gleam/string
Strings in Gleam are UTF-8 binaries. They can be written in your code as
text surrounded by "double quotes"
.
Functions
pub fn append(to first: String, suffix second: String) -> String
Creates a new String
by joining two String
s together.
This function copies both String
s and runs in linear time. If you find
yourself joining String
s frequently consider using the string_builder
module as it can append String
s much faster!
Examples
append(to: "butter", suffix: "fly")
// -> "butterfly"
pub fn byte_size(string: String) -> Int
Returns the number of bytes in a String
.
This function runs in constant time on Erlang and in linear time on JavaScript.
Examples
byte_size("π³οΈββ§οΈπ³οΈβππ©πΎββ€οΈβπ¨π»")
// -> 58
pub fn capitalise(s: String) -> String
Creates a new String
with the first grapheme in the input String
converted to uppercase and the remaining graphemes to lowercase.
Examples
capitalise("mamouna")
// -> "Mamouna"
pub fn compare(a: String, b: String) -> Order
Compares two String
s to see which is βlargerβ by comparing their graphemes.
This does not compare the size or length of the given String
s.
Examples
compare("Anthony", "Anthony")
// -> order.Eq
compare("A", "B")
// -> order.Lt
pub fn concat(strings: List(String)) -> String
Creates a new String
by joining many String
s together.
This function copies both String
s and runs in linear time. If you find
yourself joining String
s frequently consider using the string_builder
module as it can append String
s much faster!
Examples
concat(["never", "the", "less"])
// -> "nevertheless"
pub fn contains(
does haystack: String,
contain needle: String,
) -> Bool
Checks if the first String
contains the second.
Examples
contains(does: "theory", contain: "ory")
// -> True
contains(does: "theory", contain: "the")
// -> True
contains(does: "theory", contain: "THE")
// -> False
pub fn crop(
from string: String,
before substring: String,
) -> String
Drops contents of the first String
that occur before the second String
.
If the from
string does not contain the before
string, from
is returned unchanged.
Examples
crop(from: "The Lone Gunmen", before: "Lone")
// -> "Lone Gunmen"
pub fn drop_left(
from string: String,
up_to num_graphemes: Int,
) -> String
Drops n graphemes from the left side of a String
.
Examples
drop_left(from: "The Lone Gunmen", up_to: 2)
// -> "e Lone Gunmen"
pub fn drop_right(
from string: String,
up_to num_graphemes: Int,
) -> String
Drops n graphemes from the right side of a String
.
Examples
drop_right(from: "Cigarette Smoking Man", up_to: 2)
// -> "Cigarette Smoking M"
pub fn ends_with(string: String, suffix: String) -> Bool
Checks whether the first String
ends with the second one.
Examples
ends_with("theory", "ory")
// -> True
pub fn first(s: String) -> Result(String, Nil)
Returns the first grapheme cluster in a given String
and wraps it in a
Result(String, Nil)
. If the String
is empty, it returns Error(Nil)
.
Otherwise, it returns Ok(String)
.
Examples
first("")
// -> Error(Nil)
first("icecream")
// -> Ok("i")
pub fn from_utf_codepoints(
utf_codepoints: List(UtfCodepoint),
) -> String
Converts a List
of UtfCodepoint
s to a String
.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_point and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode#Codespace_and_Code_Points for an explanation on code points.
Examples
let assert Ok(a) = utf_codepoint(97)
let assert Ok(b) = utf_codepoint(98)
let assert Ok(c) = utf_codepoint(99)
from_utf_codepoints([a, b, c])
// -> "abc"
pub fn inspect(term: a) -> String
Returns a String
representation of a term in Gleam syntax.
pub fn is_empty(str: String) -> Bool
Determines if a String
is empty.
Examples
is_empty("")
// -> True
is_empty("the world")
// -> False
pub fn join(
strings: List(String),
with separator: String,
) -> String
Joins many String
s together with a given separator.
This function runs in linear time.
Examples
join(["home","evan","Desktop"], with: "/")
// -> "home/evan/Desktop"
pub fn last(s: String) -> Result(String, Nil)
Returns the last grapheme cluster in a given String
and wraps it in a
Result(String, Nil)
. If the String
is empty, it returns Error(Nil)
.
Otherwise, it returns Ok(String)
.
Examples
last("")
// -> Error(Nil)
last("icecream")
// -> Ok("m")
pub fn length(string: String) -> Int
Gets the number of grapheme clusters in a given String
.
This function has to iterate across the whole string to count the number of graphemes, so it runs in linear time.
Examples
length("Gleam")
// -> 5
length("ΓβeΜ")
// -> 3
length("")
// -> 0
pub fn lowercase(string: String) -> String
Creates a new String
with all the graphemes in the input String
converted to
lowercase.
Useful for case-insensitive comparisons.
Examples
lowercase("X-FILES")
// -> "x-files"
pub fn pad_left(
string: String,
to desired_length: Int,
with pad_string: String,
) -> String
Pads a String
on the left until it has at least given number of graphemes.
Examples
pad_left("121", to: 5, with: ".")
// -> "..121"
pad_left("121", to: 3, with: ".")
// -> "121"
pad_left("121", to: 2, with: ".")
// -> "121"
pub fn pad_right(
string: String,
to desired_length: Int,
with pad_string: String,
) -> String
Pads a String
on the right until it has a given length.
Examples
pad_right("123", to: 5, with: ".")
// -> "123.."
pad_right("123", to: 3, with: ".")
// -> "123"
pad_right("123", to: 2, with: ".")
// -> "123"
pub fn pop_grapheme(
string: String,
) -> Result(#(String, String), Nil)
Splits a non-empty String
into its first element (head) and rest (tail).
This lets you pattern match on String
s exactly as you would with lists.
Note on JavaScript using the function to iterate over a string will likely
be slower than using to_graphemes
due to string slicing being more
expensive on JavaScript than Erlang.
Examples
pop_grapheme("gleam")
// -> Ok(#("g", "leam"))
pop_grapheme("")
// -> Error(Nil)
pub fn repeat(string: String, times times: Int) -> String
Creates a new String
by repeating a String
a given number of times.
This function runs in linear time.
Examples
repeat("ha", times: 3)
// -> "hahaha"
pub fn replace(
in string: String,
each pattern: String,
with substitute: String,
) -> String
Creates a new String
by replacing all occurrences of a given substring.
Examples
replace("www.example.com", each: ".", with: "-")
// -> "www-example-com"
replace("a,b,c,d,e", each: ",", with: "/")
// -> "a/b/c/d/e"
pub fn reverse(string: String) -> String
Reverses a String
.
This function has to iterate across the whole String
so it runs in linear
time.
Examples
reverse("stressed")
// -> "desserts"
pub fn slice(
from string: String,
at_index idx: Int,
length len: Int,
) -> String
Takes a substring given a start grapheme index and a length. Negative indexes are taken starting from the end of the list.
Examples
slice(from: "gleam", at_index: 1, length: 2)
// -> "le"
slice(from: "gleam", at_index: 1, length: 10)
// -> "leam"
slice(from: "gleam", at_index: 10, length: 3)
// -> ""
slice(from: "gleam", at_index: -2, length: 2)
// -> "am"
slice(from: "gleam", at_index: -12, length: 2)
// -> ""
pub fn split(x: String, on substring: String) -> List(String)
Creates a list of String
s by splitting a given string on a given substring.
Examples
split("home/gleam/desktop/", on: "/")
// -> ["home", "gleam", "desktop", ""]
pub fn split_once(
x: String,
on substring: String,
) -> Result(#(String, String), Nil)
Splits a String
a single time on the given substring.
Returns an Error
if substring not present.
Examples
split_once("home/gleam/desktop/", on: "/")
// -> Ok(#("home", "gleam/desktop/"))
split_once("home/gleam/desktop/", on: "?")
// -> Error(Nil)
pub fn starts_with(string: String, prefix: String) -> Bool
Checks whether the first String
starts with the second one.
Examples
starts_with("theory", "ory")
// -> False
pub fn to_graphemes(string: String) -> List(String)
Converts a String
to a list of
graphemes.
to_graphemes("abc")
// -> ["a", "b", "c"]
pub fn to_option(s: String) -> Option(String)
Converts a String
into Option(String)
where an empty String
becomes
None
.
Examples
to_option("")
// -> None
to_option("hats")
// -> Some("hats")
pub fn to_utf_codepoints(string: String) -> List(UtfCodepoint)
Converts a String
to a List
of UtfCodepoint
.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_point and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode#Codespace_and_Code_Points for an explanation on code points.
Examples
"a" |> to_utf_codepoints
// -> [UtfCodepoint(97)]
// Semantically the same as:
// ["π³", "οΈ", "β", "π"] or:
// [waving_white_flag, variant_selector_16, zero_width_joiner, rainbow]
"π³οΈβπ" |> to_utf_codepoints
// -> [
// UtfCodepoint(127987),
// UtfCodepoint(65039),
// UtfCodepoint(8205),
// UtfCodepoint(127752),
// ]
pub fn trim(string: String) -> String
Removes whitespace on both sides of a String
.
Examples
trim(" hats \n")
// -> "hats"
pub fn trim_left(string: String) -> String
Removes whitespace on the left of a String
.
Examples
trim_left(" hats \n")
// -> "hats \n"
pub fn trim_right(string: String) -> String
Removes whitespace on the right of a String
.
Examples
trim_right(" hats \n")
// -> " hats"
pub fn uppercase(string: String) -> String
Creates a new String
with all the graphemes in the input String
converted to
uppercase.
Useful for case-insensitive comparisons and VIRTUAL YELLING.
Examples
uppercase("skinner")
// -> "SKINNER"
pub fn utf_codepoint(value: Int) -> Result(UtfCodepoint, Nil)
Converts an integer to a UtfCodepoint
.
Returns an Error
if the integer does not represent a valid UTF codepoint.
pub fn utf_codepoint_to_int(cp: UtfCodepoint) -> Int
Converts an UtfCodepoint to its ordinal code point value.
Examples
let assert [utf_codepoint, ..] = to_utf_codepoints("π")
utf_codepoint_to_int(utf_codepoint)
// -> 128156