class String
Available on all platforms
The basic String class.
A haxe String is immutable, it is not possible to modify individual
characters. No method of this class changes the state of this String.
Strings can be constructed using the string literal syntax "string value".
String can be concatenated by using the + operator. If an operand is not a String, it is passed through Std.string() first.
Class Fields
static function fromCharCode(code:Int):String
Returns the String corresponding to the character code code.
If code is negative or has another invalid value, the result is
unspecified.
Instance Fields
function charAt(index:Int):String
Returns the character at position index of this String.
If index is negative or exceeds this.length, the empty String ""
is returned.
function charCodeAt(index:Int):Null<Int>
Returns the character code at position index of this String.
If index is negative or exceeds this.length, null is returned.
To obtain the character code of a single character, "x".code can be used instead to inline the character code at compile time. Note that this only works on String literals of length 1.
function indexOf(str:String, ?startIndex:Int):Int
Returns the position of the leftmost occurence of str within this
String.
If startIndex is given, the search is performed within the substring
of this String starting from startIndex. Otherwise the search is
performed within this String. In either case, the returned position
is relative to the beginning of this String.
If str cannot be found, -1 is returned.
function lastIndexOf(str:String, ?startIndex:Int):Int
Returns the position of the rightmost occurence of str within this
String.
If startIndex is given, the search is performed within the substring
of this String from 0 to startIndex. Otherwise the search is
performed within this String. In either case, the returned position
is relative to the beginning of this String.
If str cannot be found, -1 is returned.
function split(delimiter:String):Array<String>
Splits this String at each occurence of delimiter.
If this String is the empty String "", the result is not consistent
across targets and may either be [] (on Js, Cpp) or [""].
If delimiter is the empty String "", this String is split into an
Array of this.length elements, where the elements correspond to the
characters of this String.
If delimiter is not found within this String, the result is an Array
with one element, which equals this String.
If delimiter is null, the result is unspecified.
Otherwise, this String is split into parts at each occurence of
delimiter. If this String starts (or ends) with [delimiter}, the
result Array contains a leading (or trailing) empty String "" element.
Two subsequent delimiters also result in an empty String "" element.
function substr(pos:Int, ?len:Int):String
Returns len characters of this String, starting at position pos.
If len is omitted, all characters from position pos to the end of
this String are included.
If pos is negative, its value is calculated from the end of this
String by this.length + pos. If this yields a negative value, 0 is
used instead.
If the calculated position + len exceeds this.length, the characters
from that position to the end of this String are returned.
If len is negative, the result is unspecified.
function substring(startIndex:Int, ?endIndex:Int):String
Returns the part of this String from startIndex to but not including endIndex.
If startIndex or endIndex are negative, 0 is used instead.
If startIndex exceeds endIndex, they are swapped.
If the (possibly swapped) endIndex is omitted or exceeds
this.length, this.length is used instead.
If the (possibly swapped) startIndex exceeds this.length, the empty
String "" is returned.
function toLowerCase():String
Returns a String where all characters of this String are lower case.
Affects the characters A-Z. Other characters remain unchanged.
function toUpperCase():String
Returns a String where all characters of this String are upper case.
Affects the characters a-z. Other characters remain unchanged.