Module string | Tarantool

Module string

The string module has everything in the standard Lua string library, and some Tarantool extensions.

In this section we only discuss the additional functions that the Tarantool developers have added.

Below is a list of all additional string functions.

Name Use
string.ljust() Left-justify a string
string.rjust() Right-justify a string
string.hex() Given a string, return hexadecimal values
string.fromhex() Given hexadecimal values, return a string
string.startswith() Check if a string starts with a given substring
string.endswith() Check if a string ends with a given substring
string.lstrip() Remove characters from the left of a string
string.rstrip() Remove characters from the right of a string
string.split() Split a string into a table of strings
string.strip() Remove spaces on the left and right of a string
string.ljust(input-string, width[, pad-character])

Return the string left-justified in a string of length width.

Parameters:
  • input-string (string) – the string to left-justify
  • width (integer) – the width of the string after left-justifying
  • pad-character (string) – a single character, default = 1 space
Return:

left-justified string (unchanged if width <= string length)

Rtype:

string

Example:

tarantool> string = require('string')
---
...
tarantool> string.ljust(' A', 5)
---
- ' A   '
...
string.rjust(input-string, width[, pad-character])

Return the string right-justified in a string of length width.

Parameters:
  • input-string (string) – the string to right-justify
  • width (integer) – the width of the string after right-justifying
  • pad-character (string) – a single character, default = 1 space
Return:

right-justified string (unchanged if width <= string length)

Rtype:

string

Example:

tarantool> string = require('string')
---
...
tarantool> string.rjust('', 5, 'X')
---
- 'XXXXX'
...
string.hex(input-string)

Return the hexadecimal value of the input string.

Parameters:
  • input-string (string) – the string to process
Return:

hexadecimal, 2 hex-digit characters for each input character

Rtype:

string

Example:

tarantool> string = require('string')
---
...
tarantool> string.hex('ABC ')
---
- '41424320'
...
string.fromhex(hexadecimal-input-string)

Given a string containing pairs of hexadecimal digits, return a string with one byte for each pair. This is the reverse of string.hex(). The hexadecimal-input-string must contain an even number of hexadecimal digits.

Parameters:
  • hexadecimal-input-string (string) – string with pairs of hexadecimal digits
Return:

string with one byte for each pair of hexadecimal digits

Rtype:

string

Example:

tarantool> string = require('string')
---
...
tarantool> string.fromhex('41424320')
---
- 'ABC '
...
string.startswith(input-string, start-string[, start-pos[, end-pos]])

Return True if input-string starts with start-string, otherwise return False.

Parameters:
  • input-string (string) – the string where start-string should be looked for
  • start-string (string) – the string to look for
  • start-pos (integer) – position: where to start looking within input-string
  • end-pos (integer) – position: where to end looking within input-string
Return:

true or false

Rtype:

boolean

start-pos and end-pos may be negative, meaning the position should be calculated from the end of the string.

Example:

tarantool> string = require('string')
---
...
tarantool> string.startswith(' A', 'A', 2, 5)
---
- true
...
string.endswith(input-string, end-string[, start-pos[, end-pos]])

Return True if input-string ends with end-string, otherwise return False.

Parameters:
  • input-string (string) – the string where end-string should be looked for
  • end-string (string) – the string to look for
  • start-pos (integer) – position: where to start looking within input-string
  • end-pos (integer) – position: where to end looking within input-string
Return:

true or false

Rtype:

boolean

start-pos and end-pos may be negative, meaning the position should be calculated from the end of the string.

Example:

tarantool> string = require('string')
---
...
tarantool> string.endswith('Baa', 'aa')
---
- true
...
string.lstrip(input-string[, list-of-characters])

Return the value of the input string, after removing characters on the left. The optional list-of-characters parameter is a set not a sequence, so string.lstrip(...,'ABC') does not mean strip 'ABC', it means strip 'A' or 'B' or 'C'.

Parameters:
  • input-string (string) – the string to process
  • list-of-characters (string) – what characters can be stripped. Default = space.
Return:

result after stripping characters from input string

Rtype:

string

Example:

tarantool> string = require('string')
---
...
tarantool> string.lstrip(' ABC ')
---
- 'ABC '
...
string.rstrip(input-string[, list-of-characters])

Return the value of the input string, after removing characters on the right. The optional list-of-characters parameter is a set not a sequence, so string.rstrip(...,'ABC') does not mean strip 'ABC', it means strip 'A' or 'B' or 'C'.

Parameters:
  • input-string (string) – the string to process
  • list-of-characters (string) – what characters can be stripped. Default = space.
Return:

result after stripping characters from input string

Rtype:

string

Example:

tarantool> string = require('string')
---
...
tarantool> string.rstrip(' ABC ')
---
- ' ABC'
...
string.split(input-string[, split-string[, max]])

Split input-string into one or more output strings in a table. The places to split are the places where split-string occurs.

Parameters:
  • input-string (string) – the string to split
  • split-string (string) – the string to find within input-string. Default = space.
  • max (integer) – maximum number of delimiters to process counting from the beginning of the input string. Result will contain max + 1 parts maximum.
Return:

table of strings that were split from input-string

Rtype:

table

Example:

tarantool> string = require('string')
---
...
tarantool> string.split("A:B:C:D:F", ":", 2)
---
- - A
  - B
  - C:D:F
...
string.strip(input-string[, list-of-characters])

Return the value of the input string, after removing characters on the left and the right. The optional list-of-characters parameter is a set not a sequence, so string.strip(...,'ABC') does not mean strip 'ABC', it means strip 'A' or 'B' or 'C'.

Parameters:
  • input-string (string) – the string to process
  • list-of-characters (string) – what characters can be stripped. Default = space.
Return:

result after stripping characters from input string

Rtype:

string

Example:

tarantool> string = require('string')
---
...
tarantool> string.strip(' ABC ')
---
- ABC
...
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