GETTOKEN | |
Description
Determines whether a token of the list in the delimiters parameter is present in a string. |
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Returns
The token found at position index of the string, as a string. If index is greater than the number of tokens in the string, returns an empty string. |
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Category
String functions |
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Function syntaxGetToken(string, index [, delimiters ]) |
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See also
Left, Right, Mid, SpanExcluding, SpanIncluding |
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Parameters
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Usage
The following examples show how this function works. Example A: Consider the following code: GetToken("red,blue:;red,black,tan:;red,pink,brown:;red,three", 2, ":;") This function call requests element number 2 from the string, using the delimiter ":;". The output is as follows: red,black,tan Example B: Consider the following code: <cfset mystring = "four," & #chr(32)# & #chr(9)# & #chr(10)# & ",five, nine,zero:;" & #chr(10)# & "nine,ten:, eleven:;twelve:;thirteen," & #chr(32)# & #chr(9)# & #chr(10)# & ",four"> <cfoutput> #mystring#<br><br> </cfoutput> The output is as follows: four, ,five, nine,zero:; nine,ten:, eleven:;twelve:;thirteen, ,four The GetToken function recognizes explicit spaces, tabs, or newline characters as the parameter delimiters (To specify a space character, the code is chr(32); a tab character, chr(9); and a newline character, chr(10).) In the example string mystring, there is:
In the following call against mystring, no spaces are specified in delimiters (it is omitted), so the function uses the space character as the string delimiter: <br> <cfoutput> GetToken(mystring, 3) is : #GetToken(mystring, 3)# </cfoutput><br> The output of this code is as follows: GetToken(mystring, 3) is : nine,zero:; The function finds the third delimiter, and returns the substring just before it that is between the second and third delimiter. This substring is "nine,zero:;". Example C: Consider the following code: <cfset mystring2 = "four," &#chr(9)# & #chr(10)# & ",five,nine,zero:;" & #chr(10)# & "nine,ten:,eleven:;twelve:;thirteen," & #chr(9)# & #chr(10)# & ",four"> <cfoutput> #mystring2#<br> </cfoutput> The output is as follows: four, ,five,nine,zero:; nine,ten:,eleven:;twelve:;thirteen, ,four The following is a call against mystring2: <cfoutput> GetToken(mystring2, 2) is : #GetToken(mystring2, 2)# </cfoutput> The output is as follows: GetToken(mystring2, 2) is : ,five,nine,zero:; The function finds the second delimiter, and returns the substring just before it that is between the first and second delimiter. This substring is ",five,nine,zero:;". |
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Example<h3>GetToken Example</h3> <cfif IsDefined("FORM.yourString")> <!--- set delimiter ---> <cfif FORM.yourDelimiter is not ""> <cfset yourDelimiter = FORM.yourDelimiter> <cfelse> <cfset yourDelimiter = " "> </cfif> <!--- check whether number of elements in list is greater than or equal to the element sought to return ---> <cfif ListLen(FORM.yourString, yourDelimiter) GTE FORM.returnElement> <cfoutput> <p>Element #FORM.ReturnElement# in #FORM.yourString#, delimited by "#yourDelimiter#" <br>is:#GetToken(FORM.yourString, FORM.returnElement, yourDelimiter)# </cfoutput> ... |
STRING | |
INDEX | |
DELIMITERS | |