Lua 5.0 Reference Manual
by Roberto Ierusalimschy, Luiz Henrique de Figueiredo, Waldemar Celes
Copyright ©
2003 Tecgraf, PUC-Rio. All rights reserved.
This library provides generic functions for string manipulation, such as
finding and extracting substrings, and pattern matching. When indexing a
string in Lua, the first character is at position 1 (not at 0,
as in C). Indices are allowed to be negative and are interpreted as indexing
backwards, from the end of the string. Thus, the last character is at position
-1, and so on.
The string library provides all its functions inside the table string.
string.byte (s [, i])
Returns the internal numerical code of the i-th character of
s, or nil if the index is out of range. If i
is absent, then it is assumed to be 1. i may be negative.
Note that numerical codes are not necessarily portable across platforms.
string.char (i1, i2, ...)
Receives 0 or more integers. Returns a string with length equal to the number
of arguments, in which each character has the internal numerical code equal
to its correspondent argument.
Note that numerical codes are not necessarily portable across platforms.
string.dump (function)
Returns a binary representation of the given function, so that a later
loadstring on that string returns a copy of the function.
function must be a Lua function without upvalues.
string.find (s, pattern [, init [, plain]])
Looks for the first match of pattern in the string
s. If it finds one, then find returns the indices
of s where this occurrence starts and ends; otherwise,
it returns nil. If the pattern specifies captures (see string.gsub
below), the captured strings are returned as extra results. A third, optional
numerical argument init specifies where to start the search;
its default value is 1 and may be negative. A value of true
as a fourth, optional argument plain turns off the pattern
matching facilities, so the function does a plain "find substring" operation,
with no characters in pattern being considered "magic". Note
that if plain is given, then init must be given
too.
string.len (s)
Receives a string and returns its length. The empty string ""
has length 0. Embedded zeros are counted, so "a\000b\000c"
has length 5.
string.lower (s)
Receives a string and returns a copy of that string with all uppercase letters
changed to lowercase. All other characters are left unchanged. The definition
of what is an uppercase letter depends on the current locale.
string.rep (s, n)
Returns a string that is the concatenation of n copies of the
string s.
string.sub (s, i [, j])
Returns the substring of s that starts at i and
continues until j; i and j may be
negative. If j is absent, then it is assumed to be equal to
-1 (which is the same as the string length). In particular, the
call string.sub(s,1,j) returns a prefix of s with
length j, and string.sub(s, -i) returns a suffix
of s with length i.
string.upper (s)
Receives a string and returns a copy of that string with all lowercase letters
changed to uppercase. All other characters are left unchanged. The definition
of what is a lowercase letter depends on the current locale.
Returns a formatted version of its variable number of arguments following
the description given in its first argument (which must be a string). The
format string follows the same rules as the printf family of
standard C functions. The only differences are that the options/modifiers
*, l, L, n, p,
and h are not supported, and there is an extra option, q.
The q option formats a string in a form suitable to be safely
read back by the Lua interpreter: The string is written between double quotes,
and all double quotes, newlines, and backslashes in the string are correctly
escaped when written. For instance, the call
string.format('%q', 'a string with "quotes" and \n new line')
will produce the string:
"a string with \"quotes\" and \
new line"
The options c, d, E, e,
f, g, G, i, o,
u, X, and x all expect a number
as argument, whereas q and s expect a string.
The * modifier can be simulated by building the appropriate
format string. For example, "%*g" can be simulated with "%"..width.."g".
String values to be formatted with %s cannot contain embedded
zeros.
string.gfind (s, pat)
Returns an iterator function that, each time it is called, returns the
next captures from pattern pat over string s.
If pat specifies no captures, then the whole match is produced
in each call.
As an example, the following loop
s = "hello world from Lua"
for w in string.gfind(s, "%a+") do
print(w)
end
will iterate over all the words from string s, printing one
per line. The next example collects all pairs key=value from
the given string into a table:
t = {}
s = "from=world, to=Lua"
for k, v in string.gfind(s, "(%w+)=(%w+)") do
t[k] = v
end
string.gsub (s, pat, repl [, n])
Returns a copy of s in which all occurrences of the pattern
pat have been replaced by a replacement string specified by
repl. gsub also returns, as a second value, the
total number of substitutions made.
If repl is a string, then its value is used for replacement.
Any sequence in repl of the form %n,
with n between 1 and 9, stands for the value of the n-th
captured substring (see below).
If repl is a function, then this function is called every
time a match occurs, with all captured substrings passed as arguments,
in order; if the pattern specifies no captures, then the whole match is
passed as a sole argument. If the value returned by this function is a
string, then it is used as the replacement string; otherwise, the replacement
string is the empty string.
The optional last parameter n limits the maximum number
of substitutions to occur. For instance, when n is 1 only
the first occurrence of pat is replaced.
Here are some examples:
x = string.gsub("hello world", "(%w+)", "%1 %1")
--> x="hello hello world world"
x = string.gsub("hello world", "(%w+)", "%1 %1", 1)
--> x="hello hello world"
x = string.gsub("hello world from Lua", "(%w+)%s*(%w+)", "%2 %1")
--> x="world hello Lua from"
x = string.gsub("home = $HOME, user = $USER", "%$(%w+)", os.getenv)
--> x="home = /home/roberto, user = roberto"
x = string.gsub("4+5 = $return 4+5$", "%$(.-)%$", function (s)
return loadstring(s)()
end)
--> x="4+5 = 9"
local t = {name="lua", version="5.0"}
x = string.gsub("$name_$version.tar.gz", "%$(%w+)", function (v)
return t[v]
end)
--> x="lua_5.0.tar.gz"
A character class is used to represent a set of characters.
The following combinations are allowed in describing a character class:
For all classes represented by single letters (%a, %c,
etc.), the corresponding uppercase letter represents the complement of the
class. For instance, %S represents all non-space characters.
The definitions of letter, space, and other character groups depend on
the current locale. In particular, the class [a-z] may not
be equivalent to %l. The second form should be preferred
for portability.
A pattern item may be
- a single character class, which matches any single character in the
class;
- a single character class followed by `
*´, which
matches 0 or more repetitions of characters in the class. These repetition
items will always match the longest possible sequence;
- a single character class followed by `
+´, which
matches 1 or more repetitions of characters in the class. These repetition
items will always match the longest possible sequence;
- a single character class followed by `
-´, which
also matches 0 or more repetitions of characters in the class. Unlike
`*´, these repetition items will always match the
shortest possible sequence;
- a single character class followed by `
?´, which
matches 0 or 1 occurrence of a character in the class;
-
%n, for n between 1 and 9; such item
matches a substring equal to the n-th captured string (see
below);
-
%bxy, where x and y are two
distinct characters; such item matches strings that start with x,
end with y, and where the x and y are
balanced. This means that, if one reads the string from left
to right, counting +1 for an x and -1 for
a y, the ending y is the first y where the
count reaches 0. For instance, the item %b() matches expressions
with balanced parentheses.
A pattern is a sequence of pattern items. A `^´
at the beginning of a pattern anchors the match at the beginning of the
subject string. A `$´ at the end of a pattern anchors
the match at the end of the subject string. At other positions, `^´
and `$´ have no special meaning and represent themselves.
A pattern may contain sub-patterns enclosed in parentheses; they describe
captures. When a match succeeds, the substrings of the subject
string that match captures are stored (captured) for future use.
Captures are numbered according to their left parentheses. For instance,
in the pattern "(a*(.)%w(%s*))", the part of the string matching
"a*(.)%w(%s*)" is stored as the first capture (and therefore
has number 1); the character matching . is captured
with number 2, and the part matching %s* has number 3.
As a special case, the empty capture () captures the current
string position (a number). For instance, if we apply the pattern "()aa()"
on the string "flaaap", there will be two captures: 3 and
5.
A pattern cannot contain embedded zeros. Use %z instead.
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