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150 lines
4.6 KiB
Text
150 lines
4.6 KiB
Text
api Str provides Str, isEmpty, join
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## Types
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## A [Unicode](https://unicode.org) text value.
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##
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## Dealing with text is deep topic, so by design, Roc's `Str` module sticks
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## to the basics. For more advanced use cases like working with raw [code points](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_point),
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## see the [roc/unicode](roc/unicode) package, and for locale-specific text
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## functions (including capitalization, as capitalization rules vary by locale)
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## see the [roc/locale](roc/locale) package.
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##
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## ### Unicode
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##
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## Unicode can represent text values which span multiple languages, symbols, and emoji.
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## Here are some valid Roc strings:
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##
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## * "Roc"
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## * "鹏"
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## * "🐦"
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##
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## Every Unicode string is a sequence of [grapheme clusters](https://unicode.org/glossary/#grapheme_cluster).
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## A grapheme cluster corresponds to what a person reading a string might call
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## a "character", but because the term "character" is used to mean many different
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## concepts across different programming languages, we intentionally avoid it in Roc.
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## Instead, we use the term "clusters" as a shorthand for "grapheme clusters."
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##
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## You can get the number of grapheme clusters in a string by calling `Str.countClusters` on it:
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##
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## >>> Str.countClusters "Roc"
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##
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## >>> Str.countClusters "音乐"
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##
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## >>> Str.countClusters "👍"
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##
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## > The `countClusters` function traverses the entire string to calculate its answer,
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## > so it's much better for performance to use `Str.isEmpty` instead of
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## > calling `Str.countClusters` and checking whether the count was `0`.
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##
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## ### Escape characters
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##
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## ### String interpolation
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##
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## ### Encoding
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##
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## Roc strings are not coupled to any particular
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## [encoding](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Character_encoding). As it happens,
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## they are currently encoded in UTF-8, but this module is intentionally designed
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## not to rely on that implementation detail so that a future release of Roc can
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## potentially change it without breaking existing Roc applications.
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##
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## This module has functions to can convert a #Str to a #List of raw code unit integers
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## in a particular encoding, but if you are doing encoding-specific work,
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## you should take a look at the [roc/unicode](roc/unicode) pacakge.
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## It has many more tools than this module does!
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Str : [ @Str ]
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## Convert
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## Convert a #Float to a decimal string, rounding off to the given number of decimal places.
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##
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## Since #Float values are imprecise, it's usually best to limit this to the lowest
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## number you can choose that will make sense for what you want to display.
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##
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## If you want to kep all the digits, passing #Int.highestSupported will accomplish this,
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## but it's recommended to pass much smaller numbers instead.
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##
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## Passing a negative number for decimal places is equivalent to passing 0.
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decimal : Float *, Int * -> Str
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## Convert an #Int to a string.
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int : Int * -> Str
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## Check
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isEmpty : Str -> Bool
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startsWith : Str, Str -> Bool
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endsWith : Str, Str -> Bool
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contains : Str, Str -> Bool
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any : Str, Str -> Bool
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all : Str, Str -> Bool
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## Combine
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## Combine a list of strings into a single string.
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##
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## >>> Str.join [ "a", "bc", "def" ]
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join : List Str -> Str
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## Combine a list of strings into a single string, with a separator
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## string in between each.
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##
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## >>> Str.joinWith [ "one", "two", "three" ] ", "
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joinWith : List Str, Str -> Str
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padStart : Str, Int, Str -> Str
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padEnd : Str, Int, Str -> Str
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foldClusters : Str, { start: state, step: (state, Str -> state) } -> state
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## Returns #True if the string begins with a capital letter, and #False otherwise.
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##
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## >>> Str.isCapitalized "hi"
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##
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## >>> Str.isCapitalized "Hi"
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##
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## >>> Str.isCapitalized " Hi"
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##
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## >>> Str.isCapitalized "Česká"
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##
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## >>> Str.isCapitalized "Э"
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##
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## >>> Str.isCapitalized "東京"
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##
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## >>> Str.isCapitalized "🐦"
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##
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## >>> Str.isCapitalized ""
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##
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## Since the rules for how to capitalize an uncapitalized string vary by locale,
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## see the [roc/locale](roc/locale) package for functions which do that.
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isCapitalized : Str -> Bool
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## ## Code Units
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##
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## Besides grapheme clusters, another way to break down strings is into
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## raw code unit integers.
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##
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## Code units are no substitute for grapheme clusters!
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## These functions exist to support advanced use cases like those found in
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## [roc/unicode](roc/unicode), and using code units when grapheme clusters would
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## be more appropriate can very easily lead to bugs.
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##
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## For example, `Str.countGraphemes "👍"` returns `1`,
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## whereas `Str.toUtf8 "👍"` returns a list with a length of 4,
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## and `Str.toUtf16 "👍"` returns a list with a length of 2.
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toUtf8 : Str -> List U8
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toUtf16 : Str -> List U16
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toUtf32 : Str -> List U32
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