GetNumberTokens(string, string)
Return the number of tokens in the string for the specified delimiter.
int GetNumberTokens( string sString, string sDelimiter );
Parameters
sString
The string to be split up into parts (tokens).
sDelimiter
The delimiter used to split up the string.
Description
This function returns the number of tokens into which a string will be split up, using a specified delimiter.
GetNumberTokens() requires two arguments: The string that is to be split up into tokens (sString) and the delimiter used to split up the string (sDelimiter).
The delimiter MUST be a string containing a single character.
Remarks
Contrary to the description found in x0_i0_stringlib, the DELIMITER MUST be a SINGLE CHARACTER. Otherwise the tokenization process does not work as expected.
The reason is that the function AdvanceToNextToken implicitly assumes that the delimiter has a length of 1. It is
easy to modify that function in order to accommodate a delimiter consisting of multiple characters, by replacing any occurrence of 'nDelimPos+1' with
'nDelimPos+GetStringLength(stTok.sDelimiter)'. However, such a modification would result in functionality different from the Bioware provided functionality.
Keep in mind that the functions in x0_i0_stringlib are not very efficient. They do a lot of unnecessary string manipulations and unnecessary string parameter passing;
string operations and string parameter passing (into or out of nwnscript functions) are amongst the most inefficient operations in nwnscript.
For the purpose of string tokenization by the functions provided in x0_i0_stringlib, a token is any substring (including empty substrings!) within the original string
enclosed by the specified delimiter (e.g. every token has one delimiter to the left, one to the right and NO delimiters within). Any non-empty original string is
treated as if it were enclosed within a pair of (virtual) delimiters to its left and right. Thus, unless the original string is empty, the number of tokens is always one higher than the
number of delimiters contained within the original string. A non-empty string with no delimiters therefore consists out of one token, which is equal to the original string.
An empty string has no tokens, although an empty token will be returned on request.
Example:
sString = "I|am|sloppy||programmer";
sDelimiter = "|";
Token[0] = "I";
Token[1] = "am";
Token[2] = "sloppy";
Token[3] = "";
Token[4] = "programmer";
sString contains five tokens and four delimiters.
Known Bugs
Contrary to the description found in the include file, the delimiter must be a single character (see remarks above).
Requirements
#include "x0_i0_stringlib"
Version
???
See Also
functions: | AdvanceToNextToken | FindSubString | GetNextToken | GetStringTokenizer | GetSubString | GetTokenByPosition | HasMoreTokens |
categories: | String Functions |
author: motu99, editors: Mistress, Kolyana