LNXSDK/Kha/Tools/macos/std/String.hx
2025-01-22 16:18:30 +01:00

176 lines
5.8 KiB
Haxe

/*
* Copyright (C)2005-2019 Haxe Foundation
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
* copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
* to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
* the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
* and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
* Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
* all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
* AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
* LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
* FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
* DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
*/
/**
The basic String class.
A Haxe String is immutable, it is not possible to modify individual
characters. No method of this class changes the state of `this` String.
Strings can be constructed using the String literal syntax `"string value"`.
String can be concatenated by using the `+` operator. If an operand is not a
String, it is passed through `Std.string()` first.
@see https://haxe.org/manual/std-String.html
**/
extern class String {
/**
The number of characters in `this` String.
**/
var length(default, null):Int;
/**
Creates a copy from a given String.
**/
function new(string:String):Void;
/**
Returns a String where all characters of `this` String are upper case.
**/
function toUpperCase():String;
/**
Returns a String where all characters of `this` String are lower case.
**/
function toLowerCase():String;
/**
Returns the character at position `index` of `this` String.
If `index` is negative or exceeds `this.length`, the empty String `""`
is returned.
**/
function charAt(index:Int):String;
/**
Returns the character code at position `index` of `this` String.
If `index` is negative or exceeds `this.length`, `null` is returned.
To obtain the character code of a single character, `"x".code` can be
used instead to inline the character code at compile time. Note that
this only works on String literals of length 1.
**/
function charCodeAt(index:Int):Null<Int>;
/**
Returns the position of the leftmost occurrence of `str` within `this`
String.
If `startIndex` is given, the search is performed within the substring
of `this` String starting from `startIndex`.
If `startIndex` exceeds `this.length`, -1 is returned.
If `startIndex` is negative, the result is unspecifed.
Otherwise the search is performed within `this` String. In either case,
the returned position is relative to the beginning of `this` String.
If `str` cannot be found, -1 is returned.
**/
function indexOf(str:String, ?startIndex:Int):Int;
/**
Returns the position of the rightmost occurrence of `str` within `this`
String.
If `startIndex` is given, the search is performed within the substring
of `this` String from 0 to `startIndex + str.length`. Otherwise the search
is performed within `this` String. In either case, the returned position
is relative to the beginning of `this` String.
If `startIndex` is negative, the result is unspecifed.
If `str` cannot be found, -1 is returned.
**/
function lastIndexOf(str:String, ?startIndex:Int):Int;
/**
Splits `this` String at each occurrence of `delimiter`.
If `this` String is the empty String `""`, the result is not consistent
across targets and may either be `[]` (on Js, Cpp) or `[""]`.
If `delimiter` is the empty String `""`, `this` String is split into an
Array of `this.length` elements, where the elements correspond to the
characters of `this` String.
If `delimiter` is not found within `this` String, the result is an Array
with one element, which equals `this` String.
If `delimiter` is null, the result is unspecified.
Otherwise, `this` String is split into parts at each occurrence of
`delimiter`. If `this` String starts (or ends) with `delimiter`, the
result `Array` contains a leading (or trailing) empty String `""` element.
Two subsequent delimiters also result in an empty String `""` element.
**/
function split(delimiter:String):Array<String>;
/**
Returns `len` characters of `this` String, starting at position `pos`.
If `len` is omitted, all characters from position `pos` to the end of
`this` String are included.
If `pos` is negative, its value is calculated from the end of `this`
String by `this.length + pos`. If this yields a negative value, 0 is
used instead.
If the calculated position + `len` exceeds `this.length`, the characters
from that position to the end of `this` String are returned.
If `len` is negative, the result is unspecified.
**/
function substr(pos:Int, ?len:Int):String;
/**
Returns the part of `this` String from `startIndex` to but not including `endIndex`.
If `startIndex` or `endIndex` are negative, 0 is used instead.
If `startIndex` exceeds `endIndex`, they are swapped.
If the (possibly swapped) `endIndex` is omitted or exceeds
`this.length`, `this.length` is used instead.
If the (possibly swapped) `startIndex` exceeds `this.length`, the empty
String `""` is returned.
**/
function substring(startIndex:Int, ?endIndex:Int):String;
/**
Returns the String itself.
**/
function toString():String;
/**
Returns the String corresponding to the character code `code`.
If `code` is negative or has another invalid value, the result is
unspecified.
**/
@:pure static function fromCharCode(code:Int):String;
}