Related
I have a string, 12345.00, and I would like it to return 12345.0.
I have looked at trim, but it looks like it is only trimming whitespace and slice which I don't see how this would work. Any suggestions?
You can use the substring function:
let str = "12345.00";
str = str.substring(0, str.length - 1);
console.log(str);
This is the accepted answer, but as per the conversations below, the slice syntax is much clearer:
let str = "12345.00";
str = str.slice(0, -1);
console.log(str);
You can use slice! You just have to make sure you know how to use it. Positive #s are relative to the beginning, negative numbers are relative to the end.
js>"12345.00".slice(0,-1)
12345.0
You can use the substring method of JavaScript string objects:
s = s.substring(0, s.length - 4)
It unconditionally removes the last four characters from string s.
However, if you want to conditionally remove the last four characters, only if they are exactly _bar:
var re = /_bar$/;
s.replace(re, "");
The easiest method is to use the slice method of the string, which allows negative positions (corresponding to offsets from the end of the string):
const s = "your string";
const withoutLastFourChars = s.slice(0, -4);
If you needed something more general to remove everything after (and including) the last underscore, you could do the following (so long as s is guaranteed to contain at least one underscore):
const s = "your_string";
const withoutLastChunk = s.slice(0, s.lastIndexOf("_"));
console.log(withoutLastChunk);
For a number like your example, I would recommend doing this over substring:
console.log(parseFloat('12345.00').toFixed(1));
Do note that this will actually round the number, though, which I would imagine is desired but maybe not:
console.log(parseFloat('12345.46').toFixed(1));
Be aware that String.prototype.{ split, slice, substr, substring } operate on UTF-16 encoded strings
None of the previous answers are Unicode-aware.
Strings are encoded as UTF-16 in most modern JavaScript engines, but higher Unicode code points require surrogate pairs, so older, pre-existing string methods operate on UTF-16 code units, not Unicode code points.
See: Do NOT use .split('').
const string = "ẞ🦊";
console.log(string.slice(0, -1)); // "ẞ\ud83e"
console.log(string.substr(0, string.length - 1)); // "ẞ\ud83e"
console.log(string.substring(0, string.length - 1)); // "ẞ\ud83e"
console.log(string.replace(/.$/, "")); // "ẞ\ud83e"
console.log(string.match(/(.*).$/)[1]); // "ẞ\ud83e"
const utf16Chars = string.split("");
utf16Chars.pop();
console.log(utf16Chars.join("")); // "ẞ\ud83e"
In addition, RegExp methods, as suggested in older answers, don’t match line breaks at the end:
const string = "Hello, world!\n";
console.log(string.replace(/.$/, "").endsWith("\n")); // true
console.log(string.match(/(.*).$/) === null); // true
Use the string iterator to iterate characters
Unicode-aware code utilizes the string’s iterator; see Array.from and ... spread.
string[Symbol.iterator] can be used (e.g. instead of string) as well.
Also see How to split Unicode string to characters in JavaScript.
Examples:
const string = "ẞ🦊";
console.log(Array.from(string).slice(0, -1).join("")); // "ẞ"
console.log([
...string
].slice(0, -1).join("")); // "ẞ"
Use the s and u flags on a RegExp
The dotAll or s flag makes . match line break characters, the unicode or u flag enables certain Unicode-related features.
Note that, when using the u flag, you eliminate unnecessary identity escapes, as these are invalid in a u regex, e.g. \[ is fine, as it would start a character class without the backslash, but \: isn’t, as it’s a : with or without the backslash, so you need to remove the backslash.
Examples:
const unicodeString = "ẞ🦊",
lineBreakString = "Hello, world!\n";
console.log(lineBreakString.replace(/.$/s, "").endsWith("\n")); // false
console.log(lineBreakString.match(/(.*).$/s) === null); // false
console.log(unicodeString.replace(/.$/su, "")); // ẞ
console.log(unicodeString.match(/(.*).$/su)[1]); // ẞ
// Now `split` can be made Unicode-aware:
const unicodeCharacterArray = unicodeString.split(/(?:)/su),
lineBreakCharacterArray = lineBreakString.split(/(?:)/su);
unicodeCharacterArray.pop();
lineBreakCharacterArray.pop();
console.log(unicodeCharacterArray.join("")); // "ẞ"
console.log(lineBreakCharacterArray.join("").endsWith("\n")); // false
Note that some graphemes consist of more than one code point, e.g. 🏳️🌈 which consists of the sequence 🏳 (U+1F3F3), VS16 (U+FE0F), ZWJ (U+200D), 🌈 (U+1F308).
Here, even Array.from will split this into four “characters”.
Matching those is made easier with the RegExp set notation and properties of strings proposal.
Using JavaScript's slice function:
let string = 'foo_bar';
string = string.slice(0, -4); // Slice off last four characters here
console.log(string);
This could be used to remove '_bar' at end of a string, of any length.
A regular expression is what you are looking for:
let str = "foo_bar";
console.log(str.replace(/_bar$/, ""));
Try this:
const myString = "Hello World!";
console.log(myString.slice(0, -1));
Performance
Today 2020.05.13 I perform tests of chosen solutions on Chrome v81.0, Safari v13.1 and Firefox v76.0 on MacOs High Sierra v10.13.6.
Conclusions
the slice(0,-1)(D) is fast or fastest solution for short and long strings and it is recommended as fast cross-browser solution
solutions based on substring (C) and substr(E) are fast
solutions based on regular expressions (A,B) are slow/medium fast
solutions B, F and G are slow for long strings
solution F is slowest for short strings, G is slowest for long strings
Details
I perform two tests for solutions A, B, C, D, E(ext), F, G(my)
for 8-char short string (from OP question) - you can run it HERE
for 1M long string - you can run it HERE
Solutions are presented in below snippet
function A(str) {
return str.replace(/.$/, '');
}
function B(str) {
return str.match(/(.*).$/)[1];
}
function C(str) {
return str.substring(0, str.length - 1);
}
function D(str) {
return str.slice(0, -1);
}
function E(str) {
return str.substr(0, str.length - 1);
}
function F(str) {
let s= str.split("");
s.pop();
return s.join("");
}
function G(str) {
let s='';
for(let i=0; i<str.length-1; i++) s+=str[i];
return s;
}
// ---------
// TEST
// ---------
let log = (f)=>console.log(`${f.name}: ${f("12345.00")}`);
[A,B,C,D,E,F,G].map(f=>log(f));
This snippet only presents soutions
Here are example results for Chrome for short string
Use regex:
let aStr = "12345.00";
aStr = aStr.replace(/.$/, '');
console.log(aStr);
How about:
let myString = "12345.00";
console.log(myString.substring(0, myString.length - 1));
1. (.*), captures any character multiple times:
console.log("a string".match(/(.*).$/)[1]);
2. ., matches last character, in this case:
console.log("a string".match(/(.*).$/));
3. $, matches the end of the string:
console.log("a string".match(/(.*).{2}$/)[1]);
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/34817546/javascript-how-to-delete-last-two-characters-in-a-string
Just use trim if you don't want spaces
"11.01 °C".slice(0,-2).trim()
Here is an alternative that i don't think i've seen in the other answers, just for fun.
var strArr = "hello i'm a string".split("");
strArr.pop();
document.write(strArr.join(""));
Not as legible or simple as slice or substring but does allow you to play with the string using some nice array methods, so worth knowing.
debris = string.split("_") //explode string into array of strings indexed by "_"
debris.pop(); //pop last element off the array (which you didn't want)
result = debris.join("_"); //fuse the remainng items together like the sun
If you want to do generic rounding of floats, instead of just trimming the last character:
var float1 = 12345.00,
float2 = 12345.4567,
float3 = 12345.982;
var MoreMath = {
/**
* Rounds a value to the specified number of decimals
* #param float value The value to be rounded
* #param int nrDecimals The number of decimals to round value to
* #return float value rounded to nrDecimals decimals
*/
round: function (value, nrDecimals) {
var x = nrDecimals > 0 ? 10 * parseInt(nrDecimals, 10) : 1;
return Math.round(value * x) / x;
}
}
MoreMath.round(float1, 1) => 12345.0
MoreMath.round(float2, 1) => 12345.5
MoreMath.round(float3, 1) => 12346.0
EDIT: Seems like there exists a built in function for this, as Paolo points out. That solution is obviously much cleaner than mine. Use parseFloat followed by toFixed
if(str.substring(str.length - 4) == "_bar")
{
str = str.substring(0, str.length - 4);
}
Via slice(indexStart, indexEnd) method - note, this does NOT CHANGE the existing string, it creates a copy and changes the copy.
console.clear();
let str = "12345.00";
let a = str.slice(0, str.length -1)
console.log(a, "<= a");
console.log(str, "<= str is NOT changed");
Via Regular Expression method - note, this does NOT CHANGE the existing string, it creates a copy and changes the copy.
console.clear();
let regExp = /.$/g
let b = str.replace(regExp,"")
console.log(b, "<= b");
console.log(str, "<= str is NOT changed");
Via array.splice() method -> this only works on arrays, and it CHANGES, the existing array (so careful with this one), you'll need to convert a string to an array first, then back.
console.clear();
let str = "12345.00";
let strToArray = str.split("")
console.log(strToArray, "<= strToArray");
let spliceMethod = strToArray.splice(str.length-1, 1)
str = strToArray.join("")
console.log(str, "<= str is changed now");
In cases where you want to remove something that is close to the end of a string (in case of variable sized strings) you can combine slice() and substr().
I had a string with markup, dynamically built, with a list of anchor tags separated by comma. The string was something like:
var str = "<a>text 1,</a><a>text 2,</a><a>text 2.3,</a><a>text abc,</a>";
To remove the last comma I did the following:
str = str.slice(0, -5) + str.substr(-4);
You can, in fact, remove the last arr.length - 2 items of an array using arr.length = 2, which if the array length was 5, would remove the last 3 items.
Sadly, this does not work for strings, but we can use split() to split the string, and then join() to join the string after we've made any modifications.
var str = 'string'
String.prototype.removeLast = function(n) {
var string = this.split('')
string.length = string.length - n
return string.join('')
}
console.log(str.removeLast(3))
Try to use toFixed
const str = "12345.00";
return (+str).toFixed(1);
Try this:
<script>
var x="foo_foo_foo_bar";
for (var i=0; i<=x.length; i++) {
if (x[i]=="_" && x[i+1]=="b") {
break;
}
else {
document.write(x[i]);
}
}
</script>
You can also try the live working example on http://jsfiddle.net/informativejavascript/F7WTn/87/.
#Jason S:
You can use slice! You just have to
make sure you know how to use it.
Positive #s are relative to the
beginning, negative numbers are
relative to the end.
js>"12345.00".slice(0,-1)
12345.0
Sorry for my graphomany but post was tagged 'jquery' earlier. So, you can't use slice() inside jQuery because slice() is jQuery method for operations with DOM elements, not substrings ...
In other words answer #Jon Erickson suggest really perfect solution.
However, your method will works out of jQuery function, inside simple Javascript.
Need to say due to last discussion in comments, that jQuery is very much more often renewable extension of JS than his own parent most known ECMAScript.
Here also exist two methods:
as our:
string.substring(from,to) as plus if 'to' index nulled returns the rest of string. so:
string.substring(from) positive or negative ...
and some other - substr() - which provide range of substring and 'length' can be positive only:
string.substr(start,length)
Also some maintainers suggest that last method string.substr(start,length) do not works or work with error for MSIE.
Use substring to get everything to the left of _bar. But first you have to get the instr of _bar in the string:
str.substring(3, 7);
3 is that start and 7 is the length.
I'm trying to keep some nav bar lines short by matching the first 50 chars then concatenating '...', but using substr sometimes creates some awkward word chops.
So I want to figure out a way to respect words.
I could write a function to do this, but I'm just seeing if there's an easier/cleaner way.
I've used this successfully in perl:
^(.{50,50}[^ ]*)
Nice and elegant! But it doesn't work in Javascript :(
let catName = "A string that is longer than 50 chars that I want to abbreviate";
let regex = /^(.{50,50}[^ ]*)/;
let match = regex.exec(catName);
match is undefined
Use String#match method with regex with word boundary to include the last word.
str.match(/^.{1,50}.*?\b/)[0]
var str="I'm trying to keep some nav bar lines short by matching the first 50 chars then concatenating '...', but using substr sometimes creates some awkward word chops. So I want to figure out a way to respect words.";
console.log('With your code:', str.substr(0,50));
console.log('Using match:',str.match(/^.{1,50}.*?\b/)[0]);
Probably the most fool-proof solution with regular expression would be to use replace method instead. It won't fail with strings less than 50 characters:
str.replace(/^(.{50}[^ ]*).*/, '$1...');
var str = 'A string that is longer than 50 chars that I want to abbreviate';
console.log( str.replace(/^(.{50}[^ ]*).*/, '$1...') );
Tinkering with Pranov's answer, I think this works and is most succinct:
// abbreviate strings longer than 50 char, respecting words
if (catName.length > 50) {
catName = catName.match(/^(.{50,50}[^ ]*)/)[0] + '...';
}
The regex in my OP did work, but it was used in a loop and was choking on strings that already had fewer than 50 chars.
You can .split() \s, count characters at each array element which contains a word at for loop, when 50 or greater is reached when .length of each word is accrued at a variable, .slice() at current iteration from array, .join() with space characters " ", .concat() ellipses, break loop.
let catName = "A string that is longer than 50 chars that I want to abbreviate";
let [stop, res] = [50, ""];
if (catName.length > stop) {
let arr = catName.split(/\s/);
for (let i = 0, n = 0; i < arr.length; i++) {
n += arr[i].length;
if (n >= stop) {
res = arr.slice(0, i).join(" ").concat("...");
break;
};
}
} else {
res = catName.slice(0, 50).concat("...")
}
document.querySelector("pre").textContent = res;
<pre></pre>
I have some text files, each with a mix of western and chinese characters. I want a list of the chinese characters that appear in each file.
I have tried
ch = text.match(/[\u4E00-\u9FFF]/g); // unicode usual chinese characters - that'll do for me
if (ch != null) {
alert(ch);
}
This gives me the list of chinese characters, but with some repetitions. For example:
肉,捕,兵,死,兵,半,水
for a file
卵,水,半,水,土,木,水,清,慢,底,海,海,海,清,清,清,木,清,慢,底,清,土,半,水,水,土,半,水,土
for another...
1) I don't need those commas. Where did they come from? (I can take them off with a single replace, but since I'm using regex, I think it may be faster if I solve it inside the regex itself.)
2) How to get only unique values? For example:
肉捕兵死半水
for the first file
卵水半土木清慢底海
for the second...
commas come from default array to string conversion. use ch.join('') to convert array to string instead.
To remove duplicate values, use this line:
ch = text.match(/([\u4E00-\u9FFF])/g);
ch = ch.filter(function (c, i) { return ch.indexOf(c) === i; }).join('');
Array.prototype.getUnique = function(){
var u = {}, a = [];
for(var i = 0, l = this.length; i < l; ++i){
if(u.hasOwnProperty(this[i])) {
continue;
}
a.push(this[i]);
u[this[i]] = 1;
}
return a;
}
ch = text.match(/([\u4E00-\u9FFF])/g);
var result_string = ch.getUnique().join("");
Try this:
var text = "卵水半水土木水清慢底海海海清清清木清慢底清土半水水土半水土",
re = /([\u4E00-\u9FFF])/g,
unique = {},
chars = "", c;
while(c = re.exec(text)){
if(!unique[c[0]]){
chars += c[0];
unique[c[0]] = true;
}
}
chars.split("");
Which returned:
["卵", "水", "半", "土", "木", "清", "慢", "底", "海"]
And yes, the commas you're seeing are when a browser typecasts an array to a string: it joins the the string representations of each value together with commas. I'm guessing that came from the call to "alert" in your original example, which was being supplied an array (returned from the string's "Match" method).
Array's "filter" method isn't supported in legacy browsers, but it's quite easy to polyfill (and certainly not necessary to if you're only concerned with supporting agents as recent as IE9).
There is a one-liner solution with regex:
input.match(/([\u4E00-\u9FFF])(?![\s\S]*\1)/g)
However, I wouldn't recommend using it, since it will have O(n * k) complexity in worst case (when the string contains mostly Chinese characters), where n is the length of the string and k is the number of unique Chinese characters. Why O(n * k)? Since the look-ahead (?![\s\S]*\1) basically says "assert that you can't find another instance of whatever matched in first capturing group in the rest of the string".
This answer by #Ruben Kazumov is a reasonable alternative. Its complexity depends on the implementation of setting and getting property in an Object, which should be sub-linear per operation in a reasonable implementation.
I have a string, 12345.00, and I would like it to return 12345.0.
I have looked at trim, but it looks like it is only trimming whitespace and slice which I don't see how this would work. Any suggestions?
You can use the substring function:
let str = "12345.00";
str = str.substring(0, str.length - 1);
console.log(str);
This is the accepted answer, but as per the conversations below, the slice syntax is much clearer:
let str = "12345.00";
str = str.slice(0, -1);
console.log(str);
You can use slice! You just have to make sure you know how to use it. Positive #s are relative to the beginning, negative numbers are relative to the end.
js>"12345.00".slice(0,-1)
12345.0
You can use the substring method of JavaScript string objects:
s = s.substring(0, s.length - 4)
It unconditionally removes the last four characters from string s.
However, if you want to conditionally remove the last four characters, only if they are exactly _bar:
var re = /_bar$/;
s.replace(re, "");
The easiest method is to use the slice method of the string, which allows negative positions (corresponding to offsets from the end of the string):
const s = "your string";
const withoutLastFourChars = s.slice(0, -4);
If you needed something more general to remove everything after (and including) the last underscore, you could do the following (so long as s is guaranteed to contain at least one underscore):
const s = "your_string";
const withoutLastChunk = s.slice(0, s.lastIndexOf("_"));
console.log(withoutLastChunk);
For a number like your example, I would recommend doing this over substring:
console.log(parseFloat('12345.00').toFixed(1));
Do note that this will actually round the number, though, which I would imagine is desired but maybe not:
console.log(parseFloat('12345.46').toFixed(1));
Be aware that String.prototype.{ split, slice, substr, substring } operate on UTF-16 encoded strings
None of the previous answers are Unicode-aware.
Strings are encoded as UTF-16 in most modern JavaScript engines, but higher Unicode code points require surrogate pairs, so older, pre-existing string methods operate on UTF-16 code units, not Unicode code points.
See: Do NOT use .split('').
const string = "ẞ🦊";
console.log(string.slice(0, -1)); // "ẞ\ud83e"
console.log(string.substr(0, string.length - 1)); // "ẞ\ud83e"
console.log(string.substring(0, string.length - 1)); // "ẞ\ud83e"
console.log(string.replace(/.$/, "")); // "ẞ\ud83e"
console.log(string.match(/(.*).$/)[1]); // "ẞ\ud83e"
const utf16Chars = string.split("");
utf16Chars.pop();
console.log(utf16Chars.join("")); // "ẞ\ud83e"
In addition, RegExp methods, as suggested in older answers, don’t match line breaks at the end:
const string = "Hello, world!\n";
console.log(string.replace(/.$/, "").endsWith("\n")); // true
console.log(string.match(/(.*).$/) === null); // true
Use the string iterator to iterate characters
Unicode-aware code utilizes the string’s iterator; see Array.from and ... spread.
string[Symbol.iterator] can be used (e.g. instead of string) as well.
Also see How to split Unicode string to characters in JavaScript.
Examples:
const string = "ẞ🦊";
console.log(Array.from(string).slice(0, -1).join("")); // "ẞ"
console.log([
...string
].slice(0, -1).join("")); // "ẞ"
Use the s and u flags on a RegExp
The dotAll or s flag makes . match line break characters, the unicode or u flag enables certain Unicode-related features.
Note that, when using the u flag, you eliminate unnecessary identity escapes, as these are invalid in a u regex, e.g. \[ is fine, as it would start a character class without the backslash, but \: isn’t, as it’s a : with or without the backslash, so you need to remove the backslash.
Examples:
const unicodeString = "ẞ🦊",
lineBreakString = "Hello, world!\n";
console.log(lineBreakString.replace(/.$/s, "").endsWith("\n")); // false
console.log(lineBreakString.match(/(.*).$/s) === null); // false
console.log(unicodeString.replace(/.$/su, "")); // ẞ
console.log(unicodeString.match(/(.*).$/su)[1]); // ẞ
// Now `split` can be made Unicode-aware:
const unicodeCharacterArray = unicodeString.split(/(?:)/su),
lineBreakCharacterArray = lineBreakString.split(/(?:)/su);
unicodeCharacterArray.pop();
lineBreakCharacterArray.pop();
console.log(unicodeCharacterArray.join("")); // "ẞ"
console.log(lineBreakCharacterArray.join("").endsWith("\n")); // false
Note that some graphemes consist of more than one code point, e.g. 🏳️🌈 which consists of the sequence 🏳 (U+1F3F3), VS16 (U+FE0F), ZWJ (U+200D), 🌈 (U+1F308).
Here, even Array.from will split this into four “characters”.
Matching those is made easier with the RegExp set notation and properties of strings proposal.
Using JavaScript's slice function:
let string = 'foo_bar';
string = string.slice(0, -4); // Slice off last four characters here
console.log(string);
This could be used to remove '_bar' at end of a string, of any length.
A regular expression is what you are looking for:
let str = "foo_bar";
console.log(str.replace(/_bar$/, ""));
Try this:
const myString = "Hello World!";
console.log(myString.slice(0, -1));
Performance
Today 2020.05.13 I perform tests of chosen solutions on Chrome v81.0, Safari v13.1 and Firefox v76.0 on MacOs High Sierra v10.13.6.
Conclusions
the slice(0,-1)(D) is fast or fastest solution for short and long strings and it is recommended as fast cross-browser solution
solutions based on substring (C) and substr(E) are fast
solutions based on regular expressions (A,B) are slow/medium fast
solutions B, F and G are slow for long strings
solution F is slowest for short strings, G is slowest for long strings
Details
I perform two tests for solutions A, B, C, D, E(ext), F, G(my)
for 8-char short string (from OP question) - you can run it HERE
for 1M long string - you can run it HERE
Solutions are presented in below snippet
function A(str) {
return str.replace(/.$/, '');
}
function B(str) {
return str.match(/(.*).$/)[1];
}
function C(str) {
return str.substring(0, str.length - 1);
}
function D(str) {
return str.slice(0, -1);
}
function E(str) {
return str.substr(0, str.length - 1);
}
function F(str) {
let s= str.split("");
s.pop();
return s.join("");
}
function G(str) {
let s='';
for(let i=0; i<str.length-1; i++) s+=str[i];
return s;
}
// ---------
// TEST
// ---------
let log = (f)=>console.log(`${f.name}: ${f("12345.00")}`);
[A,B,C,D,E,F,G].map(f=>log(f));
This snippet only presents soutions
Here are example results for Chrome for short string
Use regex:
let aStr = "12345.00";
aStr = aStr.replace(/.$/, '');
console.log(aStr);
How about:
let myString = "12345.00";
console.log(myString.substring(0, myString.length - 1));
1. (.*), captures any character multiple times:
console.log("a string".match(/(.*).$/)[1]);
2. ., matches last character, in this case:
console.log("a string".match(/(.*).$/));
3. $, matches the end of the string:
console.log("a string".match(/(.*).{2}$/)[1]);
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/34817546/javascript-how-to-delete-last-two-characters-in-a-string
Just use trim if you don't want spaces
"11.01 °C".slice(0,-2).trim()
Here is an alternative that i don't think i've seen in the other answers, just for fun.
var strArr = "hello i'm a string".split("");
strArr.pop();
document.write(strArr.join(""));
Not as legible or simple as slice or substring but does allow you to play with the string using some nice array methods, so worth knowing.
debris = string.split("_") //explode string into array of strings indexed by "_"
debris.pop(); //pop last element off the array (which you didn't want)
result = debris.join("_"); //fuse the remainng items together like the sun
If you want to do generic rounding of floats, instead of just trimming the last character:
var float1 = 12345.00,
float2 = 12345.4567,
float3 = 12345.982;
var MoreMath = {
/**
* Rounds a value to the specified number of decimals
* #param float value The value to be rounded
* #param int nrDecimals The number of decimals to round value to
* #return float value rounded to nrDecimals decimals
*/
round: function (value, nrDecimals) {
var x = nrDecimals > 0 ? 10 * parseInt(nrDecimals, 10) : 1;
return Math.round(value * x) / x;
}
}
MoreMath.round(float1, 1) => 12345.0
MoreMath.round(float2, 1) => 12345.5
MoreMath.round(float3, 1) => 12346.0
EDIT: Seems like there exists a built in function for this, as Paolo points out. That solution is obviously much cleaner than mine. Use parseFloat followed by toFixed
if(str.substring(str.length - 4) == "_bar")
{
str = str.substring(0, str.length - 4);
}
Via slice(indexStart, indexEnd) method - note, this does NOT CHANGE the existing string, it creates a copy and changes the copy.
console.clear();
let str = "12345.00";
let a = str.slice(0, str.length -1)
console.log(a, "<= a");
console.log(str, "<= str is NOT changed");
Via Regular Expression method - note, this does NOT CHANGE the existing string, it creates a copy and changes the copy.
console.clear();
let regExp = /.$/g
let b = str.replace(regExp,"")
console.log(b, "<= b");
console.log(str, "<= str is NOT changed");
Via array.splice() method -> this only works on arrays, and it CHANGES, the existing array (so careful with this one), you'll need to convert a string to an array first, then back.
console.clear();
let str = "12345.00";
let strToArray = str.split("")
console.log(strToArray, "<= strToArray");
let spliceMethod = strToArray.splice(str.length-1, 1)
str = strToArray.join("")
console.log(str, "<= str is changed now");
In cases where you want to remove something that is close to the end of a string (in case of variable sized strings) you can combine slice() and substr().
I had a string with markup, dynamically built, with a list of anchor tags separated by comma. The string was something like:
var str = "<a>text 1,</a><a>text 2,</a><a>text 2.3,</a><a>text abc,</a>";
To remove the last comma I did the following:
str = str.slice(0, -5) + str.substr(-4);
You can, in fact, remove the last arr.length - 2 items of an array using arr.length = 2, which if the array length was 5, would remove the last 3 items.
Sadly, this does not work for strings, but we can use split() to split the string, and then join() to join the string after we've made any modifications.
var str = 'string'
String.prototype.removeLast = function(n) {
var string = this.split('')
string.length = string.length - n
return string.join('')
}
console.log(str.removeLast(3))
Try to use toFixed
const str = "12345.00";
return (+str).toFixed(1);
Try this:
<script>
var x="foo_foo_foo_bar";
for (var i=0; i<=x.length; i++) {
if (x[i]=="_" && x[i+1]=="b") {
break;
}
else {
document.write(x[i]);
}
}
</script>
You can also try the live working example on http://jsfiddle.net/informativejavascript/F7WTn/87/.
#Jason S:
You can use slice! You just have to
make sure you know how to use it.
Positive #s are relative to the
beginning, negative numbers are
relative to the end.
js>"12345.00".slice(0,-1)
12345.0
Sorry for my graphomany but post was tagged 'jquery' earlier. So, you can't use slice() inside jQuery because slice() is jQuery method for operations with DOM elements, not substrings ...
In other words answer #Jon Erickson suggest really perfect solution.
However, your method will works out of jQuery function, inside simple Javascript.
Need to say due to last discussion in comments, that jQuery is very much more often renewable extension of JS than his own parent most known ECMAScript.
Here also exist two methods:
as our:
string.substring(from,to) as plus if 'to' index nulled returns the rest of string. so:
string.substring(from) positive or negative ...
and some other - substr() - which provide range of substring and 'length' can be positive only:
string.substr(start,length)
Also some maintainers suggest that last method string.substr(start,length) do not works or work with error for MSIE.
Use substring to get everything to the left of _bar. But first you have to get the instr of _bar in the string:
str.substring(3, 7);
3 is that start and 7 is the length.
I've have a input string:
12345,3244,654,ffgv,87676,988ff,87657
I'm having a difficulty to transform all terms in the string that are not five digit numbers to a constant 34567 using regular expressions. So, the output would be like this:
12345,34567,34567,34567,87676,34567,87657
For this, I looked at two options:
negated character class: Not useful because it does not execute directly on this expression ,[^\d{5}],
lookahead and lookbehind: Issue here is that it doesn't include non-matched part in the result of this expression ,(?!\d{5}) or (?<!\d{5}), for the purpose of substitution/replace.
Once the desired expression is found, it would give a result so that one can replace non-matched part using tagged regions like \1, \2.
Is there any mechanism in regular expression tools to achieve the output as mentioned in the above example?
Edit: I really appreciate those who have answered non-regex solutions, but I would be more thankful if you provide a regex-based solution.
You don't need regex for this. You can use str.split to split the string at commas first and then for each item check if its length is greater than or equal to 5 and it contains only digits(using str.isdigit). Lastly combine all the items using str.join.
>>> s = '12345,3244,654,ffgv,87676,988ff,87657'
>>> ','.join(x if len(x) >= 5 and x.isdigit() else '34567' for x in s.split(','))
'12345,34567,34567,34567,87676,34567,87657'
Javascript version:
function isdigit(s){
for(var i=0; i <s.length; i++){
if(!(s[i] >= '0' && s[i] <= '9')){
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
arr = "12345,3244,654,ffgv,87676,988ff,87657".split(",");
for(var i=0; i < arr.length; i++){
if(arr[i].length < 5 || ! isdigit(arr[i])) arr[i] = '34567';
}
output = arr.join(",")
Try the following: /\b(?!\d{5})[^,]+\b/g
It constrains the expression between word boundaries (\b),
Followed by a negative look-ahead for non five digit numbers (!\d{5}),
Followed by any characters between ,
const expression = /\b(?!\d{5})[^,]+\b/g;
const input = '12345,3244,654,ffgv,87676,988ff,87657';
const expectedOutput = '12345,34567,34567,34567,87676,34567,87657';
const output = input.replace(expression, '34567');
console.log(output === expectedOutput, expectedOutput, output);
This approach uses /\b(\d{5})|(\w+)\b/g:
we match on boundaries (\b)
our first capture group captures "good strings"
our looser capture group gets the leftovers (bad strings)
our replacer() function knows the difference
const str = '12345,3244,654,ffgv,87676,988ff,87657';
const STAND_IN = '34567';
const massageString = (str) => {
const pattern = /\b(\d{5})|(\w+)\b/g;
const replacer = (match, goodstring, badstring) => {
if (goodstring) {
return goodstring;
} else {
return STAND_IN;
}
}
const r = str.replace(pattern,replacer);
return r;
};
console.log( massageString(str) );
I think the following would work for value no longer than 5 alphanumeric characters:
(,(?!\d{5})\w{1,5})
if longer than 5 alphanumeric characters, then remove 5 in above expression:
(,(?!\d{5})\w{1,})
and you can replace using:
,34567
You can see a demo on regex101. Of course, there might be faster non-regex methods for specific languages as well (python, perl or JS)