length, then it returns ""
.
Examples
iex> String.slice("elixir", 1, 3)
"lix"
iex> String.slice("elixir", 1, 10)
"lixir"
iex> String.slice("elixir", 10, 3)
""
If the start position is negative, it is normalized against the string length and clamped to 0:
iex> String.slice("elixir", -4, 4)
"ixir"
iex> String.slice("elixir", -10, 3)
"eli"
If start is more than the string length, an empty string is returned:
iex> String.slice("elixir", 10, 1500)
""
Divides a string into substrings at each Unicode whitespace occurrence with leading and trailing whitespace ignored. Groups of whitespace are treated as a single occurrence. Divisions do not occur on non-breaking whitespace.
Examples
iex> String.split("foo bar")
["foo", "bar"]
iex> String.split("foo" <> <<194, 133>> <> "bar")
["foo", "bar"]
iex> String.split(" foo bar ")
["foo", "bar"]
iex> String.split("no\u00a0break")
["no\u00a0break"]
Divides a string into parts based on a pattern.
Returns a list of these parts.
The pattern
may be a string, a list of strings, a regular expression, or a
compiled pattern.
The string is split into as many parts as possible by
default, but can be controlled via the :parts
option.
Empty strings are only removed from the result if the
:trim
option is set to true
.
When the pattern used is a regular expression, the string is
split using Regex.split/3
.
If the pattern cannot be found, a list containing the original string will be returned.
Options
:parts
(positive integer or:infinity
) - the string is split into at most as many parts as this option specifies. If:infinity
, the string will be split into all possible parts. Defaults to:infinity
.:trim
(boolean) - iftrue
, empty strings are removed from the resulting list.
This function also accepts all options accepted by Regex.split/3
if pattern
is a regular expression.
Examples
Splitting with a string pattern:
iex> String.split("a,b,c", ",")
["a", "b", "c"]
iex> String.split("a,b,c", ",", parts: 2)
["a", "b,c"]
iex> String.split(" a b c ", " ", trim: true)
["a", "b", "c"]
A list of patterns:
iex> String.split("1,2 3,4", [" ", ","])
["1", "2", "3", "4"]
A regular expression:
iex> String.split("a,b,c", ~r{,})
["a", "b", "c"]
iex> String.split("a,b,c", ~r{,}, parts: 2)
["a", "b,c"]
iex> String.split(" a b c ", ~r{\s}, trim: true)
["a", "b", "c"]
iex> String.split("abc", ~r{b}, include_captures: true)
["a", "b", "c"]
A compiled pattern:
iex> pattern = :binary.compile_pattern([" ", ","])
iex> String.split("1,2 3,4", pattern)
["1", "2", "3", "4"]
Splitting on empty string returns graphemes:
iex> String.split("abc", "")
["", "a", "b", "c", ""]
iex> String.split("abc", "", trim: true)
["a", "b", "c"]
iex> String.split("abc", "", parts: 1)
["abc"]
iex> String.split("abc", "", parts: 3)
["", "a", "bc"]
Splitting on an non-existing pattern returns the original string:
iex> String.split("abc", ",")
["abc"]
Be aware that this function can split within or across grapheme boundaries. For example, take the grapheme "é" which is made of the characters "e" and the acute accent. The following will split the string into two parts:
iex> String.split(String.normalize("é", :nfd), "e")
["", "́"]
However, if "é" is represented by the single character "e with acute" accent, then it will split the string into just one part:
iex> String.split(String.normalize("é", :nfc), "e")
["é"]
Splits a string into two at the specified offset. When the offset given is negative, location is counted from the end of the string.
The offset is capped to the length of the string. Returns a tuple with two elements.
Note: keep in mind this function splits on graphemes and for such it
has to linearly traverse the string. If you want to split a string or
a binary based on the number of bytes, use Kernel.binary_part/3
instead.
Examples
iex> String.split_at("sweetelixir", 5)
{"sweet", "elixir"}
iex> String.split_at("sweetelixir", -6)
{"sweet", "elixir"}
iex> String.split_at("abc", 0)
{"", "abc"}
iex> String.split_at("abc", 1000)
{"abc", ""}
iex> String.split_at("abc", -1000)
{"", "abc"}
@spec splitter(t(), pattern(), keyword()) :: Enumerable.t()
Returns an enumerable that splits a string on demand.
This is in contrast to split/3
which splits the
entire string upfront.
This function does not support regular expressions by design. When using regular expressions, it is often more efficient to have the regular expressions traverse the string at once than in parts, like this function does.
Options
- :trim - when
true
, does not emit empty patterns
Examples
iex> String.splitter("1,2 3,4 5,6 7,8,...,99999", [" ", ","]) |> Enum.take(4)
["1", "2", "3", "4"]
iex> String.splitter("abcd", "") |> Enum.take(10)
["", "a", "b", "c", "d", ""]
iex> String.splitter("abcd", "", trim: true) |> Enum.take(10)
["a", "b", "c", "d"]
A compiled pattern can also be given:
iex> pattern = :binary.compile_pattern([" ", ","])
iex> String.splitter("1,2 3,4 5,6 7,8,...,99999", pattern) |> Enum.take(4)
["1", "2", "3", "4"]
Returns true
if string
starts with any of the prefixes given.
prefix
can be either a string, a list of strings, or a compiled
pattern.
Examples
iex> String.starts_with?("elixir", "eli")
true
iex> String.starts_with?("elixir", ["erlang", "elixir"])
true
iex> String.starts_with?("elixir", ["erlang", "ruby"])
false
An empty string will always match:
iex> String.starts_with?("elixir", "")
true
iex> String.starts_with?("elixir", ["", "other"])
true
An empty list will never match:
iex> String.starts_with?("elixir", [])
false
iex> String.starts_with?("", [])
false
Converts a string to an existing atom or creates a new one.
Warning: this function creates atoms dynamically and atoms are
not garbage-collected. Therefore, string
should not be an
untrusted value, such as input received from a socket or during
a web request. Consider using to_existing_atom/1
instead.
By default, the maximum number of atoms is 1_048_576
. This limit
can be raised or lowered using the VM option +t
.
The maximum atom size is of 255 Unicode code points.
Inlined by the compiler.
Examples
iex> String.to_atom("my_atom")
:my_atom
Converts a string into a charlist.
Specifically, this function takes a UTF-8 encoded binary and returns a list of its integer
code points. It is similar to codepoints/1
except that the latter returns a list of code points as
strings.
In case you need to work with bytes, take a look at the
:binary
module.
Examples
iex> String.to_charlist("foo")
~c"foo"
Converts a string to an existing atom or raises if the atom does not exist.
The maximum atom size is of 255 Unicode code points.
Raises an ArgumentError
if the atom does not exist.
Inlined by the compiler.
Atoms and modules
Since Elixir is a compiled language, the atoms defined in a module will only exist after said module is loaded, which typically happens whenever a function in the module is executed. Therefore, it is generally recommended to call
String.to_existing_atom/1
only to convert atoms defined within the module making the function call toto_existing_atom/1
.To create a module name itself from a string safely, it is recommended to use
Module.safe_concat/1
.
Examples
iex> _ = :my_atom
iex> String.to_existing_atom("my_atom")
:my_atom
Returns a float whose text representation is string
.
string
must be the string representation of a float including a decimal point.
In order to parse a string without decimal point as a float then Float.parse/1
should be used. Otherwise, an ArgumentError
will be raised.
Inlined by the compiler.
Examples
iex> String.to_float("2.2017764e+0")
2.2017764
iex> String.to_float("3.0")
3.0
String.to_float("3")
** (ArgumentError) argument error
Returns an integer whose text representation is string
.
string
must be the string representation of an integer.
Otherwise, an ArgumentError
will be raised. If you want
to parse a string that may contain an ill-formatted integer,
use Integer.parse/1
.
Inlined by the compiler.
Examples
iex> String.to_integer("123")
123
Passing a string that does not represent an integer leads to an error:
String.to_integer("invalid data")
** (ArgumentError) argument error
Returns an integer whose text representation is string
in base base
.
Inlined by the compiler.
Examples
iex> String.to_integer("3FF", 16)
1023
Returns a string where all leading and trailing Unicode whitespaces have been removed.
Examples
iex> String.trim("\n abc\n ")
"abc"
Returns a string where all leading and trailing to_trim
characters have been
removed.
Examples
iex> String.trim("a abc a", "a")
" abc "
Returns a string where all leading Unicode whitespaces have been removed.
Examples
iex> String.trim_leading("\n abc ")
"abc "
Returns a string where all leading to_trim
characters have been removed.
Examples
iex> String.trim_leading("__ abc _", "_")
" abc _"
iex> String.trim_leading("1 abc", "11")
"1 abc"
Returns a string where all trailing Unicode whitespaces has been removed.
Examples
iex> String.trim_trailing(" abc\n ")
" abc"
Returns a string where all trailing to_trim
characters have been removed.
Examples
iex> String.trim_trailing("_ abc __", "_")
"_ abc "
iex> String.trim_trailing("abc 1", "11")
"abc 1"
Converts all characters in the given string to uppercase according to mode
.
mode
may be :default
, :ascii
, :greek
or :turkic
. The :default
mode considers
all non-conditional transformations outlined in the Unicode standard. :ascii
uppercases only the letters a to z. :greek
includes the context sensitive
mappings found in Greek. :turkic
properly handles the letter i with the dotless variant.
Examples
iex> String.upcase("abcd")
"ABCD"
iex> String.upcase("ab 123 xpto")
"AB 123 XPTO"
iex> String.upcase("olá")
"OLÁ"
The :ascii
mode ignores Unicode characters and provides a more
performant implementation when you know the string contains only
ASCII characters:
iex> String.upcase("olá", :ascii)
"OLá"
And :turkic
properly handles the letter i with the dotless variant:
iex> String.upcase("ıi")
"II"
iex> String.upcase("ıi", :turkic)
"Iİ"
Also see downcase/2
and capitalize/2
for other conversions.
Checks whether string
contains only valid characters.
algorithm
may be :default
or :fast_ascii
. Both algorithms are equivalent
from a validation perspective (they will always produce the same output), but
:fast_ascii
can yield significant performance benefits in specific scenarios.
If all of the following conditions are true, you may want to experiment with
the :fast_ascii
algorithm to see if it yields performance benefits in your
specific scenario:
- You are running Erlang/OTP 26 or newer on a 64 bit platform
- You expect most of your strings to be longer than ~64 bytes
- You expect most of your strings to contain mostly ASCII codepoints
Note that the :fast_ascii
algorithm does not affect correctness, you can
expect the output of String.valid?/2
to be the same regardless of algorithm.
The only difference to be expected is one of performance, which can be
expected to improve roughly linearly in string length compared to the
:default
algorithm.
Examples
iex> String.valid?("a")
true
iex> String.valid?("ø")
true
iex> String.valid?(<<0xFFFF::16>>)
false
iex> String.valid?(<<0xEF, 0xB7, 0x90>>)
true
iex> String.valid?("asd" <> <<0xFFFF::16>>)
false
iex> String.valid?("a", :fast_ascii)
true
iex> String.valid?(4)
** (FunctionClauseError) no function clause matching in String.valid?/2