Re: Swift: How to determine if a Character represents whitespace?
Re: Swift: How to determine if a Character represents whitespace?
- Subject: Re: Swift: How to determine if a Character represents whitespace?
- From: Charles Jenkins <email@hidden>
- Date: Thu, 02 Apr 2015 10:21:05 -0400
Oops. My documentation viewer was set up wrong. characterAtIndex() is indeed supposed to be available in Swift. Don’t know what I’ve done wrong that I can’t use it in a playground.
--
Charles
On April 2, 2015 at 10:18:00, Charles Jenkins (email@hidden) wrote:
The documentation certainly says that, Ken, but stick this code in a playground and see that you can’t examine the characters via index no matter whether you assume it to be String or NSString:
let whitespaceSet = NSCharacterSet.whitespaceAndNewlineCharacterSet()
let attrStr = NSAttributedString( string:" Fourscore and seven years ago \n\n\n\t\t\t " )
let str = attrStr.string
var head = 0
let tooFar = attrStr.length
while head < tooFar {
if whitespaceSet.characterIsMember( str.characterAtIndex( head ) ) {
// Skip -- I did it this way so the error message received from the above line will be clear
} else {
break;
}
++head
}
var headIx = str.startIndex
let tooFarIx = str.endIndex
while headIx < tooFarIx {
if whitespaceSet.characterIsMember( str[ headIx ] ) {
// Skip
} else {
break;
}
headIx = headIx.successor()
}
characterAtIndex() doesn’t work because it’s not available in Swift. If you replace str.characterAtIndex( head ) with with str[ head ], you get the same error as in the version below it that incorrectly assumes it’s a Swift string: “Could not find overload of 'subscript' that accepts the supplied arguments.”
Now, I did just type this out on a computer running Xcode 6.2. At home I’m using 6.3 beta, so it’s possible I’ll get home and find one of these versions works as expected, even though I’m sure I tried both ways last night when I first hit the roadblock…
I’m now guessing that maybe converting from NSString to String and examining characters via one of the UTF views might possibly not involve a copy. But then how do I decide which view I should be using...
--
Charles
On April 2, 2015 at 08:44:52, Ken Thomases (email@hidden) wrote:
On Apr 2, 2015, at 6:54 AM, Charles Jenkins <email@hidden> wrote:
> What would be nice is a way to count leading and trailing characters in place while the thing is still an NSAttributedString--without using NSAttributedString.string to convert to a Swift string in the first place.
NSAttributedString.string does not involve a conversion. The underlying string is part of NSAttributedString's data model. The documentation for the method explicitly says, "For performance reasons, this property returns the current backing store of the attributed string object."
I don't know if there's a conversion to create a Swift string from that, but you don't have to. I believe you can work with NSString in Swift.
Regards,
Ken
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