☰
Java_String
fuzion.java.Java_String
Java's 'java.lang.String' type
Fields
Constructors
helper type for the result of the cut feature
repeat string given number of timesFunctions
convert this string into a Sequence of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
converting a string to a string is just returning string.this
length of this string in bytes
splits this string in chunks of codepoint length n, the last part might be shorter
length of this string in codepoints
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
Java's 'java.lang.String' type
Fields
Constructors
helper type for the result of the cut feature
repeat string given number of timesFunctions
convert this string into a Sequence of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
converting a string to a string is just returning string.this
length of this string in bytes
splits this string in chunks of codepoint length n, the last part might be shorter
length of this string in codepoints
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
Constructors
helper type for the result of the cut feature
repeat string given number of timesFunctions
convert this string into a Sequence of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
converting a string to a string is just returning string.this
length of this string in bytes
splits this string in chunks of codepoint length n, the last part might be shorter
length of this string in codepoints
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
helper type for the result of the cut feature
repeat string given number of timesFunctions
convert this string into a Sequence of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
converting a string to a string is just returning string.this
length of this string in bytes
splits this string in chunks of codepoint length n, the last part might be shorter
length of this string in codepoints
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
repeat string given number of times
Functions
convert this string into a Sequence of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
converting a string to a string is just returning string.this
length of this string in bytes
splits this string in chunks of codepoint length n, the last part might be shorter
length of this string in codepoints
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
convert this string into a Sequence of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
converting a string to a string is just returning string.this
length of this string in bytes
splits this string in chunks of codepoint length n, the last part might be shorter
length of this string in codepoints
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
converting a string to a string is just returning string.this
length of this string in bytes
splits this string in chunks of codepoint length n, the last part might be shorter
length of this string in codepoints
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
converting a string to a string is just returning string.this
length of this string in bytes
splits this string in chunks of codepoint length n, the last part might be shorter
length of this string in codepoints
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
length of this string in bytes
splits this string in chunks of codepoint length n, the last part might be shorter
length of this string in codepoints
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
splits this string in chunks of codepoint length n, the last part might be shorter
length of this string in codepoints
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
length of this string in codepoints
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
convert this string into a list of codepoint and errors for encoding problems
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
found in the underlying utf8 bytes
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
does this string contain the given 'substring'
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
returns true if string contains whitespace
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
count number of occurrences of given 'substring' in this string
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
Cuts out the first appearance of the string sep from this string, in other words,
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
returns a tuple of two strings and a bool, the first string is the substring before
the first appreance of sep, the second string is the substring after the first
appearance of sep. The bool result is true iff sep appears in this string.
If sep does not appear in this string at all, return this string as the first string,
the empty string as the second, and false as the bool.
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
Get the dynamic type of this instance. For value instances `x`, this is
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
equal to `type_of x`, but for `x` with a `ref` type `x.dynamic_type` gives
the actual runtime type, while `type_of x` results in the static
compile-time type.
There is no dynamic type of a type instance since this would result in an
endless hierarchy of types. So for Type values, dynamic_type is redefined
to just return Type.type.
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
check if this string ends with given suffix
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
Splits this string at codepoints where p is true and returns the result as a
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
list of strings. In case multiple, neighboring codepoints in the string are
evaluated to be true by p, this does not cause empty strings to be added to
the result list, rather this case is being treated as being one big separator.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
find (utf8-byte-) index of 'substring' witin this string.
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
find (utf8-byte-) index of last occurrence of 'substring'
within this string.
within this string.
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
concatenate string with string representation of another object
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
Does this String consist of nothing but ascii codepoints?
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
returns true if string is empty or contains whitespace only
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
is this string empty?
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
convert this string to lower case
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
pad this string at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
pad this string at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
In case the required number of codepoints to add is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
pad this string at the beginning and at the end with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
In case the required number of copies of `p` is odd, the padding at the end will be longer.
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
return string of at least length l by
padding codepoint s to start of string
padding codepoint s to start of string
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
pad this string at the beginning with spaces such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
pad this string at the beginning with `p` such that its `codepoint_length` is at least `n`.
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a signed 128-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a signed 32-bit integer value
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a signed 64-bit integer value
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an int value of arbitrary size
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as a integer value given as type parameter
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an unsigned 128-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an unsigned 32-bit integer value
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
parse this string as an unsigned 64-bit integer value
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
convenience prefix operator to create a string from a value.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
This permits usage of `$` as a prefix operator in a similar way both
inside and outside of constant strings: $x and "$x" will produce the
same string.
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
replace all occurrences of old by new
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
replace the first n occurrences of old by new
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
Split string separated by (ASCII) white space
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
Leading and trailing white space is ignored, repeated white space is treated
like a single white space
The result is a, possibly empty, list of separate non-empty strings.
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
split string at s
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
split string after s, that is do the same thing as split but
include the separator s in the resulting strings
include the separator s in the resulting strings
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
split string after s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
split string at s, for at most n occurrences of s
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
if s occurs in the string less than n times, the resulting list will have
less than n elements
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
check if this string starts with given prefix
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).
create substring of this string consisting of bytes from (inclusive) .. byte_length (exclusive).