| Core object | |
| Implemented in |
Navigator 2.0: Create a String object only by quoting characters.Navigator 3.0, LiveWire 1.0: added String constructor; added prototype property; added split method; added ability to pass strings among scripts in different windows or frames (in previous releases, you had to add an empty string to another window's string to refer to it)Navigator 4.0, Netscape Server 3.0: added concat, match, replace, search, slice, and substr methods.
|
Created by
The String constructor:
new String(string);
Parameters
string | Any string. |
Description
The String object is a built-in JavaScript object. You an treat any JavaScript string as a String object.
A string can be represented as a literal enclosed by single or double quotation marks; for example, "Netscape" or 'Netscape'.
Property Summary
| Reflects the length of the string. |
|
Allows the addition of properties to a String object.
|
Examples
Example 1: String variable. The following statement creates a string variable:
var last_name = "Schaefer"
Example 2: String object properties. The following statements evaluate to 8, "SCHAEFER," and "schaefer":
last_name.length
Example 3: Accessing individual characters in a string. You can think of a string as an array of characters. In this way, you can access the individual characters in the string by indexing that array. For example, the following code:
last_name.toUpperCase()
last_name.toLowerCase()var myString = "Hello"
displays "The first character in the string is H"
Example 4: Pass a string among scripts in different windows or frames. The following code creates two string variables and opens a second window:
document.write ("The first character in the string is " + myString[0])var lastName = new String("Schaefer")
If the HTML source for the second window (
var firstName = new String ("Jesse")
empWindow=window.open('string2.html','window1','width=300,height=300')string2.html) creates two string variables, empLastName and empFirstName, the following code in the first window assigns values to the second window's variables:
empWindow.empFirstName=firstName
The following code in the first window displays the values of the second window's variables:
empWindow.empLastName=lastNamealert('empFirstName in empWindow is ' + empWindow.empFirstName)
alert('empLastName in empWindow is ' + empWindow.empLastName) Properties
length
The length of the string.
| Property of |
String
|
| Read-only | |
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Description
For a null string, length is 0.
Examples
The following example displays 8 in an Alert dialog box:
var x="Netscape"
alert("The string length is " + x.length)prototype
Represents the prototype for this class. You can use the prototype to add properties or methods to all instances of a class. For information on prototypes, see Function.prototype.
| Property of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 3.0, Netscape Server 3.0 |
Methods
anchor
Creates an HTML anchor that is used as a hypertext target.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
anchor(nameAttribute)
Parameters
nameAttribute | A string. |
Description
Use the anchor method with the document.write or document.writeln methods to programmatically create and display an anchor in a document. Create the anchor with the anchor method, and then call write or writeln to display the anchor in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to display the anchor.
In the syntax, the text string represents the literal text that you want the user to see. The nameAttribute string represents the NAME attribute of the A tag.
Anchors created with the anchor method become elements in the document.anchors array.
Examples
The following example opens the msgWindow window and creates an anchor for the table of contents:
var myString="Table of Contents"
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
msgWindow.document.writeln(myString.anchor("contents_anchor"))<A NAME="contents_anchor">Table of Contents</A>
In server-side JavaScript, you can generate this HTML by calling the write function instead of using document.writeln.
big
Causes a string to be displayed in a big font as if it were in a BIG tag.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
big()
Parameters
None
Description
Use the big method with the write or writeln methods to format and display a string in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to display the string.
Examples
The following example uses string methods to change the size of a string:
var worldString="Hello, world"
document.write(worldString.small())
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
document.write("<P>" + worldString.big())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.fontsize(7))<SMALL>Hello, world</SMALL>
<P><BIG>Hello, world</BIG>
<P><FONTSIZE=7>Hello, world</FONTSIZE> See also
String.fontsize, String.small
blink
Causes a string to blink as if it were in a BLINK tag.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
blink()
Parameters
None
Description
Use the blink method with the write or writeln methods to format and display a string in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to display the string.
Examples
The following example uses string methods to change the formatting of a string:
var worldString="Hello, world"
document.write(worldString.blink())
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
document.write("<P>" + worldString.bold())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.italics())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.strike())<BLINK>Hello, world</BLINK>
<P><B>Hello, world</B>
<P><I>Hello, world</I>
<P><STRIKE>Hello, world</STRIKE> See also
String.bold, String.italics, String.strike
bold
Causes a string to be displayed as bold as if it were in a B tag.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
bold()
Parameters
None
Description
Use the bold method with the write or writeln methods to format and display a string in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to display the string.
Examples
The following example uses string methods to change the formatting of a string:
var worldString="Hello, world"
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
document.write(worldString.blink())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.bold())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.italics())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.strike())<BLINK>Hello, world</BLINK>
<P><B>Hello, world</B>
<P><I>Hello, world</I>
<P><STRIKE>Hello, world</STRIKE> See also
String.blink, String.italics, String.strike
charAt
Returns the specified character from the string.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
charAt(index)
Parameters
index | An integer between 0 and 1 less than the length of the string. |
Description
Characters in a string are indexed from left to right. The index of the first character is 0, and the index of the last character in a string called stringName is stringName.length - 1. If the index you supply is out of range, JavaScript returns an empty string.
Examples
The following example displays characters at different locations in the string "Brave new world":
var anyString="Brave new world"
document.writeln("The character at index 0 is " + anyString.charAt(0))
These lines display the following:
The character at index 0 is B
document.writeln("The character at index 1 is " + anyString.charAt(1))
document.writeln("The character at index 2 is " + anyString.charAt(2))
document.writeln("The character at index 3 is " + anyString.charAt(3))
document.writeln("The character at index 4 is " + anyString.charAt(4))
The character at index 1 is r
The character at index 2 is a
The character at index 3 is v
The character at index 4 is e
In server-side JavaScript, you can display the same output by calling the write function instead of using document.write.
See also
String.indexOf, String.lastIndexOf, String.split
charCodeAt
Returns a number indicating the ISO-Latin-1 codeset value of the character at the given index.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 4.0, Netscape Server 3.0 |
Syntax
charCodeAt(index)
Parameters
index | (Optional) An integer between 0 and 1 less than the length of the string. The default value is 0. |
Description
The ISO-Latin-1 codeset ranges from 0 to 255. The first 0 to 127 are a direct match of the ASCII character set.
Example
The following example returns 65, the ISO-Latin-1 codeset value for A.
"ABC".charCodeAt(0)
concat
Combines the text of two strings and returns a new string.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 4.0, Netscape Server 3.0 |
Syntax
concat(string2)
Parameters
string1 | The first string. |
string2 | The second string. |
Description
concat combines the text from two strings and returns a new string. Changes to the text in one string do not affect the other string.
Example
The following example combines two strings into a new string.
<SCRIPT>
This writes:
The morning is upon us.
str1="The morning is upon us. "
str2="The sun is bright."
str3=str1.concat(str2)
document.writeln(str1)
document.writeln(str2)
document.writeln(str3)
</SCRIPT>
The sun is bright.
The morning is upon us. The sun is bright.
fixed
Causes a string to be displayed in fixed-pitch font as if it were in a TT tag.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
fixed()
Parameters
None
Description
Use the fixed method with the write or writeln methods to format and display a string in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to display the string.
Examples
The following example uses the fixed method to change the formatting of a string:
var worldString="Hello, world"
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
document.write(worldString.fixed())<TT>Hello, world</TT>
fontcolor
Causes a string to be displayed in the specified color as if it were in a <FONT COLOR=color> tag.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
fontcolor(color)
Parameters
color | A string expressing the color as a hexadecimal RGB triplet or as a string literal. String literals for color names are listed in Appendix B, "Color Values," in the JavaScript Guide. |
Description
Use the fontcolor method with the write or writeln methods to format and display a string in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to display the string.
If you express
color as a hexadecimal RGB triplet, you must use the format rrggbb. For example, the hexadecimal RGB values for salmon are red=FA, green=80, and blue=72, so the RGB triplet for salmon is "FA8072".
The fontcolor method overrides a value set in the fgColor property.
Examples
The following example uses the fontcolor method to change the color of a string:
var worldString="Hello, world"
document.write(worldString.fontcolor("maroon") +
" is maroon in this line")
document.write("<P>" + worldString.fontcolor("salmon") +
" is salmon in this line")
document.write("<P>" + worldString.fontcolor("red") +
" is red in this line")document.write("<P>" + worldString.fontcolor("8000") +
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
" is maroon in hexadecimal in this line")
document.write("<P>" + worldString.fontcolor("FA8072") +
" is salmon in hexadecimal in this line")
document.write("<P>" + worldString.fontcolor("FF00") +
" is red in hexadecimal in this line")<FONT COLOR="maroon">Hello, world</FONT> is maroon in this line
<P><FONT COLOR="salmon">Hello, world</FONT> is salmon in this line
<P><FONT COLOR="red">Hello, world</FONT> is red in this line<FONT COLOR="8000">Hello, world</FONT>
is maroon in hexadecimal in this line
<P><FONT COLOR="FA8072">Hello, world</FONT>
is salmon in hexadecimal in this line
<P><FONT COLOR="FF00">Hello, world</FONT>
is red in hexadecimal in this linefontsize
Causes a string to be displayed in the specified font size as if it were in a <FONT SIZE=size> tag.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
fontsize(size)
Parameters
size | An integer between 1 and 7, a string representing a signed integer between 1 and 7. |
Description
Use the fontsize method with the write or writeln methods to format and display a string in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to display the string.
When you specify size as an integer, you set the size of stringName to one of the 7 defined sizes. When you specify size as a string such as "-2", you adjust the font size of stringName relative to the size set in the BASEFONT tag.
Examples
The following example uses string methods to change the size of a string:
var worldString="Hello, world"
document.write(worldString.small())
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
document.write("<P>" + worldString.big())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.fontsize(7))<SMALL>Hello, world</SMALL>
<P><BIG>Hello, world</BIG>
<P><FONTSIZE=7>Hello, world</FONTSIZE> See also
String.big, String.small
fromCharCode
Returns a string created by using the specified sequence ISO-Latin-1 codeset values.
| Method of |
String
|
| Static | |
| Implemented in | Navigator 4.0, Netscape Server 3.0 |
Syntax
fromCharCode(num1, ..., numN)
Parameters
num1, ..., numN | A sequence of numbers that are ISO-Latin-1 codeset values. |
Description
This method returns a string and not a String object.
Because fromCharCode is a static method of String, you always use it as String.fromCharCode(), rather than as a method of a String object you created.
Examples
Example 1. The following example returns the string "ABC".
String.fromCharCode(65,66,67)
Example 2. The which property of the KeyDown, KeyPress, and KeyUp events contains the ASCII value of the key pressed at the time the event occurred. If you want to get the actual letter, number, or symbol of the key, you can use fromCharCode. The following example returns the letter, number, or symbol of the KeyPress event's which property.
String.fromCharCode(KeyPress.which)
indexOf
Returns the index within the calling String object of the first occurrence of the specified value, starting the search at fromIndex, or -1 if the value is not found.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
indexOf(searchValue, fromIndex)
Parameters
Description
Characters in a string are indexed from left to right. The index of the first character is 0, and the index of the last character of a string called stringName is stringName.length - 1.
If stringName contains an empty string (""), indexOf returns an empty string.
The indexOf method is case sensitive. For example, the following expression returns -1:
"Blue Whale".indexOf("blue")
Examples
Example 1. The following example uses indexOf and lastIndexOf to locate values in the string "Brave new world."
var anyString="Brave new world"
//Displays 8
Example 2. The following example defines two string variables. The variables contain the same string except that the second string contains uppercase letters. The first
document.write("<P>The index of the first w from the beginning is " +
anyString.indexOf("w"))
//Displays 10
document.write("<P>The index of the first w from the end is " +
anyString.lastIndexOf("w"))
//Displays 6
document.write("<P>The index of 'new' from the beginning is " +
anyString.indexOf("new"))
//Displays 6
document.write("<P>The index of 'new' from the end is " +
anyString.lastIndexOf("new"))writeln method displays 19. But because the indexOf method is case sensitive, the string "cheddar" is not found in myCapString, so the second writeln method displays -1.
myString="brie, pepper jack, cheddar"
Example 3. The following example sets
myCapString="Brie, Pepper Jack, Cheddar"
document.writeln('myString.indexOf("cheddar") is ' +
myString.indexOf("cheddar"))
document.writeln('<P>myCapString.indexOf("cheddar") is ' +
myCapString.indexOf("cheddar"))count to the number of occurrences of the letter x in the string str:
count = 0;
pos = str.indexOf("x");
while ( pos != -1 ) {
count++;
pos = str.indexOf("x",pos+1);
} See also
String.charAt, String.lastIndexOf, String.split
italics
Causes a string to be italic, as if it were in an I tag.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
italics()
Parameters
None
Description
Use the italics method with the write or writeln methods to format and display a string in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to display the string.
Examples
The following example uses string methods to change the formatting of a string:
var worldString="Hello, world"
document.write(worldString.blink())
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
document.write("<P>" + worldString.bold())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.italics())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.strike())<BLINK>Hello, world</BLINK>
<P><B>Hello, world</B>
<P><I>Hello, world</I>
<P><STRIKE>Hello, world</STRIKE> See also
String.blink, String.bold, String.strike
lastIndexOf
Returns the index within the calling String object of the last occurrence of the specified value. The calling string is searched backward, starting at fromIndex, or -1 if not found.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
lastIndexOf(searchValue, fromIndex)
Parameters
Description
Characters in a string are indexed from left to right. The index of the first character is 0, and the index of the last character is stringName.length - 1.
The lastIndexOf method is case sensitive. For example, the following expression returns -1:
"Blue Whale, Killer Whale".lastIndexOf("blue")
Examples
The following example uses indexOf and lastIndexOf to locate values in the string "Brave new world."
var anyString="Brave new world"
//Displays 8
In server-side JavaScript, you can display the same output by calling the
document.write("<P>The index of the first w from the beginning is " +
anyString.indexOf("w"))
//Displays 10
document.write("<P>The index of the first w from the end is " +
anyString.lastIndexOf("w"))
//Displays 6
document.write("<P>The index of 'new' from the beginning is " +
anyString.indexOf("new"))
//Displays 6
document.write("<P>The index of 'new' from the end is " +
anyString.lastIndexOf("new"))write function instead of using document.write.
See also
String.charAt, String.indexOf, String.split
link
Creates an HTML hypertext link that requests another URL.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
link(hrefAttribute)
Parameters
hrefAttribute |
Any string that specifies the HREF attribute of the A tag; it should be a valid URL (relative or absolute).
|
Description
Use the link method to programmatically create a hypertext link, and then call write or writeln to display the link in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to display the link.
Links created with the link method become elements in the links array of the document object. See document.links.
Examples
The following example displays the word "Netscape" as a hypertext link that returns the user to the Netscape home page:
var hotText="Netscape"
var URL="http://home.netscape.com"document.write("Click to return to " + hotText.link(URL))
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
Click to return to <A HREF="http://home.netscape.com">Netscape</A>
See also
Anchor
match
Used to match a regular expression against a string.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 4.0 |
Syntax
match(regexp)
Parameters
regexp | Name of the regular expression. It can be a variable name or a literal. |
Description
If you want to execute a global match, or a case insensitive match, include the g (for global) and i (for ignore case) flags in the regular expression. These can be included separately or together. The following two examples below show how to use these flags with match.
Note
If you execute a match simply to find true or false, use String.search or the regular expression test method.
Examples
Example 1. In the following example, match is used to find 'Chapter' followed by 1 or more numeric characters followed by a decimal point and numeric character 0 or more times. The regular expression includes the i flag so that case will be ignored.
<SCRIPT>
This returns the array containing Chapter 3.4.5.1,Chapter 3.4.5.1,.1
str = "For more information, see Chapter 3.4.5.1";
re = /(chapter \d+(\.\d)*)/i;
found = str.match(re);
document.write(found);
</SCRIPT>'Chapter 3.4.5.1' is the first match and the first value remembered from (Chapter \d+(\.\d)*).
'.1' is the second value remembered from (\.\d).
Example 2. The following example demonstrates the use of the global and ignore case flags with match.
<SCRIPT>
The returned array contains D, d.
str = "abcDdcba";
newArray = str.match(/d/gi);
document.write(newArray);
</SCRIPT>replace
Used to find a match between a regular expression and a string, and to replace the matched substring with a new substring.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 4.0 |
Syntax
replace(regexp, newSubStr)
Parameters
Description
This method does not change the String object it is called on; it simply returns a new string.
If you want to execute a global search and replace, or a case insensitive search, include the g (for global) and i (for ignore case) flags in the regular expression. These can be included separately or together. The following two examples below show how to use these flags with replace.
Examples
Example 1. In the following example, the regular expression includes the global and ignore case flags which permits replace to replace each occurrence of 'apples' in the string with 'oranges.'
<SCRIPT>
This prints "oranges are round, and oranges are juicy."
Example 2. In the following example, the regular expression is defined in
re = /apples/gi;
str = "Apples are round, and apples are juicy.";
newstr=str.replace(re, "oranges");
document.write(newstr)
</SCRIPT>replace and includes the ignore case flag.
<SCRIPT>
This prints "Twas the night before Christmas..."
Example 3. The following script switches the words in the string. For the replacement text, the script uses the values of the
str = "Twas the night before Xmas...";
newstr=str.replace(/xmas/i, "Christmas");
document.write(newstr)
</SCRIPT>$1 and $2 properties.
<SCRIPT LANGUAGE="JavaScript1.2">
This prints "Smith, John".
re = /(\w+)\s(\w+)/;
str = "John Smith";
newstr = str.replace(re, "$2, $1");
document.write(newstr)
</SCRIPT>search
Executes the search for a match between a regular expression and this String object.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 4.0 |
Syntax
search(regexp)
Parameters
regexp | Name of the regular expression. It can be a variable name or a literal. |
Description
If successful, search returns the index of the regular expression inside the string. Otherwise, it returns -1.
When you want to know whether a pattern is found in a string use search (similar to the regular expression test method); for more information (but slower execution) use match (similar to the regular expression exec method).
Example
The following example prints a message which depends on the success of the test.
function testinput(re, str){
if (str.search(re) != -1)
midstring = " contains ";
else
midstring = " does not contain ";
document.write (str + midstring + re.source);
}slice
Extracts a section of a string and returns a new string.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
slice(beginslice,endSlice)
Parameters
beginSlice | The zero-based index at which to begin extraction. |
endSlice |
(Optional) The zero-based index at which to end extraction. If omitted, slice extracts to the end of the string.
|
Description
slice extracts the text from one string and returns a new string. Changes to the text in one string do not affect the other string.
slice extracts up to but not including endSlice. string.slice(1,4) extracts the second character through the fourth character (characters indexed 1, 2, and 3).
As a negative index, endSlice indicates an offset from the end of the string. string.slice(2,-1) extracts the third character through the second to last character in the string.
Example
The following example uses slice to create a new string.
<SCRIPT>
This writes:
morning is upon
str1="The morning is upon us. "
str2=str1.slice(3,-5)
document.write(str2)
</SCRIPT>small
Causes a string to be displayed in a small font, as if it were in a SMALL tag.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
small()
Parameters
None
Description
Use the small method with the write or writeln methods to format and display a string in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to display the string.
Examples
The following example uses string methods to change the size of a string:
var worldString="Hello, world"
document.write(worldString.small())
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
document.write("<P>" + worldString.big())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.fontsize(7))<SMALL>Hello, world</SMALL>
<P><BIG>Hello, world</BIG>
<P><FONTSIZE=7>Hello, world</FONTSIZE> See also
String.big, String.fontsize
split
Splits a String object into an array of strings by separating the string into substrings.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 3.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
split(separator, limit)
Parameters
Description
The split method returns the new array.
When found, separator is removed from the string and the substrings are returned in an array. If separator is omitted, the array contains one element consisting of the entire string.
In Navigator 4.0, Split has the following additions:
function splitString (stringToSplit,separator) {
arrayOfStrings = stringToSplit.split(separator)
document.write ('<P>The original string is: "' + stringToSplit + '"')
document.write ('<BR>The separator is: "' + separator + '"')
document.write ("<BR>The array has " + arrayOfStrings.length + " elements: ")
for (var i=0; i < arrayOfStrings.length; i++) {
document.write (arrayOfStrings[i] + " / ")
}
}
var tempestString="Oh brave new world that has such people in it."
var monthString="Jan,Feb,Mar,Apr,May,Jun,Jul,Aug,Sep,Oct,Nov,Dec"
var space=" "
var comma=","
splitString(tempestString,space)This example produces the following output:
splitString(tempestString)
splitString(monthString,comma)
The original string is: "Oh brave new world that has such people in it."
The separator is: " "
The array has 10 elements: Oh / brave / new / world / that / has / such / people / in / it. /
The original string is: "Oh brave new world that has such people in it."
The separator is: "undefined"
The array has 1 elements: Oh brave new world that has such people in it. /
The original string is: "Jan,Feb,Mar,Apr,May,Jun,Jul,Aug,Sep,Oct,Nov,Dec"Example 2. Consider the following script:
The separator is: ","
The array has 12 elements: Jan / Feb / Mar / Apr / May / Jun / Jul / Aug / Sep / Oct / Nov / Dec /
<SCRIPT LANGUAGE="JavaScript1.2">Using
str="She sells seashells \nby the\n seashore"
document.write(str + "<BR>")
a=str.split(" ")
document.write(a)
</SCRIPT>
LANGUAGE="JavaScript1.2", this script produces
"She", "sells", "seashells", "by", "the", "seashore"Without
LANGUAGE="JavaScript1.2", this script splits only on single space characters, producing
"She", "sells", , , , "seashells", "by", , , "the", "seashore"Example 3. In the following example,
split looks for 0 or more spaces followed by a semicolon followed by 0 or more spaces and, when found, removes the spaces from the string. nameList is the array returned as a result of split.
<SCRIPT>This prints two lines; the first line prints the original string, and the second line prints the resulting array. Harry Trump ;Fred Barney; Helen Rigby ; Bill Abel ;Chris Hand
names = "Harry Trump ;Fred Barney; Helen Rigby ; Bill Abel ;Chris Hand ";
document.write (names + "<BR>" + "<BR>");
re = /\s*;\s*/;
nameList = names.split (re);
document.write(nameList);
</SCRIPT>
split looks for 0 or more spaces in a string and returns the first 3 splits that it finds.
<SCRIPT LANGUAGE="JavaScript1.2">This script displays the following:
myVar = " Hello World. How are you doing? ";
splits = myVar.split(" ", 3);
document.write(splits)
</SCRIPT>
["Hello", "World.", "How"]
String.charAt, String.indexOf, String.lastIndexOf
strike
Causes a string to be displayed as struck-out text, as if it were in a STRIKE tag.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
strike()
Parameters
None
Description
Use the strike method with the write or writeln methods to format and display a string in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to display the string.
Examples
The following example uses string methods to change the formatting of a string:
var worldString="Hello, world"
document.write(worldString.blink())
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
document.write("<P>" + worldString.bold())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.italics())
document.write("<P>" + worldString.strike())<BLINK>Hello, world</BLINK>
<P><B>Hello, world</B>
<P><I>Hello, world</I>
<P><STRIKE>Hello, world</STRIKE> See also
String.blink, String.bold, String.italics
sub
Causes a string to be displayed as a subscript, as if it were in a SUB tag.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
sub()
Parameters
None
Description
Use the sub method with the write or writeln methods to format and display a string in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to generate the HTML.
Examples
The following example uses the sub and sup methods to format a string:
var superText="superscript"
var subText="subscript"document.write("This is what a " + superText.sup() + " looks like.")
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
document.write("<P>This is what a " + subText.sub() + " looks like.")This is what a <SUP>superscript</SUP> looks like.
<P>This is what a <SUB>subscript</SUB> looks like. See also
String.sup
substr
Returns the characters in a string beginning at the specified location through the specified number of characters.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
substr(start, length)
Parameters
start | Location at which to begin extracting characters. |
length | (Optional) The number of characters to extract |
Description
start is a character index. The index of the first character is 0, and the index of the last character is 1 less than the length of the string. substr begins extracting characters at start and collects length number of characters.
If start is positive and is the length of the string or longer, substr returns no characters.
If start is negative, substr uses it as a character index from the end of the string. If start is negative and abs(start) is larger than the length of the string, substr uses 0 is the start index.
If length is 0 or negative, substr returns no characters. If length is omitted, start extracts characters to the end of the string.
Example
Consider the following script:
<SCRIPT LANGUAGE="JavaScript1.2">
str = "abcdefghij"
document.writeln("(1,2): ", str.substr(1,2))
document.writeln("(-2,2): ", str.substr(-2,2))
document.writeln("(1): ", str.substr(1))
document.writeln("(-20, 2): ", str.substr(1,20))
document.writeln("(20, 2): ", str.substr(20,2))</SCRIPT>
This script displays:
(1,2): bc
(-2,2): ij
(1): bcdefghij
(-20, 2): bcdefghij
(20, 2): See also
substring
substring
Returns a subset of a String object.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
substring(indexA, indexB)
Parameters
indexA | An integer between 0 and 1 less than the length of the string. |
indexB | An integer between 0 and 1 less than the length of the string. |
Description
substring extracts characters from indexA up to but not including indexB. In particular:
indexA is less than 0, indexA is treated as if it were 0.
indexB is greater than stringName.length, indexB is treated as if it were stringName.length.
indexA equals indexB, substring returns an empty string.
indexB is omitted, indexA extracts characters to the end of the string.
LANGUAGE="JavaScript1.2" in the SCRIPT tag,
Without LANGUAGE="JavaScript1.2",
substring to display characters from the string "Netscape":
var anyString="Netscape"
//Displays "Net"Example 2. The following example replaces a substring within a string. It will replace both individual characters and substrings. The function call at the end of the example changes the string
document.write(anyString.substring(0,3))
document.write(anyString.substring(3,0))
//Displays "cap"
document.write(anyString.substring(4,7))
document.write(anyString.substring(7,4))
//Displays "Netscap"
document.write(anyString.substring(0,7))
//Displays "Netscape"
document.write(anyString.substring(0,8))
document.write(anyString.substring(0,10))
"Brave New World" into "Brave New Web".
function replaceString(oldS,newS,fullS) {
// Replaces oldS with newS in the string fullS
for (var i=0; i<fullS.length; i++) {
if (fullS.substring(i,i+oldS.length) == oldS) {
fullS = fullS.substring(0,i)+newS+fullS.substring(i+oldS.length,fullS.length)
}
}
return fullS
}
replaceString("World","Web","Brave New World")
Example 3. Using LANGUAGE="JavaScript1.2", the following script produces a runtime error (out of memory).
<SCRIPT LANGUAGE="JavaScript1.2">Without
str="Netscape"
document.write(str.substring(0,3);
document.write(str.substring(3,0);
</SCRIPT>
LANGUAGE="JavaScript1.2", the above script prints
Net Net
In the second write, the index numbers are swapped.
substr
sup
Causes a string to be displayed as a superscript, as if it were in a SUP tag.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
sup()
Parameters
None
Description
Use the sup method with the write or writeln methods to format and display a string in a document. In server-side JavaScript, use the write function to generate the HTML.
Examples
The following example uses the sub and sup methods to format a string:
var superText="superscript"
var subText="subscript"document.write("This is what a " + superText.sup() + " looks like.")
The previous example produces the same output as the following HTML:
document.write("<P>This is what a " + subText.sub() + " looks like.")This is what a <SUP>superscript</SUP> looks like.
<P>This is what a <SUB>subscript</SUB> looks like. See also
String.sub
toLowerCase
Returns the calling string value converted to lowercase.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
toLowerCase()
Parameters
None
Description
The toLowerCase method returns the value of the string converted to lowercase. toLowerCase does not affect the value of the string itself.
Examples
The following example displays the lowercase string "alphabet":
var upperText="ALPHABET"
document.write(upperText.toLowerCase()) See also
String.toUpperCase
toUpperCase
Returns the calling string value converted to uppercase.
| Method of |
String
|
| Implemented in | Navigator 2.0, LiveWire 1.0 |
Syntax
toUpperCase()
Parameters
None
Description
The toUpperCase method returns the value of the string converted to uppercase. toUpperCase does not affect the value of the string itself.
Examples
The following example displays the string "ALPHABET":
var lowerText="alphabet"
document.write(lowerText.toUpperCase()) See also
String.toLowerCase
Last Updated: 10/31/97 12:30:31