ref: e81c54ba2ecc673a4d5f8aed0e9b52841fe07b0d
dir: /man/1/sh-string/
.TH SH-STRING 1 .SH NAME prefix, in, splitl, splitr, drop, take, splitstrl, splitstrr, tolower, toupper, len, alen, slice \- shell script string manipulation .SH SYNOPSIS .B load string .B prefix .I pre s .br .B in .I c cl .br .B ${splitl .IB "s cl" } .br .B ${splitr .IB "s cl" } .br .B ${splitstrl .IB "s t" } .br .B ${splitstrr .IB "s t" } .br .B ${take .IB "s cl" } .br .B ${tolower .IB s } .br .B ${toupper .IB s } .br .B ${len .IB s } .br .B ${alen .IB s } .br .B ${slice .IB "start end s" } .br .B ${fields .IB "cl s" } .br .B ${padl .I n [ .IR s ... .RB ] } .br .B ${padr .I n [ .IR s ... .RB ] } .br .SH DESCRIPTION .I String is a loadable module for .IR sh (1) that provides a shell-script interface to the string manipulation commands found in .IR string (2), with a couple of other facilities thrown in for good measure. Each of the substitution builtins .BR splitl , .BR splitr , .BR drop , .BR take , .BR splitstrl , .BR splitstrr , .BR tolower , and .BR toupper implements the same functionality as that provided by the function of the same name in .IR string (2). Where a function in the .IR string (2) module returns a tuple, the equivalent builtin yields a two-element list; the others yield a list with a single element. .PP In all .I string commands, the number of arguments provided must be exactly that required by the command so, for instance, giving an undefined variable (a zero element list) as an argument will cause a .B usage exception to be generated. .PP The two builtins .B prefix and .B in are again similar to their .IR string (2) counterparts - their return value is true (an empty string) if the equivalent .IR string (2) function would be non-zero. .PP .B Len returns the length of its argument .IR s . .B Alen returns the length of its argument .IR s when converted to a byte-array. (This will be different from the result of .B len when .I s contains non-ASCII characters). .B Slice is similar to the string-slicing operator in Limbo; it returns the section of .I s starting at index .I start and ending just before index .IR end . .I End may be the literal string .BR end , in which .BI "${slice " start " end}" is the same as .BI "${slice " start " ${len " s "}}"\fR.\fP Unlike in Limbo, nothing untoward happens if an out-of-range slice is taken: any out of range indices are trimmed to within the bounds of .IR s . .PP .B Fields is similar to .B ${split} in .IR sh (1), but does not merge field separator characters. It splits .I s into fields separated by characters in class .IR cl ; if there are .I n characters matching .I cl inside .IR s , .B fields will yield .IR n +1 items in its result. .PP .B Padl and .B padr widen the string .I s to .I n characters, padding it with spaces on the right (for .BR padl ) or the left (for .BR padr ) as necessary. If .I s is already at least .I n characters wide, it is left unchanged. If several arguments are given, they are concatenated, separated with spaces, before padding takes place. .SH SOURCE .B /appl/cmd/sh/string.b .SH SEE ALSO .IR string (2), .IR sh (1), .IR sh-std (1), .IR sh-expr (1)