Split
No edit summary
(Automatically adding template at the end of the page.)
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
In OCL the string split function gets expects a char - but ocl defaults single characters to string. To solve this you can go like this:
In OCL, the String split function gets expects a char - but OCL defaults single characters to [[String]]. To solve this, do this:
  SomeString.split('X'.toCharArray)
  SomeString.split('X'.toCharArray)
This OCL SomeString.split('X') will give you the error: ''31:System.String does not conform to Collection(System.Char)''
This OCL SomeString.split('X') will give you the error: ''31:System.String does not conform to Collection(System.Char)''
An example of creating a <code>Collection(Part1:System.String+Part2:System.String)</code> which is a [[tuple]] that you can iterate to - for example, do search and replace:
'A, B;
X, Y'.Split(';'.toCharArray)->collect(pair | pair.Split(','.toCharArray)->at(1), pair.Split(','.toCharArray)->at(2))
RGB := '241, 55, 45'; '#' + RGB.split(','.toCharArray)->
<nowiki> </nowiki> collect(s|Integer.parse(s))->
<nowiki> </nowiki>  collect(i|i.toString('x'))->asSeparatedList(<nowiki>''</nowiki>)
If you want to do the reverse, look at [[OCLOperators asSeparatedList|asSeparatedList]].
[[Category:OCL]]
{{Edited|July|12|2024}}

Latest revision as of 15:47, 10 February 2024

In OCL, the String split function gets expects a char - but OCL defaults single characters to String. To solve this, do this:

SomeString.split('X'.toCharArray)

This OCL SomeString.split('X') will give you the error: 31:System.String does not conform to Collection(System.Char)

An example of creating a Collection(Part1:System.String+Part2:System.String) which is a tuple that you can iterate to - for example, do search and replace:

'A, B;
X, Y'.Split(';'.toCharArray)->collect(pair | pair.Split(','.toCharArray)->at(1), pair.Split(','.toCharArray)->at(2))
RGB := '241, 55, 45'; '#' + RGB.split(','.toCharArray)->
  collect(s|Integer.parse(s))->
    collect(i|i.toString('x'))->asSeparatedList('')

If you want to do the reverse, look at asSeparatedList.

This page was edited 101 days ago on 02/10/2024. What links here