An extension of the standard StringLabels. If you open Base
, you'll get these in
the String module.
module Caseless : sig ... end
Caseless
compares and hashes strings ignoring case, so that for example
Caseless.equal "OCaml" "ocaml"
and Caseless.("apple" < "Banana")
are true
, and
Caseless.Map
, Caseless.Table
lookup and Caseless.Set
membership is
case-insensitive. Caseless
also provides case insensitive is_suffix and is_prefix
functions, so that for example Caseless.is_suffix "OCaml" ~suffix:"AmL"
and
Caseless.is_prefix "OCaml" ~prefix:"oc"
are true
.
val blito : (t, bytes) Blit.blito
include Container.S0 with type t := t with type elt = char
val length : t ‑> int
val is_empty : t ‑> bool
iter
must allow exceptions raised in f
to escape, terminating the iteration
cleanly. The same holds for all functions below taking an f
.
val fold_result : t ‑> init:'accum ‑> f:('accum ‑> elt ‑> ('accum, 'e) Result.t) ‑> ('accum, 'e) Result.t
fold_result t ~init ~f
is a short-circuiting version of fold
that runs in the
Result
monad. If f
returns an Error _
, that value is returned without any
additional invocations of f
.
val fold_until : t ‑> init:'accum ‑> f:('accum ‑> elt ‑> ('accum, 'stop) Container_intf.Continue_or_stop.t) ‑> ('accum, 'stop) Container_intf.Finished_or_stopped_early.t
fold_until t ~init ~f
is a short-circuiting version of fold
. If f
returns Stop _
the computation ceases and results in that value. If f
returns
Continue _
, the fold will proceed.
Returns true
if and only if there exists an element for which the provided
function evaluates to true
. This is a short-circuiting operation.
Returns true
if and only if the provided function evaluates to true
for all
elements. This is a short-circuiting operation.
val sum : (module Commutative_group.S with type t = 'sum) ‑> t ‑> f:(elt ‑> 'sum) ‑> 'sum
Returns the sum of f i
for all i
in the container.
include Identifiable.S with type t := t
include Comparable.S with type t := t
include Comparable_intf.Polymorphic_compare
ascending
is identical to compare
. descending x y = ascending y x
. These are
intended to be mnemonic when used like List.sort ~cmp:ascending
and List.sort
~cmp:descending
, since they cause the list to be sorted in ascending or descending
order, respectively.
clamp_exn t ~min ~max
returns t'
, the closest value to t
such that
between t' ~low:min ~high:max
is true.
Raises if not (min <= max)
.
val clamp : t ‑> min:t ‑> max:t ‑> t Or_error.t
include Comparator.S with type t := t
val comparator : (t, comparator_witness) Comparator.comparator
include Comparable_intf.Validate with type t := t
val validate_lbound : min:t Maybe_bound.t ‑> t Validate.check
val validate_ubound : max:t Maybe_bound.t ‑> t Validate.check
val validate_bound : min:t Maybe_bound.t ‑> max:t Maybe_bound.t ‑> t Validate.check
external length : t ‑> int = "%string_length"
external get : t ‑> int ‑> char = "%string_safe_get"
external unsafe_get : string ‑> int ‑> char = "%string_unsafe_get"
unsafe_get t i
is like get t i
but does not perform bounds checking. The caller
must ensure that it is a memory-safe operation.
val make : int ‑> char ‑> t
val init : int ‑> f:(int ‑> char) ‑> t
String append. Also available unqualified, but re-exported here for documentation purposes.
Note that a ^ b
must copy both a
and b
into a newly-allocated result string, so
a ^ b ^ c ^ ... ^ z
is quadratic in the number of strings. String.concat
does not
have this problem -- it allocates the result buffer only once. The Rope
module
provides a data structure which uses a similar trick to achieve fast concatenation at
either end of a string.
Warning: Only returns a copy if changes are necessary! Special characters are represented by escape sequences, following the lexical conventions of Objective Caml.
val contains : ?pos:int ‑> ?len:int ‑> t ‑> char ‑> bool
val index : t ‑> char ‑> int option
val index_exn : t ‑> char ‑> int
val rindex : t ‑> char ‑> int option
val rindex_exn : t ‑> char ‑> int
val index_from : t ‑> int ‑> char ‑> int option
val index_from_exn : t ‑> int ‑> char ‑> int
val rindex_from : t ‑> int ‑> char ‑> int option
val rindex_from_exn : t ‑> int ‑> char ‑> int
module Search_pattern : sig ... end
Substring search and replace functions. They use the Knuth-Morris-Pratt algorithm (KMP) under the hood.
Substring search and replace convenience functions. They call Search_pattern.create
and then forget the preprocessed pattern when the search is complete. pos < 0
or
pos >= length t
result in no match (hence substr_index
returns None
and
substr_index_exn
raises). may_overlap
indicates whether to report overlapping
matches, see Search_pattern.index_all
.
slice s start stop
gets a slice of s
between start
and stop
.
start
and stop
will be normalized before the access.
(viz. Array.normalize).
If the string s
contains the character on
, then lsplit2_exn
s ~on
returns a pair containing s
split around the first
appearance of on
(from the left).
on
cannot be found in s
If the string s
contains the character on
, then rsplit2_exn
s ~on
returns a pair containing s
split around the first
appearance of on
(from the right).
on
cannot be found in s
lsplit2 s ~on
optionally returns s
split into two strings around the
first appearance of on
from the left
rsplit2 s ~on
optionally returns s
split into two strings around the first
appearance of on
from the right
split s ~on
s
that are separated by
on
. Consecutive on
characters will cause multiple empty strings
in the result. Splitting the empty string returns a list of the empty
string, not the empty list.split_on_chars s ~on
s
that are separated by one of the chars from on
. on
are not grouped. So a grouping of on
in the source string will
produce multiple empty string splits in the result.split_lines t
returns the list of lines that comprise t
. The lines do
not include the trailing "\n"
or "\r\n"
.
val lfindi : ?pos:int ‑> t ‑> f:(int ‑> char ‑> bool) ‑> int option
lfindi ?pos t ~f
returns the smallest i >= pos
such that f i t.[i]
, if there is
such an i
. By default, pos = 0
.
val rfindi : ?pos:int ‑> t ‑> f:(int ‑> char ‑> bool) ‑> int option
rfindi ?pos t ~f
returns the largest i <= pos
such that f i t.[i]
, if there is
such an i
. By default pos = length t - 1
.
Warning: the following strip functions may return the same string passed in
lstrip ?drop s
returns a string with consecutive chars satisfying drop
(by default
white space, e.g. tabs, spaces, newlines, and carriage returns) stripped from the
beginning of s
.
rstrip ?drop s
returns a string with consecutive chars satisfying drop
(by default
white space, e.g. tabs, spaces, newlines, and carriage returns) stripped from the end
of s
.
strip ?drop s
returns a string with consecutive chars satisfying drop
(by default
white space, e.g. tabs, spaces, newlines, and carriage returns) stripped from the
beginning and end of s
.
val foldi : t ‑> init:'a ‑> f:(int ‑> 'a ‑> char ‑> 'a) ‑> 'a
foldi
works similarly to fold
, but also pass in index of each character to f
val tr_inplace : target:char ‑> replacement:char ‑> bytes ‑> unit
tr_inplace target replacement s
destructively modifies s (in place!)
replacing every instance of target
in s
with replacement
.
chop_suffix_exn s ~suffix
returns a copy of s
without the trailing suffix
suffix
is not a suffix of s
chop_prefix_exn s ~prefix
returns a copy of s
without the leading prefix
prefix
is not a prefix of s
val of_char : char ‑> t
val of_char_list : char list ‑> t
module Escaping : sig ... end
Operations for escaping and unescaping strings, with parameterized escape and escapeworthy characters. Escaping/unescaping using this module is more efficient than using Pcre. Benchmark code can be found in core/benchmarks/string_escaping.ml.