API for clojure.string
-
by Stuart Sierra, Stuart Halloway, David Liebke
Full namespace name:
clojure.string
Overview
Clojure String utilities
It is poor form to (:use clojure.string). Instead, use require
with :as to specify a prefix, e.g.
(ns your.namespace.here
(:require [clojure.string :as str]))
Design notes for clojure.string:
1. Strings are objects (as opposed to sequences). As such, the
string being manipulated is the first argument to a function;
passing nil will result in a NullPointerException unless
documented otherwise. If you want sequence-y behavior instead,
use a sequence.
2. Functions are generally not lazy, and call straight to host
methods where those are available and efficient.
3. Functions take advantage of String implementation details to
write high-performing loop/recurs instead of using higher-order
functions. (This is not idiomatic in general-purpose application
code.)
4. When a function is documented to accept a string argument, it
will take any implementation of the correct *interface* on the
host platform. In Java, this is CharSequence, which is more
general than String. In ordinary usage you will almost always
pass concrete strings. If you are doing something unusual,
e.g. passing a mutable implementation of CharSequence, then
thread-safety is your responsibility.
Public Variables and Functions
blank?
function
Usage: (blank? s)
True if s is nil, empty, or contains only whitespace.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
capitalize
function
Usage: (capitalize s)
Converts first character of the string to upper-case, all other
characters to lower-case.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
ends-with?
function
Usage: (ends-with? s substr)
True if s ends with substr.
Added in Clojure version 1.8
Source
escape
function
Usage: (escape s cmap)
Return a new string, using cmap to escape each character ch
from s as follows:
If (cmap ch) is nil, append ch to the new string.
If (cmap ch) is non-nil, append (str (cmap ch)) instead.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
includes?
function
Usage: (includes? s substr)
True if s includes substr.
Added in Clojure version 1.8
Source
index-of
function
Usage: (index-of s value)
(index-of s value from-index)
Return index of value (string or char) in s, optionally searching
forward from from-index. Return nil if value not found.
Added in Clojure version 1.8
Source
join
function
Usage: (join coll)
(join separator coll)
Returns a string of all elements in coll, as returned by (seq coll),
separated by an optional separator.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
last-index-of
function
Usage: (last-index-of s value)
(last-index-of s value from-index)
Return last index of value (string or char) in s, optionally
searching backward from from-index. Return nil if value not found.
Added in Clojure version 1.8
Source
lower-case
function
Usage: (lower-case s)
Converts string to all lower-case.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
re-quote-replacement
function
Usage: (re-quote-replacement replacement)
Given a replacement string that you wish to be a literal
replacement for a pattern match in replace or replace-first, do the
necessary escaping of special characters in the replacement.
Added in Clojure version 1.5
Source
replace
function
Usage: (replace s match replacement)
Replaces all instance of match with replacement in s.
match/replacement can be:
string / string
char / char
pattern / (string or function of match).
See also replace-first.
The replacement is literal (i.e. none of its characters are treated
specially) for all cases above except pattern / string.
For pattern / string, $1, $2, etc. in the replacement string are
substituted with the string that matched the corresponding
parenthesized group in the pattern. If you wish your replacement
string r to be used literally, use (re-quote-replacement r) as the
replacement argument. See also documentation for
java.util.regex.Matcher's appendReplacement method.
Example:
(clojure.string/replace "Almost Pig Latin" #"\b(\w)(\w+)\b" "$2$1ay")
-> "lmostAay igPay atinLay"
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
replace-first
function
Usage: (replace-first s match replacement)
Replaces the first instance of match with replacement in s.
match/replacement can be:
char / char
string / string
pattern / (string or function of match).
See also replace.
The replacement is literal (i.e. none of its characters are treated
specially) for all cases above except pattern / string.
For pattern / string, $1, $2, etc. in the replacement string are
substituted with the string that matched the corresponding
parenthesized group in the pattern. If you wish your replacement
string r to be used literally, use (re-quote-replacement r) as the
replacement argument. See also documentation for
java.util.regex.Matcher's appendReplacement method.
Example:
(clojure.string/replace-first "swap first two words"
#"(\w+)(\s+)(\w+)" "$3$2$1")
-> "first swap two words"
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
reverse
function
Usage: (reverse s)
Returns s with its characters reversed.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
split
function
Usage: (split s re)
(split s re limit)
Splits string on a regular expression. Optional argument limit is
the maximum number of splits. Not lazy. Returns vector of the splits.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
split-lines
function
Usage: (split-lines s)
Splits s on \n or \r\n.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
starts-with?
function
Usage: (starts-with? s substr)
True if s starts with substr.
Added in Clojure version 1.8
Source
trim
function
Usage: (trim s)
Removes whitespace from both ends of string.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
trim-newline
function
Usage: (trim-newline s)
Removes all trailing newline \n or return \r characters from
string. Similar to Perl's chomp.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
triml
function
Usage: (triml s)
Removes whitespace from the left side of string.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
trimr
function
Usage: (trimr s)
Removes whitespace from the right side of string.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source
upper-case
function
Usage: (upper-case s)
Converts string to all upper-case.
Added in Clojure version 1.2
Source