* cl.texi (For Clauses): @items for hash-values and key-bindings
[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / lispref / strings.texi
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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
73b0cd50 3@c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998-1999, 2001-2011
d24880de 4@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
b8d4c8d0 5@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6336d8c3 6@setfilename ../../info/strings
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7@node Strings and Characters, Lists, Numbers, Top
8@comment node-name, next, previous, up
9@chapter Strings and Characters
10@cindex strings
11@cindex character arrays
12@cindex characters
13@cindex bytes
14
15 A string in Emacs Lisp is an array that contains an ordered sequence
16of characters. Strings are used as names of symbols, buffers, and
17files; to send messages to users; to hold text being copied between
18buffers; and for many other purposes. Because strings are so important,
19Emacs Lisp has many functions expressly for manipulating them. Emacs
20Lisp programs use strings more often than individual characters.
21
22 @xref{Strings of Events}, for special considerations for strings of
23keyboard character events.
24
25@menu
26* Basics: String Basics. Basic properties of strings and characters.
27* Predicates for Strings:: Testing whether an object is a string or char.
28* Creating Strings:: Functions to allocate new strings.
29* Modifying Strings:: Altering the contents of an existing string.
30* Text Comparison:: Comparing characters or strings.
31* String Conversion:: Converting to and from characters and strings.
32* Formatting Strings:: @code{format}: Emacs's analogue of @code{printf}.
33* Case Conversion:: Case conversion functions.
d24880de 34* Case Tables:: Customizing case conversion.
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35@end menu
36
37@node String Basics
38@section String and Character Basics
39
40 Characters are represented in Emacs Lisp as integers;
41whether an integer is a character or not is determined only by how it is
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42used. Thus, strings really contain integers. @xref{Character Codes},
43for details about character representation in Emacs.
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44
45 The length of a string (like any array) is fixed, and cannot be
46altered once the string exists. Strings in Lisp are @emph{not}
47terminated by a distinguished character code. (By contrast, strings in
48C are terminated by a character with @acronym{ASCII} code 0.)
49
50 Since strings are arrays, and therefore sequences as well, you can
51operate on them with the general array and sequence functions.
52(@xref{Sequences Arrays Vectors}.) For example, you can access or
53change individual characters in a string using the functions @code{aref}
54and @code{aset} (@pxref{Array Functions}).
55
56 There are two text representations for non-@acronym{ASCII} characters in
57Emacs strings (and in buffers): unibyte and multibyte (@pxref{Text
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58Representations}). For most Lisp programming, you don't need to be
59concerned with these two representations.
b8d4c8d0 60
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61 Sometimes key sequences are represented as unibyte strings. When a
62unibyte string is a key sequence, string elements in the range 128 to
63255 represent meta characters (which are large integers) rather than
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64character codes in the range 128 to 255. Strings cannot hold
65characters that have the hyper, super or alt modifiers; they can hold
66@acronym{ASCII} control characters, but no other control characters.
67They do not distinguish case in @acronym{ASCII} control characters.
68If you want to store such characters in a sequence, such as a key
69sequence, you must use a vector instead of a string. @xref{Character
70Type}, for more information about keyboard input characters.
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71
72 Strings are useful for holding regular expressions. You can also
73match regular expressions against strings with @code{string-match}
74(@pxref{Regexp Search}). The functions @code{match-string}
75(@pxref{Simple Match Data}) and @code{replace-match} (@pxref{Replacing
76Match}) are useful for decomposing and modifying strings after
77matching regular expressions against them.
78
79 Like a buffer, a string can contain text properties for the characters
80in it, as well as the characters themselves. @xref{Text Properties}.
81All the Lisp primitives that copy text from strings to buffers or other
82strings also copy the properties of the characters being copied.
83
84 @xref{Text}, for information about functions that display strings or
85copy them into buffers. @xref{Character Type}, and @ref{String Type},
86for information about the syntax of characters and strings.
87@xref{Non-ASCII Characters}, for functions to convert between text
88representations and to encode and decode character codes.
89
90@node Predicates for Strings
91@section The Predicates for Strings
92
93For more information about general sequence and array predicates,
94see @ref{Sequences Arrays Vectors}, and @ref{Arrays}.
95
96@defun stringp object
97This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a string, @code{nil}
98otherwise.
99@end defun
100
101@defun string-or-null-p object
8c641f06 102This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a string or
638a2457 103@code{nil}. It returns @code{nil} otherwise.
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104@end defun
105
106@defun char-or-string-p object
107This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} is a string or a
108character (i.e., an integer), @code{nil} otherwise.
109@end defun
110
111@node Creating Strings
112@section Creating Strings
113
114 The following functions create strings, either from scratch, or by
115putting strings together, or by taking them apart.
116
117@defun make-string count character
118This function returns a string made up of @var{count} repetitions of
119@var{character}. If @var{count} is negative, an error is signaled.
120
121@example
122(make-string 5 ?x)
123 @result{} "xxxxx"
124(make-string 0 ?x)
125 @result{} ""
126@end example
127
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128 Other functions to compare with this one include @code{make-vector}
129(@pxref{Vectors}) and @code{make-list} (@pxref{Building Lists}).
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130@end defun
131
132@defun string &rest characters
133This returns a string containing the characters @var{characters}.
134
135@example
136(string ?a ?b ?c)
137 @result{} "abc"
138@end example
139@end defun
140
141@defun substring string start &optional end
142This function returns a new string which consists of those characters
143from @var{string} in the range from (and including) the character at the
144index @var{start} up to (but excluding) the character at the index
145@var{end}. The first character is at index zero.
146
147@example
148@group
149(substring "abcdefg" 0 3)
150 @result{} "abc"
151@end group
152@end example
153
154@noindent
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155In the above example, the index for @samp{a} is 0, the index for
156@samp{b} is 1, and the index for @samp{c} is 2. The index 3---which
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157is the fourth character in the string---marks the character position
158up to which the substring is copied. Thus, @samp{abc} is copied from
159the string @code{"abcdefg"}.
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160
161A negative number counts from the end of the string, so that @minus{}1
162signifies the index of the last character of the string. For example:
163
164@example
165@group
166(substring "abcdefg" -3 -1)
167 @result{} "ef"
168@end group
169@end example
170
171@noindent
172In this example, the index for @samp{e} is @minus{}3, the index for
173@samp{f} is @minus{}2, and the index for @samp{g} is @minus{}1.
174Therefore, @samp{e} and @samp{f} are included, and @samp{g} is excluded.
175
176When @code{nil} is used for @var{end}, it stands for the length of the
177string. Thus,
178
179@example
180@group
181(substring "abcdefg" -3 nil)
182 @result{} "efg"
183@end group
184@end example
185
186Omitting the argument @var{end} is equivalent to specifying @code{nil}.
187It follows that @code{(substring @var{string} 0)} returns a copy of all
188of @var{string}.
189
190@example
191@group
192(substring "abcdefg" 0)
193 @result{} "abcdefg"
194@end group
195@end example
196
197@noindent
198But we recommend @code{copy-sequence} for this purpose (@pxref{Sequence
199Functions}).
200
201If the characters copied from @var{string} have text properties, the
202properties are copied into the new string also. @xref{Text Properties}.
203
204@code{substring} also accepts a vector for the first argument.
205For example:
206
207@example
208(substring [a b (c) "d"] 1 3)
209 @result{} [b (c)]
210@end example
211
212A @code{wrong-type-argument} error is signaled if @var{start} is not
213an integer or if @var{end} is neither an integer nor @code{nil}. An
214@code{args-out-of-range} error is signaled if @var{start} indicates a
215character following @var{end}, or if either integer is out of range
216for @var{string}.
217
218Contrast this function with @code{buffer-substring} (@pxref{Buffer
219Contents}), which returns a string containing a portion of the text in
220the current buffer. The beginning of a string is at index 0, but the
221beginning of a buffer is at index 1.
222@end defun
223
224@defun substring-no-properties string &optional start end
225This works like @code{substring} but discards all text properties from
226the value. Also, @var{start} may be omitted or @code{nil}, which is
227equivalent to 0. Thus, @w{@code{(substring-no-properties
228@var{string})}} returns a copy of @var{string}, with all text
229properties removed.
230@end defun
231
232@defun concat &rest sequences
233@cindex copying strings
234@cindex concatenating strings
235This function returns a new string consisting of the characters in the
236arguments passed to it (along with their text properties, if any). The
237arguments may be strings, lists of numbers, or vectors of numbers; they
238are not themselves changed. If @code{concat} receives no arguments, it
239returns an empty string.
240
241@example
242(concat "abc" "-def")
243 @result{} "abc-def"
244(concat "abc" (list 120 121) [122])
245 @result{} "abcxyz"
246;; @r{@code{nil} is an empty sequence.}
247(concat "abc" nil "-def")
248 @result{} "abc-def"
249(concat "The " "quick brown " "fox.")
250 @result{} "The quick brown fox."
251(concat)
252 @result{} ""
253@end example
254
255@noindent
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256This function always constructs a new string that is not @code{eq} to
257any existing string, except when the result is the empty string (to
258save space, Emacs makes only one empty multibyte string).
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259
260For information about other concatenation functions, see the
261description of @code{mapconcat} in @ref{Mapping Functions},
262@code{vconcat} in @ref{Vector Functions}, and @code{append} in @ref{Building
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263Lists}. For concatenating individual command-line arguments into a
264string to be used as a shell command, see @ref{Shell Arguments,
265combine-and-quote-strings}.
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266@end defun
267
268@defun split-string string &optional separators omit-nulls
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269This function splits @var{string} into substrings based on the regular
270expression @var{separators} (@pxref{Regular Expressions}). Each match
271for @var{separators} defines a splitting point; the substrings between
272splitting points are made into a list, which is returned.
b8d4c8d0 273
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274If @var{omit-nulls} is @code{nil} (or omitted), the result contains
275null strings whenever there are two consecutive matches for
276@var{separators}, or a match is adjacent to the beginning or end of
277@var{string}. If @var{omit-nulls} is @code{t}, these null strings are
278omitted from the result.
b8d4c8d0 279
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280If @var{separators} is @code{nil} (or omitted), the default is the
281value of @code{split-string-default-separators}.
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282
283As a special case, when @var{separators} is @code{nil} (or omitted),
284null strings are always omitted from the result. Thus:
285
286@example
287(split-string " two words ")
288 @result{} ("two" "words")
289@end example
290
291The result is not @code{("" "two" "words" "")}, which would rarely be
292useful. If you need such a result, use an explicit value for
293@var{separators}:
294
295@example
296(split-string " two words "
297 split-string-default-separators)
298 @result{} ("" "two" "words" "")
299@end example
300
301More examples:
302
303@example
304(split-string "Soup is good food" "o")
305 @result{} ("S" "up is g" "" "d f" "" "d")
306(split-string "Soup is good food" "o" t)
307 @result{} ("S" "up is g" "d f" "d")
308(split-string "Soup is good food" "o+")
309 @result{} ("S" "up is g" "d f" "d")
310@end example
311
312Empty matches do count, except that @code{split-string} will not look
313for a final empty match when it already reached the end of the string
314using a non-empty match or when @var{string} is empty:
315
316@example
317(split-string "aooob" "o*")
318 @result{} ("" "a" "" "b" "")
319(split-string "ooaboo" "o*")
320 @result{} ("" "" "a" "b" "")
321(split-string "" "")
322 @result{} ("")
323@end example
324
325However, when @var{separators} can match the empty string,
326@var{omit-nulls} is usually @code{t}, so that the subtleties in the
327three previous examples are rarely relevant:
328
329@example
330(split-string "Soup is good food" "o*" t)
331 @result{} ("S" "u" "p" " " "i" "s" " " "g" "d" " " "f" "d")
332(split-string "Nice doggy!" "" t)
333 @result{} ("N" "i" "c" "e" " " "d" "o" "g" "g" "y" "!")
334(split-string "" "" t)
335 @result{} nil
336@end example
337
338Somewhat odd, but predictable, behavior can occur for certain
339``non-greedy'' values of @var{separators} that can prefer empty
340matches over non-empty matches. Again, such values rarely occur in
341practice:
342
343@example
344(split-string "ooo" "o*" t)
345 @result{} nil
346(split-string "ooo" "\\|o+" t)
347 @result{} ("o" "o" "o")
348@end example
fd6f900c 349
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350If you need to split a string into a list of individual command-line
351arguments suitable for @code{call-process} or @code{start-process},
352see @ref{Shell Arguments, split-string-and-unquote}.
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353@end defun
354
355@defvar split-string-default-separators
356The default value of @var{separators} for @code{split-string}. Its
357usual value is @w{@code{"[ \f\t\n\r\v]+"}}.
358@end defvar
359
360@node Modifying Strings
361@section Modifying Strings
362
363 The most basic way to alter the contents of an existing string is with
364@code{aset} (@pxref{Array Functions}). @code{(aset @var{string}
365@var{idx} @var{char})} stores @var{char} into @var{string} at index
366@var{idx}. Each character occupies one or more bytes, and if @var{char}
367needs a different number of bytes from the character already present at
368that index, @code{aset} signals an error.
369
370 A more powerful function is @code{store-substring}:
371
372@defun store-substring string idx obj
373This function alters part of the contents of the string @var{string}, by
374storing @var{obj} starting at index @var{idx}. The argument @var{obj}
375may be either a character or a (smaller) string.
376
377Since it is impossible to change the length of an existing string, it is
378an error if @var{obj} doesn't fit within @var{string}'s actual length,
379or if any new character requires a different number of bytes from the
380character currently present at that point in @var{string}.
381@end defun
382
383 To clear out a string that contained a password, use
384@code{clear-string}:
385
386@defun clear-string string
387This makes @var{string} a unibyte string and clears its contents to
388zeros. It may also change @var{string}'s length.
389@end defun
390
391@need 2000
392@node Text Comparison
393@section Comparison of Characters and Strings
394@cindex string equality
395
396@defun char-equal character1 character2
397This function returns @code{t} if the arguments represent the same
398character, @code{nil} otherwise. This function ignores differences
399in case if @code{case-fold-search} is non-@code{nil}.
400
401@example
402(char-equal ?x ?x)
403 @result{} t
404(let ((case-fold-search nil))
405 (char-equal ?x ?X))
406 @result{} nil
407@end example
408@end defun
409
410@defun string= string1 string2
411This function returns @code{t} if the characters of the two strings
412match exactly. Symbols are also allowed as arguments, in which case
413their print names are used.
414Case is always significant, regardless of @code{case-fold-search}.
415
416@example
417(string= "abc" "abc")
418 @result{} t
419(string= "abc" "ABC")
420 @result{} nil
421(string= "ab" "ABC")
422 @result{} nil
423@end example
424
425The function @code{string=} ignores the text properties of the two
426strings. When @code{equal} (@pxref{Equality Predicates}) compares two
427strings, it uses @code{string=}.
428
429For technical reasons, a unibyte and a multibyte string are
430@code{equal} if and only if they contain the same sequence of
431character codes and all these codes are either in the range 0 through
432127 (@acronym{ASCII}) or 160 through 255 (@code{eight-bit-graphic}).
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433However, when a unibyte string is converted to a multibyte string, all
434characters with codes in the range 160 through 255 are converted to
435characters with higher codes, whereas @acronym{ASCII} characters
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436remain unchanged. Thus, a unibyte string and its conversion to
437multibyte are only @code{equal} if the string is all @acronym{ASCII}.
438Character codes 160 through 255 are not entirely proper in multibyte
439text, even though they can occur. As a consequence, the situation
440where a unibyte and a multibyte string are @code{equal} without both
441being all @acronym{ASCII} is a technical oddity that very few Emacs
442Lisp programmers ever get confronted with. @xref{Text
443Representations}.
444@end defun
445
446@defun string-equal string1 string2
447@code{string-equal} is another name for @code{string=}.
448@end defun
449
450@cindex lexical comparison
451@defun string< string1 string2
452@c (findex string< causes problems for permuted index!!)
453This function compares two strings a character at a time. It
454scans both the strings at the same time to find the first pair of corresponding
455characters that do not match. If the lesser character of these two is
456the character from @var{string1}, then @var{string1} is less, and this
457function returns @code{t}. If the lesser character is the one from
458@var{string2}, then @var{string1} is greater, and this function returns
459@code{nil}. If the two strings match entirely, the value is @code{nil}.
460
461Pairs of characters are compared according to their character codes.
462Keep in mind that lower case letters have higher numeric values in the
463@acronym{ASCII} character set than their upper case counterparts; digits and
464many punctuation characters have a lower numeric value than upper case
465letters. An @acronym{ASCII} character is less than any non-@acronym{ASCII}
466character; a unibyte non-@acronym{ASCII} character is always less than any
467multibyte non-@acronym{ASCII} character (@pxref{Text Representations}).
468
469@example
470@group
471(string< "abc" "abd")
472 @result{} t
473(string< "abd" "abc")
474 @result{} nil
475(string< "123" "abc")
476 @result{} t
477@end group
478@end example
479
480When the strings have different lengths, and they match up to the
481length of @var{string1}, then the result is @code{t}. If they match up
482to the length of @var{string2}, the result is @code{nil}. A string of
483no characters is less than any other string.
484
485@example
486@group
487(string< "" "abc")
488 @result{} t
489(string< "ab" "abc")
490 @result{} t
491(string< "abc" "")
492 @result{} nil
493(string< "abc" "ab")
494 @result{} nil
495(string< "" "")
496 @result{} nil
497@end group
498@end example
499
500Symbols are also allowed as arguments, in which case their print names
501are used.
502@end defun
503
504@defun string-lessp string1 string2
505@code{string-lessp} is another name for @code{string<}.
506@end defun
507
508@defun compare-strings string1 start1 end1 string2 start2 end2 &optional ignore-case
509This function compares the specified part of @var{string1} with the
510specified part of @var{string2}. The specified part of @var{string1}
511runs from index @var{start1} up to index @var{end1} (@code{nil} means
512the end of the string). The specified part of @var{string2} runs from
513index @var{start2} up to index @var{end2} (@code{nil} means the end of
514the string).
515
516The strings are both converted to multibyte for the comparison
517(@pxref{Text Representations}) so that a unibyte string and its
518conversion to multibyte are always regarded as equal. If
519@var{ignore-case} is non-@code{nil}, then case is ignored, so that
520upper case letters can be equal to lower case letters.
521
522If the specified portions of the two strings match, the value is
523@code{t}. Otherwise, the value is an integer which indicates how many
524leading characters agree, and which string is less. Its absolute value
525is one plus the number of characters that agree at the beginning of the
526two strings. The sign is negative if @var{string1} (or its specified
527portion) is less.
528@end defun
529
530@defun assoc-string key alist &optional case-fold
531This function works like @code{assoc}, except that @var{key} must be a
532string or symbol, and comparison is done using @code{compare-strings}.
533Symbols are converted to strings before testing.
534If @var{case-fold} is non-@code{nil}, it ignores case differences.
535Unlike @code{assoc}, this function can also match elements of the alist
536that are strings or symbols rather than conses. In particular, @var{alist} can
537be a list of strings or symbols rather than an actual alist.
538@xref{Association Lists}.
539@end defun
540
8f88eb24 541 See also the function @code{compare-buffer-substrings} in
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542@ref{Comparing Text}, for a way to compare text in buffers. The
543function @code{string-match}, which matches a regular expression
544against a string, can be used for a kind of string comparison; see
545@ref{Regexp Search}.
546
547@node String Conversion
548@comment node-name, next, previous, up
549@section Conversion of Characters and Strings
550@cindex conversion of strings
551
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552 This section describes functions for converting between characters,
553strings and integers. @code{format} (@pxref{Formatting Strings}) and
554@code{prin1-to-string} (@pxref{Output Functions}) can also convert
555Lisp objects into strings. @code{read-from-string} (@pxref{Input
556Functions}) can ``convert'' a string representation of a Lisp object
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557into an object. The functions @code{string-to-multibyte} and
558@code{string-to-unibyte} convert the text representation of a string
8f88eb24 559(@pxref{Converting Representations}).
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560
561 @xref{Documentation}, for functions that produce textual descriptions
562of text characters and general input events
563(@code{single-key-description} and @code{text-char-description}). These
564are used primarily for making help messages.
565
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566@defun number-to-string number
567@cindex integer to string
568@cindex integer to decimal
569This function returns a string consisting of the printed base-ten
570representation of @var{number}, which may be an integer or a floating
571point number. The returned value starts with a minus sign if the argument is
572negative.
573
574@example
575(number-to-string 256)
576 @result{} "256"
577@group
578(number-to-string -23)
579 @result{} "-23"
580@end group
581(number-to-string -23.5)
582 @result{} "-23.5"
583@end example
584
585@cindex int-to-string
586@code{int-to-string} is a semi-obsolete alias for this function.
587
588See also the function @code{format} in @ref{Formatting Strings}.
589@end defun
590
591@defun string-to-number string &optional base
592@cindex string to number
593This function returns the numeric value of the characters in
594@var{string}. If @var{base} is non-@code{nil}, it must be an integer
595between 2 and 16 (inclusive), and integers are converted in that base.
596If @var{base} is @code{nil}, then base ten is used. Floating point
597conversion only works in base ten; we have not implemented other
598radices for floating point numbers, because that would be much more
599work and does not seem useful. If @var{string} looks like an integer
600but its value is too large to fit into a Lisp integer,
601@code{string-to-number} returns a floating point result.
602
603The parsing skips spaces and tabs at the beginning of @var{string},
604then reads as much of @var{string} as it can interpret as a number in
605the given base. (On some systems it ignores other whitespace at the
606beginning, not just spaces and tabs.) If the first character after
607the ignored whitespace is neither a digit in the given base, nor a
608plus or minus sign, nor the leading dot of a floating point number,
609this function returns 0.
610
611@example
612(string-to-number "256")
613 @result{} 256
614(string-to-number "25 is a perfect square.")
615 @result{} 25
616(string-to-number "X256")
617 @result{} 0
618(string-to-number "-4.5")
619 @result{} -4.5
620(string-to-number "1e5")
621 @result{} 100000.0
622@end example
623
624@findex string-to-int
625@code{string-to-int} is an obsolete alias for this function.
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626@end defun
627
628@defun char-to-string character
629@cindex character to string
630This function returns a new string containing one character,
631@var{character}. This function is semi-obsolete because the function
632@code{string} is more general. @xref{Creating Strings}.
633@end defun
634
635@defun string-to-char string
636 This function returns the first character in @var{string}. This
637mostly identical to @code{(aref string 0)}, except that it returns 0
638if the string is empty. (The value is also 0 when the first character
639of @var{string} is the null character, @acronym{ASCII} code 0.) This
640function may be eliminated in the future if it does not seem useful
641enough to retain.
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642@end defun
643
644 Here are some other functions that can convert to or from a string:
645
646@table @code
647@item concat
3e99b825 648This function converts a vector or a list into a string.
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649@xref{Creating Strings}.
650
651@item vconcat
3e99b825 652This function converts a string into a vector. @xref{Vector
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653Functions}.
654
655@item append
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656This function converts a string into a list. @xref{Building Lists}.
657
658@item byte-to-string
659This function converts a byte of character data into a unibyte string.
660@xref{Converting Representations}.
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661@end table
662
663@node Formatting Strings
664@comment node-name, next, previous, up
665@section Formatting Strings
666@cindex formatting strings
667@cindex strings, formatting them
668
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669 @dfn{Formatting} means constructing a string by substituting
670computed values at various places in a constant string. This constant
671string controls how the other values are printed, as well as where
672they appear; it is called a @dfn{format string}.
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673
674 Formatting is often useful for computing messages to be displayed. In
675fact, the functions @code{message} and @code{error} provide the same
676formatting feature described here; they differ from @code{format} only
677in how they use the result of formatting.
678
679@defun format string &rest objects
680This function returns a new string that is made by copying
681@var{string} and then replacing any format specification
682in the copy with encodings of the corresponding @var{objects}. The
683arguments @var{objects} are the computed values to be formatted.
684
685The characters in @var{string}, other than the format specifications,
686are copied directly into the output, including their text properties,
687if any.
688@end defun
689
690@cindex @samp{%} in format
691@cindex format specification
692 A format specification is a sequence of characters beginning with a
693@samp{%}. Thus, if there is a @samp{%d} in @var{string}, the
694@code{format} function replaces it with the printed representation of
695one of the values to be formatted (one of the arguments @var{objects}).
696For example:
697
698@example
699@group
700(format "The value of fill-column is %d." fill-column)
701 @result{} "The value of fill-column is 72."
702@end group
703@end example
704
705 Since @code{format} interprets @samp{%} characters as format
706specifications, you should @emph{never} pass an arbitrary string as
707the first argument. This is particularly true when the string is
708generated by some Lisp code. Unless the string is @emph{known} to
709never include any @samp{%} characters, pass @code{"%s"}, described
710below, as the first argument, and the string as the second, like this:
711
712@example
713 (format "%s" @var{arbitrary-string})
714@end example
715
716 If @var{string} contains more than one format specification, the
717format specifications correspond to successive values from
718@var{objects}. Thus, the first format specification in @var{string}
719uses the first such value, the second format specification uses the
720second such value, and so on. Any extra format specifications (those
721for which there are no corresponding values) cause an error. Any
722extra values to be formatted are ignored.
723
724 Certain format specifications require values of particular types. If
725you supply a value that doesn't fit the requirements, an error is
726signaled.
727
728 Here is a table of valid format specifications:
729
730@table @samp
731@item %s
732Replace the specification with the printed representation of the object,
733made without quoting (that is, using @code{princ}, not
734@code{prin1}---@pxref{Output Functions}). Thus, strings are represented
735by their contents alone, with no @samp{"} characters, and symbols appear
736without @samp{\} characters.
737
738If the object is a string, its text properties are
739copied into the output. The text properties of the @samp{%s} itself
740are also copied, but those of the object take priority.
741
742@item %S
743Replace the specification with the printed representation of the object,
744made with quoting (that is, using @code{prin1}---@pxref{Output
745Functions}). Thus, strings are enclosed in @samp{"} characters, and
746@samp{\} characters appear where necessary before special characters.
747
748@item %o
749@cindex integer to octal
750Replace the specification with the base-eight representation of an
751integer.
752
753@item %d
754Replace the specification with the base-ten representation of an
755integer.
756
757@item %x
758@itemx %X
759@cindex integer to hexadecimal
760Replace the specification with the base-sixteen representation of an
761integer. @samp{%x} uses lower case and @samp{%X} uses upper case.
762
763@item %c
764Replace the specification with the character which is the value given.
765
766@item %e
767Replace the specification with the exponential notation for a floating
768point number.
769
770@item %f
771Replace the specification with the decimal-point notation for a floating
772point number.
773
774@item %g
775Replace the specification with notation for a floating point number,
776using either exponential notation or decimal-point notation, whichever
777is shorter.
778
779@item %%
780Replace the specification with a single @samp{%}. This format
781specification is unusual in that it does not use a value. For example,
782@code{(format "%% %d" 30)} returns @code{"% 30"}.
783@end table
784
785 Any other format character results in an @samp{Invalid format
786operation} error.
787
788 Here are several examples:
789
790@example
791@group
792(format "The name of this buffer is %s." (buffer-name))
793 @result{} "The name of this buffer is strings.texi."
794
795(format "The buffer object prints as %s." (current-buffer))
796 @result{} "The buffer object prints as strings.texi."
797
798(format "The octal value of %d is %o,
799 and the hex value is %x." 18 18 18)
800 @result{} "The octal value of 18 is 22,
801 and the hex value is 12."
802@end group
803@end example
804
805@cindex field width
806@cindex padding
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807 A specification can have a @dfn{width}, which is a decimal number
808between the @samp{%} and the specification character. If the printed
809representation of the object contains fewer characters than this
810width, @code{format} extends it with padding. The width specifier is
811ignored for the @samp{%%} specification. Any padding introduced by
812the width specifier normally consists of spaces inserted on the left:
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813
814@example
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815(format "%5d is padded on the left with spaces" 123)
816 @result{} " 123 is padded on the left with spaces"
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817@end example
818
819@noindent
820If the width is too small, @code{format} does not truncate the
821object's printed representation. Thus, you can use a width to specify
822a minimum spacing between columns with no risk of losing information.
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823In the following three examples, @samp{%7s} specifies a minimum width
824of 7. In the first case, the string inserted in place of @samp{%7s}
825has only 3 letters, and needs 4 blank spaces as padding. In the
826second case, the string @code{"specification"} is 13 letters wide but
827is not truncated.
b8d4c8d0 828
b20e7c7d 829@example
b8d4c8d0 830@group
049bcbcb 831(format "The word `%7s' has %d letters in it."
b8d4c8d0 832 "foo" (length "foo"))
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833 @result{} "The word ` foo' has 3 letters in it."
834(format "The word `%7s' has %d letters in it."
b8d4c8d0 835 "specification" (length "specification"))
049bcbcb 836 @result{} "The word `specification' has 13 letters in it."
b8d4c8d0 837@end group
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838@end example
839
840@cindex flags in format specifications
841 Immediately after the @samp{%} and before the optional width
842specifier, you can also put certain @dfn{flag characters}.
843
844 The flag @samp{+} inserts a plus sign before a positive number, so
845that it always has a sign. A space character as flag inserts a space
846before a positive number. (Otherwise, positive numbers start with the
847first digit.) These flags are useful for ensuring that positive
848numbers and negative numbers use the same number of columns. They are
849ignored except for @samp{%d}, @samp{%e}, @samp{%f}, @samp{%g}, and if
850both flags are used, @samp{+} takes precedence.
851
852 The flag @samp{#} specifies an ``alternate form'' which depends on
853the format in use. For @samp{%o}, it ensures that the result begins
854with a @samp{0}. For @samp{%x} and @samp{%X}, it prefixes the result
855with @samp{0x} or @samp{0X}. For @samp{%e}, @samp{%f}, and @samp{%g},
856the @samp{#} flag means include a decimal point even if the precision
857is zero.
858
859 The flag @samp{-} causes the padding inserted by the width
860specifier, if any, to be inserted on the right rather than the left.
861The flag @samp{0} ensures that the padding consists of @samp{0}
862characters instead of spaces, inserted on the left. These flags are
863ignored for specification characters for which they do not make sense:
864@samp{%s}, @samp{%S} and @samp{%c} accept the @samp{0} flag, but still
865pad with @emph{spaces} on the left. If both @samp{-} and @samp{0} are
866present and valid, @samp{-} takes precedence.
b8d4c8d0 867
b20e7c7d 868@example
b8d4c8d0 869@group
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870(format "%06d is padded on the left with zeros" 123)
871 @result{} "000123 is padded on the left with zeros"
872
873(format "%-6d is padded on the right" 123)
874 @result{} "123 is padded on the right"
875
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876(format "The word `%-7s' actually has %d letters in it."
877 "foo" (length "foo"))
878 @result{} "The word `foo ' actually has 3 letters in it."
879@end group
b20e7c7d 880@end example
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881
882@cindex precision in format specifications
883 All the specification characters allow an optional @dfn{precision}
884before the character (after the width, if present). The precision is
885a decimal-point @samp{.} followed by a digit-string. For the
886floating-point specifications (@samp{%e}, @samp{%f}, @samp{%g}), the
887precision specifies how many decimal places to show; if zero, the
888decimal-point itself is also omitted. For @samp{%s} and @samp{%S},
889the precision truncates the string to the given width, so @samp{%.3s}
890shows only the first three characters of the representation for
891@var{object}. Precision has no effect for other specification
892characters.
893
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894@node Case Conversion
895@comment node-name, next, previous, up
896@section Case Conversion in Lisp
897@cindex upper case
898@cindex lower case
899@cindex character case
900@cindex case conversion in Lisp
901
902 The character case functions change the case of single characters or
903of the contents of strings. The functions normally convert only
904alphabetic characters (the letters @samp{A} through @samp{Z} and
905@samp{a} through @samp{z}, as well as non-@acronym{ASCII} letters); other
906characters are not altered. You can specify a different case
907conversion mapping by specifying a case table (@pxref{Case Tables}).
908
909 These functions do not modify the strings that are passed to them as
910arguments.
911
912 The examples below use the characters @samp{X} and @samp{x} which have
913@acronym{ASCII} codes 88 and 120 respectively.
914
915@defun downcase string-or-char
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916This function converts @var{string-or-char}, which should be either a
917character or a string, to lower case.
b8d4c8d0 918
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919When @var{string-or-char} is a string, this function returns a new
920string in which each letter in the argument that is upper case is
921converted to lower case. When @var{string-or-char} is a character,
922this function returns the corresponding lower case character (an
923integer); if the original character is lower case, or is not a letter,
924the return value is equal to the original character.
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925
926@example
927(downcase "The cat in the hat")
928 @result{} "the cat in the hat"
929
930(downcase ?X)
931 @result{} 120
932@end example
933@end defun
934
935@defun upcase string-or-char
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936This function converts @var{string-or-char}, which should be either a
937character or a string, to upper case.
b8d4c8d0 938
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939When @var{string-or-char} is a string, this function returns a new
940string in which each letter in the argument that is lower case is
941converted to upper case. When @var{string-or-char} is a character,
a86cd395 942this function returns the corresponding upper case character (an
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943integer); if the original character is upper case, or is not a letter,
944the return value is equal to the original character.
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945
946@example
947(upcase "The cat in the hat")
948 @result{} "THE CAT IN THE HAT"
949
950(upcase ?x)
951 @result{} 88
952@end example
953@end defun
954
955@defun capitalize string-or-char
956@cindex capitalization
957This function capitalizes strings or characters. If
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958@var{string-or-char} is a string, the function returns a new string
959whose contents are a copy of @var{string-or-char} in which each word
960has been capitalized. This means that the first character of each
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961word is converted to upper case, and the rest are converted to lower
962case.
963
964The definition of a word is any sequence of consecutive characters that
965are assigned to the word constituent syntax class in the current syntax
966table (@pxref{Syntax Class Table}).
967
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968When @var{string-or-char} is a character, this function does the same
969thing as @code{upcase}.
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970
971@example
972@group
973(capitalize "The cat in the hat")
974 @result{} "The Cat In The Hat"
975@end group
976
977@group
978(capitalize "THE 77TH-HATTED CAT")
979 @result{} "The 77th-Hatted Cat"
980@end group
981
982@group
983(capitalize ?x)
984 @result{} 88
985@end group
986@end example
987@end defun
988
989@defun upcase-initials string-or-char
990If @var{string-or-char} is a string, this function capitalizes the
991initials of the words in @var{string-or-char}, without altering any
992letters other than the initials. It returns a new string whose
993contents are a copy of @var{string-or-char}, in which each word has
994had its initial letter converted to upper case.
995
996The definition of a word is any sequence of consecutive characters that
997are assigned to the word constituent syntax class in the current syntax
998table (@pxref{Syntax Class Table}).
999
1000When the argument to @code{upcase-initials} is a character,
1001@code{upcase-initials} has the same result as @code{upcase}.
1002
1003@example
1004@group
1005(upcase-initials "The CAT in the hAt")
1006 @result{} "The CAT In The HAt"
1007@end group
1008@end example
1009@end defun
1010
1011 @xref{Text Comparison}, for functions that compare strings; some of
1012them ignore case differences, or can optionally ignore case differences.
1013
1014@node Case Tables
1015@section The Case Table
1016
1017 You can customize case conversion by installing a special @dfn{case
1018table}. A case table specifies the mapping between upper case and lower
1019case letters. It affects both the case conversion functions for Lisp
1020objects (see the previous section) and those that apply to text in the
1021buffer (@pxref{Case Changes}). Each buffer has a case table; there is
1022also a standard case table which is used to initialize the case table
1023of new buffers.
1024
1025 A case table is a char-table (@pxref{Char-Tables}) whose subtype is
1026@code{case-table}. This char-table maps each character into the
1027corresponding lower case character. It has three extra slots, which
1028hold related tables:
1029
1030@table @var
1031@item upcase
1032The upcase table maps each character into the corresponding upper
1033case character.
1034@item canonicalize
1035The canonicalize table maps all of a set of case-related characters
1036into a particular member of that set.
1037@item equivalences
1038The equivalences table maps each one of a set of case-related characters
1039into the next character in that set.
1040@end table
1041
1042 In simple cases, all you need to specify is the mapping to lower-case;
1043the three related tables will be calculated automatically from that one.
1044
1045 For some languages, upper and lower case letters are not in one-to-one
1046correspondence. There may be two different lower case letters with the
1047same upper case equivalent. In these cases, you need to specify the
1048maps for both lower case and upper case.
1049
1050 The extra table @var{canonicalize} maps each character to a canonical
1051equivalent; any two characters that are related by case-conversion have
1052the same canonical equivalent character. For example, since @samp{a}
1053and @samp{A} are related by case-conversion, they should have the same
1054canonical equivalent character (which should be either @samp{a} for both
1055of them, or @samp{A} for both of them).
1056
1057 The extra table @var{equivalences} is a map that cyclically permutes
1058each equivalence class (of characters with the same canonical
1059equivalent). (For ordinary @acronym{ASCII}, this would map @samp{a} into
1060@samp{A} and @samp{A} into @samp{a}, and likewise for each set of
1061equivalent characters.)
1062
8f88eb24 1063 When constructing a case table, you can provide @code{nil} for
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1064@var{canonicalize}; then Emacs fills in this slot from the lower case
1065and upper case mappings. You can also provide @code{nil} for
1066@var{equivalences}; then Emacs fills in this slot from
1067@var{canonicalize}. In a case table that is actually in use, those
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1068components are non-@code{nil}. Do not try to specify
1069@var{equivalences} without also specifying @var{canonicalize}.
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1070
1071 Here are the functions for working with case tables:
1072
1073@defun case-table-p object
1074This predicate returns non-@code{nil} if @var{object} is a valid case
1075table.
1076@end defun
1077
1078@defun set-standard-case-table table
1079This function makes @var{table} the standard case table, so that it will
1080be used in any buffers created subsequently.
1081@end defun
1082
1083@defun standard-case-table
1084This returns the standard case table.
1085@end defun
1086
1087@defun current-case-table
1088This function returns the current buffer's case table.
1089@end defun
1090
1091@defun set-case-table table
1092This sets the current buffer's case table to @var{table}.
1093@end defun
1094
1095@defmac with-case-table table body@dots{}
1096The @code{with-case-table} macro saves the current case table, makes
1097@var{table} the current case table, evaluates the @var{body} forms,
1098and finally restores the case table. The return value is the value of
1099the last form in @var{body}. The case table is restored even in case
1100of an abnormal exit via @code{throw} or error (@pxref{Nonlocal
1101Exits}).
1102@end defmac
1103
8f88eb24 1104 Some language environments modify the case conversions of
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1105@acronym{ASCII} characters; for example, in the Turkish language
1106environment, the @acronym{ASCII} character @samp{I} is downcased into
1107a Turkish ``dotless i''. This can interfere with code that requires
1108ordinary ASCII case conversion, such as implementations of
1109@acronym{ASCII}-based network protocols. In that case, use the
1110@code{with-case-table} macro with the variable @var{ascii-case-table},
1111which stores the unmodified case table for the @acronym{ASCII}
1112character set.
1113
1114@defvar ascii-case-table
1115The case table for the @acronym{ASCII} character set. This should not be
1116modified by any language environment settings.
1117@end defvar
1118
1119 The following three functions are convenient subroutines for packages
1120that define non-@acronym{ASCII} character sets. They modify the specified
1121case table @var{case-table}; they also modify the standard syntax table.
1122@xref{Syntax Tables}. Normally you would use these functions to change
1123the standard case table.
1124
1125@defun set-case-syntax-pair uc lc case-table
1126This function specifies a pair of corresponding letters, one upper case
1127and one lower case.
1128@end defun
1129
1130@defun set-case-syntax-delims l r case-table
1131This function makes characters @var{l} and @var{r} a matching pair of
1132case-invariant delimiters.
1133@end defun
1134
1135@defun set-case-syntax char syntax case-table
1136This function makes @var{char} case-invariant, with syntax
1137@var{syntax}.
1138@end defun
1139
1140@deffn Command describe-buffer-case-table
1141This command displays a description of the contents of the current
1142buffer's case table.
1143@end deffn