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/Crystal

class String

Overview

A String represents an immutable sequence of UTF-8 characters.

A String is typically created with a string literal, enclosing UTF-8 characters in double quotes:

"hello world"

A backslash can be used to denote some characters inside the string:

"\"" # double quote
"\\" # backslash
"\e" # escape
"\f" # form feed
"\n" # newline
"\r" # carriage return
"\t" # tab
"\v" # vertical tab

You can use a backslash followed by an u and four hexadecimal characters to denote a unicode codepoint written:

"\u0041" # == "A"

Or you can use curly braces and specify up to six hexadecimal numbers (0 to 10FFFF):

"\u{41}" # == "A"

A string can span multiple lines:

"hello
      world" # same as "hello\n      world"

Note that in the above example trailing and leading spaces, as well as newlines, end up in the resulting string. To avoid this, you can split a string into multiple lines by joining multiple literals with a backslash:

"hello " \
"world, " \
"no newlines" # same as "hello world, no newlines"

Alternatively, a backslash followed by a newline can be inserted inside the string literal:

"hello \
     world, \
     no newlines" # same as "hello world, no newlines"

In this case, leading whitespace is not included in the resulting string.

If you need to write a string that has many double quotes, parentheses, or similar characters, you can use alternative literals:

# Supports double quotes and nested parentheses
%(hello ("world")) # same as "hello (\"world\")"

# Supports double quotes and nested brackets
%[hello ["world"]] # same as "hello [\"world\"]"

# Supports double quotes and nested curlies
%{hello {"world"}} # same as "hello {\"world\"}"

# Supports double quotes and nested angles
%<hello <"world">> # same as "hello <\"world\">"

To create a String with embedded expressions, you can use string interpolation:

a = 1
b = 2
"sum = #{a + b}" # "sum = 3"

This ends up invoking Object#to_s(IO) on each expression enclosed by #{...}.

If you need to dynamically build a string, use String#build or IO::Memory.

Non UTF-8 valid strings

String might end up being conformed of bytes which are an invalid byte sequence according to UTF-8. This can happen if the string is created via one of the constructors that accept bytes, or when getting a string from String.build or IO::Memory. No exception will be raised, but invalid byte sequences, when asked as chars, will use the unicode replacement char (value 0xFFFD). For example:

# here 255 is not a valid byte value in the UTF-8 encoding
string = String.new(Bytes[255, 97])
string.valid_encoding? # => false

# The first char here is the unicode replacement char
string.chars # => ['�', 'a']

One can also create strings with specific byte value in them by using octal and hexadecimal escape sequences:

# Octal escape sequences
"\101" # # => "A"
"\12"  # # => "\n"
"\1"   # string with one character with code point 1
"\377" # string with one byte with value 255

# Hexadecimal escape sequences
"\x41" # # => "A"
"\xFF" # string with one byte with value 255

The reason for allowing strings that don't have a valid UTF-8 sequence is that the world is full of content that isn't properly encoded, and having a program raise an exception or stop because of this is not good. It's better if programs are more resilient, but show a replacement character when there's an error in incoming data.

Included Modules

Defined in:

big/big_decimal.cr
big/big_float.cr
big/big_int.cr
json/to_json.cr
string.cr
string/utf16.cr
yaml/to_yaml.cr

Constructors

Class Method Summary

Instance Method Summary

Instance methods inherited from module Comparable(String)

<, <=(other : T) <=, <=>(other : T) <=>, ==(other : T) ==, >(other : T) >, >=(other : T) >=, clamp(min, max)
clamp(range : Range) clamp

Instance methods inherited from class Reference

==(other : self)
==(other : JSON::Any)
==(other : YAML::Any)
==(other) ==
, dup dup, hash(hasher) hash, inspect(io : IO) : Nil inspect, object_id : UInt64 object_id, pretty_print(pp) : Nil pretty_print, same?(other : Reference)
same?(other : Nil) same?
, to_s(io : IO) : Nil to_s

Constructor methods inherited from class Reference

new new

Instance methods inherited from class Object

! : Bool !, !=(other) !=, !~(other) !~, ==(other) ==, ===(other : JSON::Any)
===(other : YAML::Any)
===(other) ===
, =~(other) =~, as(type : Class) as, as?(type : Class) as?, class class, dup dup, hash(hasher)
hash hash
, in?(*values : Object) : Bool
in?(collection) : Bool in?
, inspect : String
inspect(io : IO) : Nil inspect
, is_a?(type : Class) : Bool is_a?, itself itself, nil? : Bool nil?, not_nil! not_nil!, pretty_inspect(width = 79, newline = "\n", indent = 0) : String pretty_inspect, pretty_print(pp : PrettyPrint) : Nil pretty_print, responds_to?(name : Symbol) : Bool responds_to?, tap(&) tap, to_json(io : IO)
to_json to_json
, to_pretty_json(io : IO, indent : String = " ")
to_pretty_json(indent : String = " ") to_pretty_json
, to_s : String
to_s(io : IO) : Nil to_s
, to_yaml(io : IO)
to_yaml to_yaml
, try(&) try, unsafe_as(type : T.class) forall T unsafe_as

Class methods inherited from class Object

from_json(string_or_io, root : String)
from_json(string_or_io) from_json
, from_yaml(string_or_io : String | IO) from_yaml

Constructor Detail

def self.build(capacity = 64, &) : selfSource

Builds a String by creating a String::Builder with the given initial capacity, yielding it to the block and finally getting a String out of it. The String::Builder automatically resizes as needed.

str = String.build do |str|
  str << "hello "
  str << 1
end
str # => "hello 1"

def self.from_utf16(slice : Slice(UInt16)) : StringSource

Decodes the given slice UTF-16 sequence into a String.

Invalid values are encoded using the unicode replacement char with codepoint 0xfffd.

slice = Slice[104_u16, 105_u16, 32_u16, 55296_u16, 56485_u16]
String.from_utf16(slice) # => "hi 𐂥"

def self.new(pull : JSON::PullParser)Source

def self.new(capacity : Int, &)Source

Creates a new String by allocating a buffer (Pointer(UInt8)) with the given capacity, then yielding that buffer. The block must return a tuple with the bytesize and size (UTF-8 codepoints count) of the String. If the returned size is zero, the UTF-8 codepoints count will be lazily computed.

The bytesize returned by the block must be less than or equal to the capacity given to this String, otherwise ArgumentError is raised.

If you need to build a String where the maximum capacity is unknown, use String#build.

str = String.new(4) do |buffer|
  buffer[0] = 'a'.ord.to_u8
  buffer[1] = 'b'.ord.to_u8
  {2, 2}
end
str # => "ab"

def self.new(slice : Bytes)Source

Creates a String from the given slice. Bytes will be copied from the slice.

This method is always safe to call, and the resulting string will have the contents and size of the slice.

slice = Slice.new(4) { |i| ('a'.ord + i).to_u8 }
String.new(slice) # => "abcd"

def self.new(chars : Pointer(UInt8))Source

Creates a String from a pointer. Bytes will be copied from the pointer.

This method is unsafe: the pointer must point to data that eventually contains a zero byte that indicates the ends of the string. Otherwise, the result of this method is undefined and might cause a segmentation fault.

This method is typically used in C bindings, where you get a char* from a library and the library guarantees that this pointer eventually has an ending zero byte.

ptr = Pointer.malloc(5) { |i| i == 4 ? 0_u8 : ('a'.ord + i).to_u8 }
String.new(ptr) # => "abcd"

def self.new(ctx : YAML::ParseContext, node : YAML::Nodes::Node)Source

def self.new(chars : Pointer(UInt8), bytesize, size = 0)Source

Creates a new String from a pointer, indicating its bytesize count and, optionally, the UTF-8 codepoints count (size). Bytes will be copied from the pointer.

If the given size is zero, the amount of UTF-8 codepoints will be lazily computed when needed.

ptr = Pointer.malloc(4) { |i| ('a'.ord + i).to_u8 }
String.new(ptr, 2) # => "ab"

def self.new(bytes : Bytes, encoding : String, invalid : Symbol? = nil) : StringSource

Creates a new String from the given bytes, which are encoded in the given encoding.

The invalid argument can be:

  • nil: an exception is raised on invalid byte sequences
  • :skip: invalid byte sequences are ignored
slice = Slice.new(2, 0_u8)
slice[0] = 186_u8
slice[1] = 195_u8
String.new(slice, "GB2312") # => "好"

Class Method Detail

def self.from_json_object_key?(key : String)Source

def self.from_utf16(pointer : Pointer(UInt16)) : Tuple(String, Pointer(UInt16))Source

Decodes the given slice UTF-16 sequence into a String and returns the pointer after reading. The string ends when a zero value is found.

slice = Slice[104_u16, 105_u16, 0_u16, 55296_u16, 56485_u16, 0_u16]
String.from_utf16(slice) # => "hi\0000𐂥"
pointer = slice.to_unsafe
string, pointer = String.from_utf16(pointer) # => "hi"
string, pointer = String.from_utf16(pointer) # => "𐂥"

Invalid values are encoded using the unicode replacement char with codepoint 0xfffd.

def self.interpolation(*values : *T) forall TSource

Implementation of string interpolation of multiple, possibly non-string values.

For example, this code will end up invoking this method:

value1 = "hello"
value2 = 123
"#{value1} #{value2}!" # same as String.interpolation(value1, " ", value2, "!")

In this case the implementation will call String.build with the given values.

NOTE there should never be a need to call this method instead of using string interpolation.

def self.interpolation(*values : String)Source

Implementation of string interpolation of multiple string values.

For example, this code will end up invoking this method:

value1 = "hello"
value2 = "world"
"#{value1} #{value2}!" # same as String.interpolation(value1, " ", value2, "!")

In this case the implementation can pre-compute the needed string bytesize and so it's a bit more performant than interpolating non-string values.

NOTE there should never be a need to call this method instead of using string interpolation.

def self.interpolation(value)Source

Implementation of string interpolation of a single non-string value.

For example, this code will end up invoking this method:

value = 123
"#{value}" # same as String.interpolation(value)

In this case the implementation just returns the result of calling value.to_s.

NOTE there should never be a need to call this method instead of using string interpolation.

def self.interpolation(value : String)Source

Implementation of string interpolation of a single string.

For example, this code will end up invoking this method:

value = "hello"
"#{value}" # same as String.interpolation(value)

In this case the implementation just returns the same string.

NOTE there should never be a need to call this method instead of using string interpolation.

def self.interpolation(char : Char, value : String)Source

Implementation of string interpolation of a char and a string.

For example, this code will end up invoking this method:

char = '!'
"#{char}hello" # same as String.interpolation(char, "hello")

In this case the implementation just does char + value.

NOTE there should never be a need to call this method instead of using string interpolation.

def self.interpolation(value : String, char : Char)Source

Implementation of string interpolation of a string and a char.

For example, this code will end up invoking this method:

char = '!'
"hello#{char}" # same as String.interpolation("hello", char)

In this case the implementation just does value + char.

NOTE there should never be a need to call this method instead of using string interpolation.

Instance Method Detail

def %(other)Source

Interpolates other into the string using Kernel#sprintf.

"I have %d apples" % 5                                             # => "I have 5 apples"
"%s, %s, %s, D" % ['A', 'B', 'C']                                  # => "A, B, C, D"
"sum: %{one} + %{two} = %{three}" % {one: 1, two: 2, three: 1 + 2} # => "sum: 1 + 2 = 3"
"I have %<apples>s apples" % {apples: 4}                           # => "I have 4 apples"

def *(times : Int)Source

Makes a new String by adding str to itself times times.

"Developers! " * 4
# => "Developers! Developers! Developers! Developers! "

def +(other : self)Source

Concatenates str and other.

"abc" + "def" # => "abcdef"
"abc" + 'd'   # => "abcd"

def +(char : Char)Source

Concatenates str and other.

"abc" + "def" # => "abcdef"
"abc" + 'd'   # => "abcd"

def <=>(other : self)Source

The comparison operator.

Compares this string with other, returning -1, 0 or 1 depending on whether this string is less, equal or greater than other.

Comparison is done byte-per-byte: if a byte is less then the other corresponding byte, -1 is returned and so on.

If the strings are of different lengths, and the strings are equal when compared up to the shortest length, then the longer string is considered greater than the shorter one.

"abcdef" <=> "abcde"   # => 1
"abcdef" <=> "abcdef"  # => 0
"abcdef" <=> "abcdefg" # => -1
"abcdef" <=> "ABCDEF"  # => 1

def ==(other : self) : BoolSource

Returns true if this string is equal to `other. Comparison is done byte-per-byte: if a byte is different from the corresponding byte, false is returned and so on.

See #compare for more comparison options.

def =~(regex : Regex)Source

Tests whether str matches regex. If successful, it returns the position of the first match. If unsuccessful, it returns nil.

If the argument isn't a Regex, it returns nil.

"Haystack" =~ /ay/ # => 1
"Haystack" =~ /z/  # => nil

"Haystack" =~ 45 # => nil

def =~(other)Source

Tests whether str matches regex. If successful, it returns the position of the first match. If unsuccessful, it returns nil.

If the argument isn't a Regex, it returns nil.

"Haystack" =~ /ay/ # => 1
"Haystack" =~ /z/  # => nil

"Haystack" =~ 45 # => nil

def [](start : Int, count : Int)Source

Returns a substring starting from the start character of size count.

start can can be negative to start counting from the end of the string.

Raises IndexError if the start index is out of bounds.

Raises ArgumentError if count is negative.

def [](str : String | Char)Source

def [](range : Range)Source

Returns a substring by using a Range's begin and end as character indices. Indices can be negative to start counting from the end of the string.

Raises IndexError if the range's start is out of bounds.

"hello"[0..2]   # => "hel"
"hello"[0...2]  # => "he"
"hello"[1..-1]  # => "ello"
"hello"[1...-1] # => "ell"
"hello"[6..7]   # raises IndexError

def [](index : Int)Source

Returns the Char at the given index.

Negative indices can be used to start counting from the end of the string.

Raises IndexError if the index is out of bounds.

"hello"[0]  # => 'h'
"hello"[1]  # => 'e'
"hello"[-1] # => 'o'
"hello"[-2] # => 'l'
"hello"[5]  # raises IndexError

def [](regex : Regex, group)Source

def [](regex : Regex)Source

def []?(regex : Regex)Source

def []?(str : String | Char)Source

def []?(start : Int, count : Int)Source

Like #[Int, Int] but returns nil if the start index is out of bounds.

def []?(regex : Regex, group)Source

def []?(index : Int)Source

def []?(range : Range)Source

Like #[Range], but returns nil if the range's start is out of bounds.

"hello"[6..7]? # => nil
"hello"[6..]?  # => nil

def ascii_only?Source

Returns true if this String is comprised in its entirety by ASCII characters.

"hello".ascii_only? # => true
"你好".ascii_only?    # => false

def blank?Source

Returns true if this string consists exclusively of unicode whitespace.

"".blank?        # => true
"   ".blank?     # => true
"   a   ".blank? # => false

def byte_at(index) : UInt8Source

Returns the byte at the given index.

Raises IndexError if the index is out of bounds.

"¥hello".byte_at(0)  # => 194
"¥hello".byte_at(1)  # => 165
"¥hello".byte_at(2)  # => 104
"¥hello".byte_at(-1) # => 111
"¥hello".byte_at(6)  # => 111
"¥hello".byte_at(7)  # raises IndexError

def byte_at(index, &)Source

Returns the byte at the given index, or yields if out of bounds.

"¥hello".byte_at(6) { "OUT OF BOUNDS" } # => 111
"¥hello".byte_at(7) { "OUT OF BOUNDS" } # => "OUT OF BOUNDS"

def byte_at?(index) : UInt8?Source

Returns the byte at the given index, or nil if out of bounds.

"¥hello".byte_at?(0)  # => 194
"¥hello".byte_at?(1)  # => 165
"¥hello".byte_at?(2)  # => 104
"¥hello".byte_at?(-1) # => 111
"¥hello".byte_at?(6)  # => 111
"¥hello".byte_at?(7)  # => nil

def byte_index(byte : Int, offset = 0) : Int32?Source

Returns the index of the first ocurrence of byte in the string, or nil if not present. If offset is present, it defines the position to start the search.

Negative offset can be used to start the search from the end of the string.

"Hello, World".byte_index(0x6f)             # => 4
"Hello, World".byte_index(0x5a)             # => nil
"Hello, World".byte_index(0x6f, 5)          # => 8
"💣".byte_index(0xA3)                        # => 3
"Dizzy Miss Lizzy".byte_index('z'.ord)      # => 2
"Dizzy Miss Lizzy".byte_index('z'.ord, 3)   # => 3
"Dizzy Miss Lizzy".byte_index('z'.ord, -4)  # => 13
"Dizzy Miss Lizzy".byte_index('z'.ord, -17) # => nil

def byte_index(search : String, offset = 0) : Int32?Source

Returns the byte index of search in the string, or nil if the string is not present. If offset is present, it defines the position to start the search.

Negative offset can be used to start the search from the end of the string.

"¥hello".byte_index("hello")              # => 2
"hello".byte_index("world")               # => nil
"Dizzy Miss Lizzy".byte_index("izzy")     # => 1
"Dizzy Miss Lizzy".byte_index("izzy", 2)  # => 12
"Dizzy Miss Lizzy".byte_index("izzy", -4) # => 12
"Dizzy Miss Lizzy".byte_index("izzy", -3) # => nil

def byte_index_to_char_index(index)Source

Returns the char index of a byte index, or nil if out of bounds.

It is valid to pass #bytesize to index, and in this case the answer will be the size of this string.

def byte_slice(start : Int, count : Int) : StringSource

Returns a new string built from count bytes starting at start byte.

start can can be negative to start counting from the end of the string. If count is bigger than the number of bytes from start to #bytesize, only remaining bytes are returned.

This method should be avoided, unless the string is proven to be ASCII-only (for example #ascii_only?), or the byte positions are known to be at character boundaries. Otherwise, multi-byte characters may be split, leading to an invalid UTF-8 encoding.

Raises IndexError if the start index is out of bounds.

Raises ArgumentError if count is negative.

"hello".byte_slice(0, 2)   # => "he"
"hello".byte_slice(0, 100) # => "hello"
"hello".byte_slice(-2, 3)  # => "he"
"hello".byte_slice(-2, 5)  # => "he"
"hello".byte_slice(-2, 5)  # => "he"
"¥hello".byte_slice(0, 2)  # => "¥"
"¥hello".byte_slice(2, 2)  # => "he"
"¥hello".byte_slice(0, 1)  # => "�" (invalid UTF-8 character)
"¥hello".byte_slice(1, 1)  # => "�" (invalid UTF-8 character)
"¥hello".byte_slice(1, 2)  # => "�h" (invalid UTF-8 character)
"hello".byte_slice(6, 2)   # raises IndexError
"hello".byte_slice(-6, 2)  # raises IndexError
"hello".byte_slice(0, -2)  # raises ArgumentError

def byte_slice(start : Int) : StringSource

Returns a substring starting from the start byte.

start can can be negative to start counting from the end of the string.

This method should be avoided, unless the string is proven to be ASCII-only (for example #ascii_only?), or the byte positions are known to be at character boundaries. Otherwise, multi-byte characters may be split, leading to an invalid UTF-8 encoding.

Raises IndexError if start index is out of bounds.

"hello".byte_slice(0)  # => "hello"
"hello".byte_slice(2)  # => "llo"
"hello".byte_slice(-2) # => "lo"
"¥hello".byte_slice(2) # => "hello"
"¥hello".byte_slice(1) # => "�hello" (invalid UTF-8 character)
"hello".byte_slice(6)  # raises IndexError
"hello".byte_slice(-6) # raises IndexError

def byte_slice?(start : Int, count : Int) : String?Source

Like #byte_slice(Int, Int) but returns Nil if the start index is out of bounds.

Raises ArgumentError if count is negative.

"hello".byte_slice?(0, 2)   # => "he"
"hello".byte_slice?(0, 100) # => "hello"
"hello".byte_slice?(6, 2)   # => nil
"hello".byte_slice?(-6, 2)  # => nil
"hello".byte_slice?(0, -2)  # raises ArgumentError

def bytesSource

Returns this string's bytes as an Array(UInt8).

"hello".bytes # => [104, 101, 108, 108, 111]
"你好".bytes    # => [228, 189, 160, 229, 165, 189]

def bytesize : Int32Source

Returns the number of bytes in this string.

"hello".bytesize # => 5
"你好".bytesize    # => 6

def camelcase(io : IO, options : Unicode::CaseOptions = Unicode::CaseOptions::None, *, lower : Bool = false) : NilSource

Writes an camelcased version of self to the given io.

If lower is true, lower camelcase will be written (the first letter is downcased).

io = IO::Memory.new
"eiffel_tower".camelcase io
io.to_s # => "EiffelTower"

def camelcase(options : Unicode::CaseOptions = Unicode::CaseOptions::None, *, lower : Bool = false) : StringSource

Converts underscores to camelcase boundaries.

If lower is true, lower camelcase will be returned (the first letter is downcased).

"eiffel_tower".camelcase                                            # => "EiffelTower"
"empire_state_building".camelcase(lower: true)                      # => "empireStateBuilding"
"isolated_integer".camelcase(options: Unicode::CaseOptions::Turkic) # => "İsolatedİnteger"

def capitalize(io : IO, options : Unicode::CaseOptions = :none) : NilSource

Writes a capitalized version of self to the given io.

io = IO::Memory.new
"hEllO".capitalize io
io.to_s # => Hello

def capitalize(options : Unicode::CaseOptions = :none) : StringSource

Returns a new String with the first letter converted to uppercase and every subsequent letter converted to lowercase.

"hEllO".capitalize # => "Hello"

def center(io : IO, len : Int, char : Char = ' ') : NilSource

Adds instances of char to left and right of the string until it is at least size of len, then appends the result to the given IO.

io = IO::Memory.new
"Purple".center(9, '-', io)
io.to_s # => "-Purple--"

def center(len : Int, io : IO) : NilSource

Adds spaces to left and right of the string until it is at least size of len, then appends the result to the given IO.

io = IO::Memory.new
"Purple".center(9, io)
io.to_s # => " Purple  "

DEPRECATED Use #center(io :IO, len : Int, char : Char = ' ') instead

def center(len : Int, char : Char = ' ')Source

Adds instances of char to left and right of the string until it is at least size of len.

"Purple".center(8)      # => " Purple "
"Purple".center(8, '-') # => "-Purple-"
"Purple".center(9, '-') # => "-Purple--"
"Aubergine".center(8)   # => "Aubergine"

def center(len : Int, char : Char, io : IO) : NilSource

Adds instances of char to left ond right of the string until it is at least size of len, then appends the result to the given IO.

io = IO::Memory.new
"Purple".center(9, '-', io)
io.to_s # => "-Purple--"

DEPRECATED Use #center(io :IO, len : Int, char : Char = ' ') instead

def char_at(index : Int) : CharSource

Returns the Char at the given index.

Negative indices can be used to start counting from the end of the string.

Raises IndexError if the index is out of bounds.

"hello".char_at(0)  # => 'h'
"hello".char_at(1)  # => 'e'
"hello".char_at(-1) # => 'o'
"hello".char_at(-2) # => 'l'
"hello".char_at(5)  # raises IndexError

def char_at(index : Int, &)Source

Returns the Char at the given index, or result of running the given block if out of bounds.

Negative indices can be used to start counting from the end of the string.

"hello".char_at(4) { 'x' }  # => 'o'
"hello".char_at(5) { 'x' }  # => 'x'
"hello".char_at(-1) { 'x' } # => 'o'
"hello".char_at(-5) { 'x' } # => 'h'
"hello".char_at(-6) { 'x' } # => 'x'

def char_index_to_byte_index(index)Source

Returns the byte index of a char index, or nil if out of bounds.

It is valid to pass #size to index, and in this case the answer will be the bytesize of this string.

"hello".char_index_to_byte_index(1) # => 1
"hello".char_index_to_byte_index(5) # => 5
"こんにちは".char_index_to_byte_index(1) # => 3
"こんにちは".char_index_to_byte_index(5) # => 15

def charsSource

Returns an Array of all characters in the string.

"ab☃".chars # => ['a', 'b', '☃']

def check_no_null_byte(name = nil)Source

Raises an ArgumentError if self has null bytes. Returns self otherwise.

This method should sometimes be called before passing a String to a C function.

def chompSource

Returns a new String with the last carriage return removed (that is, it will remove \n, \r, and \r\n).

"string\r\n".chomp # => "string"
"string\n\r".chomp # => "string\n"
"string\n".chomp   # => "string"
"string".chomp     # => "string"
"x".chomp.chomp    # => "x"

def chomp(suffix : String)Source

Returns a new String with suffix removed from the end of the string. If suffix is "\n" then "\r\n" is also removed if the string ends with it.

"hello".chomp("llo") # => "he"
"hello".chomp("ol")  # => "hello"

def chomp(suffix : Char)Source

Returns a new String with suffix removed from the end of the string. If suffix is '\n' then "\r\n" is also removed if the string ends with it.

"hello".chomp('o') # => "hell"
"hello".chomp('a') # => "hello"

def clone : StringSource

Returns self.

def codepoint_at(index) : Int32Source

Returns the codepoint of the character at the given index.

Negative indices can be used to start counting from the end of the string.

Raises IndexError if the index is out of bounds.

See also: Char#ord.

"hello".codepoint_at(0)  # => 104
"hello".codepoint_at(-1) # => 111
"hello".codepoint_at(5)  # raises IndexError

def codepointsSource

Returns an Array of the codepoints that make the string.

"ab☃".codepoints # => [97, 98, 9731]

See also: Char#ord.

def compare(other : String, case_insensitive = false, options = Unicode::CaseOptions::None)Source

Compares this string with other, returning -1, 0 or 1 depending on whether this string is less, equal or greater than other, optionally in a case_insensitive manner.

"abcdef".compare("abcde")   # => 1
"abcdef".compare("abcdef")  # => 0
"abcdef".compare("abcdefg") # => -1
"abcdef".compare("ABCDEF")  # => 1

"abcdef".compare("ABCDEF", case_insensitive: true) # => 0
"abcdef".compare("ABCDEG", case_insensitive: true) # => -1

"heIIo".compare("heııo", case_insensitive: true, options: Unicode::CaseOptions::Turkic) # => 0

def count(*sets)Source

Sets should be a list of strings following the rules described at Char#in_set?. Returns the number of characters in this string that match the given set.

def count(&)Source

Yields each char in this string to the block, returns the number of times the block returned a truthy value.

"aabbcc".count &.in?('a', 'b') # => 4

def count(other : Char)Source

Counts the occurrences of other char in this string.

"aabbcc".count('a') # => 2

def delete(&)Source

Yields each char in this string to the block. Returns a new String with all characters for which the block returned a truthy value removed.

"aabbcc".delete &.in?('a', 'b') # => "cc"

def delete(char : Char)Source

Returns a new String with all occurrences of char removed.

"aabbcc".delete('b') # => "aacc"

def delete(*sets)Source

Sets should be a list of strings following the rules described at Char#in_set?. Returns a new String with all characters that match the given set removed.

"aabbccdd".delete("a-c") # => "dd"

def downcase(options : Unicode::CaseOptions = :none) : StringSource

Returns a new String with each uppercase letter replaced with its lowercase counterpart.

"hEllO".downcase # => "hello"

def downcase(io : IO, options : Unicode::CaseOptions = :none) : NilSource

Writes a downcased version of self to the given io.

io = IO::Memory.new
"hEllO".downcase io
io.to_s # => hello

def dump : StringSource

Returns a representation of self using character escapes for special characters and and non-ascii characters (unicode codepoints > 128), wrapped in quotes.

"\u{1f48e} - à la carte\n".dump # => %("\\u{1F48E} - \\u00E0 la carte\\n")

def dump(io : IO) : NilSource

Appends self to the given IO object using character escapes for special characters and and non-ascii characters (unicode codepoints > 128), wrapped in quotes.

def dump_unquoted : StringSource

Returns a representation of self using character escapes for special characters and and non-ascii characters (unicode codepoints > 128), but not wrapped in quotes.

"\u{1f48e} - à la carte\n".dump_unquoted # => %(\\u{1F48E} - \\u00E0 la carte\\n)

def dump_unquoted(io : IO) : NilSource

Appends self to the given IO object using character escapes for special characters and and non-ascii characters (unicode codepoints > 128), but not wrapped in quotes.

def dup : StringSource

Returns self.

def each_byte(&)Source

Yields each byte in the string to the block.

array = [] of UInt8
"ab☃".each_byte do |byte|
  array << byte
end
array # => [97, 98, 226, 152, 131]

def each_byteSource

Returns an Iterator over each byte in the string.

bytes = "ab☃".each_byte
bytes.next # => 97
bytes.next # => 98
bytes.next # => 226
bytes.next # => 152
bytes.next # => 131

def each_charSource

Returns an Iterator over each character in the string.

chars = "ab☃".each_char
chars.next # => 'a'
chars.next # => 'b'
chars.next # => '☃'

def each_char(&) : NilSource

Yields each character in the string to the block.

array = [] of Char
"ab☃".each_char do |char|
  array << char
end
array # => ['a', 'b', '☃']

def each_char_with_index(offset = 0, &)Source

Yields each character and its index in the string to the block.

array = [] of Tuple(Char, Int32)
"ab☃".each_char_with_index do |char, index|
  array << {char, index}
end
array # => [{'a', 0}, {'b', 1}, {'☃', 2}]

Accepts an optional offset parameter, which tells it to start counting from there.

def each_codepoint(&)Source

Yields each codepoint to the block.

array = [] of Int32
"ab☃".each_codepoint do |codepoint|
  array << codepoint
end
array # => [97, 98, 9731]

See also: Char#ord.

def each_codepointSource

Returns an Iterator for each codepoint.

codepoints = "ab☃".each_codepoint
codepoints.next # => 97
codepoints.next # => 98
codepoints.next # => 9731

See also: Char#ord.

def each_line(chomp = true, &block : String -> ) : NilSource

Splits the string after each newline and yields each line to a block.

haiku = "the first cold shower
even the monkey seems to want
a little coat of straw"
haiku.each_line do |stanza|
  puts stanza
end
# output:
# the first cold shower
# even the monkey seems to want
# a little coat of straw

def each_line(chomp = true)Source

Returns an Iterator which yields each line of this string (see String#each_line).

def empty?Source

Returns true if this is the empty string, "".

def encode(encoding : String, invalid : Symbol? = nil) : BytesSource

Returns a slice of bytes containing this string encoded in the given encoding.

The invalid argument can be:

  • nil: an exception is raised on invalid byte sequences
  • :skip: invalid byte sequences are ignored
"好".encode("GB2312") # => Bytes[186, 195]
"好".bytes            # => [229, 165, 189]

def ends_with?(str : String) : BoolSource

Returns true if this string ends with the given str.

"hello".ends_with?("o")  # => true
"hello".ends_with?("lo") # => true
"hello".ends_with?("ll") # => false

def ends_with?(re : Regex) : BoolSource

Returns true if the regular expression re matches at the end of this string.

"22hello".ends_with?(/[0-9]/) # => false
"22hello".ends_with?(/[a-z]/) # => true
"22h".ends_with?(/[a-z]/)     # => true
"22h".ends_with?(/[A-Z]/)     # => false
"22h".ends_with?(/[a-z]{2}/)  # => false
"22hh".ends_with?(/[a-z]{2}/) # => true

def ends_with?(char : Char) : BoolSource

Returns true if this string ends with the given char.

"hello".ends_with?('o') # => true
"hello".ends_with?('l') # => false

def gsub(pattern : Regex, hash : Hash(String, _) | NamedTuple)Source

Returns a String where all occurrences of the given pattern are replaced with a hash of replacements. If the hash contains the matched pattern, the corresponding value is used as a replacement. Otherwise the match is not included in the returned string.

# "he" and "l" are matched and replaced,
# but "o" is not and so is not included
"hello".gsub(/(he|l|o)/, {"he": "ha", "l": "la"}) # => "halala"

def gsub(string : String, &)Source

Returns a String where all occurrences of the given string are replaced with the block's value.

"hello yellow".gsub("ll") { "dd" } # => "heddo yeddow"

def gsub(&block : Char -> _)Source

Returns a String where each character yielded to the given block is replaced by the block's return value.

"hello".gsub { |char| char + 1 } # => "ifmmp"
"hello".gsub { "hi" }            # => "hihihihihi"

def gsub(char : Char, replacement)Source

Returns a String where all occurrences of the given char are replaced with the given replacement.

"hello".gsub('l', "lo")      # => "heloloo"
"hello world".gsub('o', 'a') # => "hella warld"

def gsub(pattern : Regex, replacement, backreferences = true)Source

Returns a String where all occurrences of the given pattern are replaced with the given replacement.

"hello".gsub(/[aeiou]/, '*') # => "h*ll*"

Within replacement, the special match variable $~ will not refer to the current match.

If backreferences is true (the default value), replacement can include backreferences:

"hello".gsub(/[aeiou]/, "(\\0)") # => "h(e)ll(o)"

When substitution is performed, any backreferences found in replacement will be replaced with the contents of the corresponding capture group in pattern. Backreferences to capture groups that were not present in pattern or that did not match will be skipped. See Regex for information about capture groups.

Backreferences are expressed in the form "\\d", where d is a group number, or "\\k" where name is the name of a named capture group. A sequence of literal characters resembling a backreference can be expressed by placing "\\" before the sequence.

"foo".gsub(/o/, "x\\0x")                  # => "fxoxxox"
"foofoo".gsub(/(?<bar>oo)/, "|\\k<bar>|") # => "f|oo|f|oo|"
"foo".gsub(/o/, "\\\\0")                  # => "f\\0\\0"

Raises ArgumentError if an incomplete named back-reference is present in replacement.

Raises IndexError if a named group referenced in replacement is not present in pattern.

def gsub(string : String, replacement)Source

Returns a String where all occurrences of the given string are replaced with the given replacement.

"hello yellow".gsub("ll", "dd") # => "heddo yeddow"

def gsub(hash : Hash(Char, _))Source

Returns a String where all chars in the given hash are replaced by the corresponding hash values.

"hello".gsub({'e' => 'a', 'l' => 'd'}) # => "haddo"

def gsub(tuple : NamedTuple)Source

Returns a String where all chars in the given named tuple are replaced by the corresponding tuple values.

"hello".gsub({e: 'a', l: 'd'}) # => "haddo"

def gsub(pattern : Regex, &)Source

Returns a String where all occurrences of the given pattern are replaced by the block value's value.

"hello".gsub(/./) { |s| s[0].ord.to_s + ' ' } # => "104 101 108 108 111 "

def has_back_references?Source

This returns true if this string has '\\' in it. It might not be a back reference, but '\\' is probably used for back references, so this check is faster than parsing the whole thing.

def hash(hasher)Source

def hexbytes : BytesSource

Interprets this string as containing a sequence of hexadecimal values and decodes it as a slice of bytes. Two consecutive bytes in the string represent a byte in the returned slice.

Raises ArgumentError if this string does not denote an hexstring.

"0102031aff".hexbytes  # => Bytes[1, 2, 3, 26, 255]
"1".hexbytes           # raises ArgumentError
"hello world".hexbytes # raises ArgumentError

def hexbytes? : Bytes?Source

Interprets this string as containing a sequence of hexadecimal values and decodes it as a slice of bytes. Two consecutive bytes in the string represent a byte in the returned slice.

Returns nil if this string does not denote an hexstring.

"0102031aff".hexbytes?  # => Bytes[1, 2, 3, 26, 255]
"1".hexbytes?           # => nil
"hello world".hexbytes? # => nil

def includes?(search : Char | String)Source

Returns true if the string contains search.

"Team".includes?('i')            # => false
"Dysfunctional".includes?("fun") # => true

def index(search : String, offset = 0)Source

Returns the index of the first occurrence of search in the string, or nil if not present. If offset is present, it defines the position to start the search.

"Hello, World".index('o')    # => 4
"Hello, World".index('Z')    # => nil
"Hello, World".index("o", 5) # => 8
"Hello, World".index("H", 2) # => nil
"Hello, World".index(/[ ]+/) # => 6
"Hello, World".index(/\d+/)  # => nil

def index(search : Regex, offset = 0)Source

Returns the index of the first occurrence of search in the string, or nil if not present. If offset is present, it defines the position to start the search.

"Hello, World".index('o')    # => 4
"Hello, World".index('Z')    # => nil
"Hello, World".index("o", 5) # => 8
"Hello, World".index("H", 2) # => nil
"Hello, World".index(/[ ]+/) # => 6
"Hello, World".index(/\d+/)  # => nil

def index(search : Char, offset = 0)Source

Returns the index of the first occurrence of search in the string, or nil if not present. If offset is present, it defines the position to start the search.

"Hello, World".index('o')    # => 4
"Hello, World".index('Z')    # => nil
"Hello, World".index("o", 5) # => 8
"Hello, World".index("H", 2) # => nil
"Hello, World".index(/[ ]+/) # => 6
"Hello, World".index(/\d+/)  # => nil

def insert(index : Int, other : String)Source

Returns a new String that results of inserting other in self at index. Negative indices count from the end of the string, and insert after the given index.

Raises IndexError if the index is out of bounds.

"abcd".insert(0, "FOO")  # => "FOOabcd"
"abcd".insert(3, "FOO")  # => "abcFOOd"
"abcd".insert(4, "FOO")  # => "abcdFOO"
"abcd".insert(-3, "FOO") # => "abFOOcd"
"abcd".insert(-1, "FOO") # => "abcdFOO"

"abcd".insert(5, "FOO")  # raises IndexError
"abcd".insert(-6, "FOO") # raises IndexError

def insert(index : Int, other : Char)Source

Returns a new String that results of inserting other in self at index. Negative indices count from the end of the string, and insert after the given index.

Raises IndexError if the index is out of bounds.

"abcd".insert(0, 'X')  # => "Xabcd"
"abcd".insert(3, 'X')  # => "abcXd"
"abcd".insert(4, 'X')  # => "abcdX"
"abcd".insert(-3, 'X') # => "abXcd"
"abcd".insert(-1, 'X') # => "abcdX"

"abcd".insert(5, 'X')  # raises IndexError
"abcd".insert(-6, 'X') # raises IndexError

def inspect(io : IO) : NilSource

Appends self to the given IO object using character escapes for special characters and wrapped in double quotes.

def inspect : StringSource

Returns a representation of self using character escapes for special characters and wrapped in quotes.

"\u{1f48e} - à la carte\n".inspect # => %("\u{1F48E} - à la carte\\n")

def inspect_unquoted : StringSource

Returns a representation of self using character escapes for special characters but not wrapped in quotes.

"\u{1f48e} - à la carte\n".inspect_unquoted # => %(\u{1F48E} - à la carte\\n)

def inspect_unquoted(io : IO) : NilSource

Appends self to the given IO object using character escapes for special characters but not wrapped in quotes.

def lchop : StringSource

Returns a new String with the first char removed from it. Applying lchop to an empty string returns an empty string.

"hello".lchop # => "ello"
"".lchop      # => ""

def lchop(prefix : Char | String) : StringSource

Returns a new String with prefix removed from the beginning of the string.

"hello".lchop('h')   # => "ello"
"hello".lchop('g')   # => "hello"
"hello".lchop("hel") # => "lo"
"hello".lchop("eh")  # => "hello"

def lchop?(prefix : Char | String) : String?Source

Returns a new String with prefix removed from the beginning of the string if possible, else returns nil.

"hello".lchop?('h')   # => "ello"
"hello".lchop?('g')   # => nil
"hello".lchop?("hel") # => "lo"
"hello".lchop?("eh")  # => nil

def lchop? : String?Source

Returns a new String with the first char removed from it if possible, else returns nil.

"hello".lchop? # => "ello"
"".lchop?      # => nil

def lines(chomp = true)Source

def ljust(io : IO, len : Int, char : Char = ' ') : NilSource

Adds instances of char to right of the string until it is at least size of len, and then appends the result to the given IO.

io = IO::Memory.new
"Purple".ljust(io, 8, '-')
io.to_s # => "Purple--"

def ljust(len : Int, io : IO) : NilSource

Adds spaces to right of the string until it is at least size of len, and then appends the result to the given IO.

io = IO::Memory.new
"Purple".ljust(8, io)
io.to_s # => "Purple  "

DEPRECATED Use #ljust(io :IO, len : Int, char : Char = ' ') instead

def ljust(len : Int, char : Char = ' ')Source

Adds instances of char to right of the string until it is at least size of len.

"Purple".ljust(8)      # => "Purple  "
"Purple".ljust(8, '-') # => "Purple--"
"Aubergine".ljust(8)   # => "Aubergine"

def ljust(len : Int, char : Char, io : IO) : NilSource

Adds instances of char to right of the string until it is at least size of len, and then appends the result to the given IO.

io = IO::Memory.new
"Purple".ljust(8, '-', io)
io.to_s # => "Purple--"

DEPRECATED Use #ljust(io :IO, len : Int, char : Char = ' ') instead

def lstrip(char : Char)Source

Returns a new string with leading occurrences of char removed.

"aaabcdaaa".lstrip('a') # => "bcdaaa"

def lstrip(chars : String)Source

Returns a new string where leading occurrences of any char in chars are removed. The chars argument is not a suffix; rather; all combinations of its values are stripped.

"bcadefcba".lstrip("abc") # => "defcba"

def lstrip(&block : Char -> _)Source

Returns a new string where leading characters for which the block returns a truthy value are removed.

"bcadefcba".lstrip { |c| 'a' <= c <= 'c' } # => "defcba"

def lstripSource

Returns a new String with leading whitespace removed.

"    hello    ".lstrip # => "hello    "
"\tgoodbye\r\n".lstrip # => "goodbye\r\n"

def match(regex : Regex, pos = 0) : Regex::MatchData?Source

Finds match of regex, starting at pos. It also updates $~ with the result.

"foo".match(/foo/) # => Regex::MatchData("foo")
$~                 # => Regex::MatchData("foo")

"foo".match(/bar/) # => nil
$~                 # raises Exception

def matches?(regex : Regex, pos = 0) : BoolSource

Finds match of regex like #match, but it returns Bool value. It neither returns MatchData nor assigns it to the $~ variable.

"foo".matches?(/bar/) # => false
"foo".matches?(/foo/) # => true

# `$~` is not set even if last match succeeds.
$~ # raises Exception

def partition(search : Char | String) : Tuple(String, String, String)Source

Searches separator or pattern (Regex) in the string, and returns a Tuple with the part before it, the match, and the part after it. If it is not found, returns str followed by two empty strings.

"hello".partition("l") # => {"he", "l", "lo"}
"hello".partition("x") # => {"hello", "", ""}

def partition(search : Regex) : Tuple(String, String, String)Source

Searches separator or pattern (Regex) in the string, and returns a Tuple with the part before it, the match, and the part after it. If it is not found, returns str followed by two empty strings.

"hello".partition("l") # => {"he", "l", "lo"}
"hello".partition("x") # => {"hello", "", ""}

def presence : self?Source

Returns self unless #blank? is true in which case it returns nil.

"a".presence         # => "a"
"".presence          # => nil
"   ".presence       # => nil
"    a    ".presence # => "    a    "
nil.presence         # => nil

config = {"empty" => ""}
config["empty"]?.presence || "default"   # => "default"
config["missing"]?.presence || "default" # => "default"

See also: Nil#presence.

def pretty_print(pp : PrettyPrint) : NilSource

Pretty prints self into the given printer.

def rchop : StringSource

Returns a new String with the last character removed. Applying rchop to an empty string returns an empty string.

"string\r\n".rchop # => "string\r"
"string\n\r".rchop # => "string\n"
"string\n".rchop   # => "string"
"string".rchop     # => "strin"
"x".rchop.rchop    # => ""

def rchop(suffix : Char | String) : StringSource

Returns a new String with suffix removed from the end of the string.

"string".rchop('g')   # => "strin"
"string".rchop('x')   # => "string"
"string".rchop("ing") # => "str"
"string".rchop("inx") # => "string"

def rchop? : String?Source

Returns a new String with the last character removed if possible, else returns nil.

"string\r\n".rchop? # => "string\r"
"string\n\r".rchop? # => "string\n"
"string\n".rchop?   # => "string"
"string".rchop?     # => "strin"
"".rchop?           # => nil

def rchop?(suffix : Char | String) : String?Source

Returns a new String with suffix removed from the end of the string if possible, else returns nil.

"string".rchop?('g')   # => "strin"
"string".rchop?('x')   # => nil
"string".rchop?("ing") # => "str"
"string".rchop?("inx") # => nil

def reverseSource

Reverses the order of characters in the string.

"Argentina".reverse # => "anitnegrA"
"racecar".reverse   # => "racecar"

def rindex(search : Regex, offset = size - 1)Source

Returns the index of the last appearance of search in the string, If offset is present, it defines the position to end the search (characters beyond this point are ignored).

"Hello, World".rindex('o')    # => 8
"Hello, World".rindex('Z')    # => nil
"Hello, World".rindex("o", 5) # => 4
"Hello, World".rindex("W", 2) # => nil

def rindex(search : String, offset = size - search.size)Source

Returns the index of the last appearance of search in the string, If offset is present, it defines the position to end the search (characters beyond this point are ignored).

"Hello, World".rindex('o')    # => 8
"Hello, World".rindex('Z')    # => nil
"Hello, World".rindex("o", 5) # => 4
"Hello, World".rindex("W", 2) # => nil

def rindex(search : Char, offset = size - 1)Source

Returns the index of the last appearance of search in the string, If offset is present, it defines the position to end the search (characters beyond this point are ignored).

"Hello, World".rindex('o')    # => 8
"Hello, World".rindex('Z')    # => nil
"Hello, World".rindex("o", 5) # => 4
"Hello, World".rindex("W", 2) # => nil

def rjust(len : Int, char : Char = ' ')Source

Adds instances of char to left of the string until it is at least size of len.

"Purple".rjust(8)      # => "  Purple"
"Purple".rjust(8, '-') # => "--Purple"
"Aubergine".rjust(8)   # => "Aubergine"

def rjust(len : Int, char : Char, io : IO) : NilSource

Adds instances of char to left of the string until it is at least size of len, and then appends the result to the given IO.

io = IO::Memory.new
"Purple".rjust(8, '-', io)
io.to_s # => "--Purple"

DEPRECATED Use #rjust(io :IO, len : Int, char : Char = ' ') instead

def rjust(len : Int, io : IO) : NilSource

Adds spaces to left of the string until it is at least size of len, and then appends the result to the given IO.

io = IO::Memory.new
"Purple".rjust(8, io)
io.to_s # => "  Purple"

DEPRECATED Use #rjust(io :IO, len : Int, char : Char = ' ') instead

def rjust(io : IO, len : Int, char : Char = ' ') : NilSource

Adds instances of char to left of the string until it is at least size of len, and then appends the result to the given IO.

io = IO::Memory.new
"Purple".rjust(8, '-', io)
io.to_s # => "--Purple"

def rpartition(search : Regex) : Tuple(String, String, String)Source

Searches separator or pattern (Regex) in the string from the end of the string, and returns a Tuple with the part before it, the match, and the part after it. If it is not found, returns two empty strings and str.

"hello".rpartition("l")  # => {"hel", "l", "o"}
"hello".rpartition("x")  # => {"", "", "hello"}
"hello".rpartition(/.l/) # => {"he", "ll", "o"}

def rpartition(search : Char | String) : Tuple(String, String, String)Source

Searches separator or pattern (Regex) in the string from the end of the string, and returns a Tuple with the part before it, the match, and the part after it. If it is not found, returns two empty strings and str.

"hello".rpartition("l")  # => {"hel", "l", "o"}
"hello".rpartition("x")  # => {"", "", "hello"}
"hello".rpartition(/.l/) # => {"he", "ll", "o"}

def rstrip(char : Char)Source

Returns a new string with trailing occurrences of char removed.

"aaabcdaaa".rstrip('a') # => "aaabcd"

def rstrip(chars : String)Source

Returns a new string where trailing occurrences of any char in chars are removed. The chars argument is not a suffix; rather; all combinations of its values are stripped.

"abcdefcba".rstrip("abc") # => "abcdef"

def rstripSource

Returns a new String with trailing whitespace removed.

"    hello    ".rstrip # => "    hello"
"\tgoodbye\r\n".rstrip # => "\tgoodbye"

def rstrip(&block : Char -> _)Source

Returns a new string where trailing characters for which the block returns a truthy value are removed.

"bcadefcba".rstrip { |c| 'a' <= c <= 'c' } # => "bcadef"

def scan(pattern : String)Source

Searches the string for instances of pattern, returning an array of the matched string for each match.

def scan(pattern : Regex)Source

Searches the string for instances of pattern, returning an Array of Regex::MatchData for each match.

def scan(pattern : Regex, &)Source

Searches the string for instances of pattern, yielding a Regex::MatchData for each match.

def scan(pattern : String, &)Source

Searches the string for instances of pattern, yielding the matched string for each match.

def scrub(replacement = Char::REPLACEMENT) : StringSource

Returns a String where bytes that are invalid in the UTF-8 encoding are replaced with replacement.

def sizeSource

Returns the number of unicode codepoints in this string.

"hello".size # => 5
"你好".size    # => 2

def split(separator : Regex, limit = nil, *, remove_empty = false, &block : String -> _)Source

Makes an Array by splitting the string on separator (and removing instances of separator).

If limit is present, the array will be limited to limit items and the final item will contain the remainder of the string.

If separator is an empty regex (//), the string will be separated into one-character strings.

If remove_empty is true, any empty strings are removed from the result.

long_river_name = "Mississippi"
long_river_name.split(/s+/) # => ["Mi", "i", "ippi"]
long_river_name.split(//)   # => ["M", "i", "s", "s", "i", "s", "s", "i", "p", "p", "i"]

def split(separator : Regex, limit = nil, *, remove_empty = false)Source

Splits the string after each regex separator and yields each part to a block.

If limit is present, the array will be limited to limit items and the final item will contain the remainder of the string.

If separator is an empty regex (//), the string will be separated into one-character strings.

If remove_empty is true, any empty strings are removed from the result.

ary = [] of String
long_river_name = "Mississippi"

long_river_name.split(/s+/) { |s| ary << s }
ary # => ["Mi", "i", "ippi"]
ary.clear

long_river_name.split(//) { |s| ary << s }
ary # => ["M", "i", "s", "s", "i", "s", "s", "i", "p", "p", "i"]

def split(separator : String, limit = nil, *, remove_empty = false, &block : String -> _)Source

Splits the string after each string separator and yields each part to a block.

If limit is present, the array will be limited to limit items and the final item will contain the remainder of the string.

If separator is an empty string (""), the string will be separated into one-character strings.

If remove_empty is true, any empty strings are removed from the result.

ary = [] of String
long_river_name = "Mississippi"

long_river_name.split("ss") { |s| ary << s }
ary # => ["Mi", "i", "ippi"]
ary.clear

long_river_name.split("i") { |s| ary << s }
ary # => ["M", "ss", "ss", "pp", ""]
ary.clear

long_river_name.split("i", remove_empty: true) { |s| ary << s }
ary # => ["M", "ss", "ss", "pp"]
ary.clear

long_river_name.split("") { |s| ary << s }
ary # => ["M", "i", "s", "s", "i", "s", "s", "i", "p", "p", "i"]

def split(separator : String, limit = nil, *, remove_empty = false)Source

Makes an Array by splitting the string on separator (and removing instances of separator).

If limit is present, the array will be limited to limit items and the final item will contain the remainder of the string.

If separator is an empty string (""), the string will be separated into one-character strings.

If remove_empty is true, any empty strings are removed from the result.

long_river_name = "Mississippi"
long_river_name.split("ss")                    # => ["Mi", "i", "ippi"]
long_river_name.split("i")                     # => ["M", "ss", "ss", "pp", ""]
long_river_name.split("i", remove_empty: true) # => ["M", "ss", "ss", "pp"]
long_river_name.split("")                      # => ["M", "i", "s", "s", "i", "s", "s", "i", "p", "p", "i"]

def split(separator : Char, limit = nil, *, remove_empty = false, &block : String -> _)Source

Splits the string after each character separator and yields each part to a block.

If limit is present, up to limit new strings will be created, with the entire remainder added to the last string.

If remove_empty is true, any empty strings are not yielded.

ary = [] of String

"foo,,bar,baz".split(',') { |string| ary << string }
ary # => ["foo", "", "bar", "baz"]
ary.clear

"foo,,bar,baz".split(',', remove_empty: true) { |string| ary << string }
ary # => ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
ary.clear

"foo,bar,baz".split(',', 2) { |string| ary << string }
ary # => ["foo", "bar,baz"]

def split(separator : Char, limit = nil, *, remove_empty = false)Source

Makes an Array by splitting the string on the given character separator (and removing that character).

If limit is present, up to limit new strings will be created, with the entire remainder added to the last string.

If remove_empty is true, any empty strings are removed from the result.

"foo,,bar,baz".split(',')                     # => ["foo", "", "bar", "baz"]
"foo,,bar,baz".split(',', remove_empty: true) # => ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
"foo,bar,baz".split(',', 2)                   # => ["foo", "bar,baz"]

def split(limit : Int32? = nil, &block : String -> _)Source

Splits the string after any amount of ASCII whitespace characters and yields each non-whitespace part to a block.

If limit is present, up to limit new strings will be created, with the entire remainder added to the last string.

ary = [] of String
old_pond = "
  Old pond
  a frog leaps in
  water's sound
"

old_pond.split { |s| ary << s }
ary # => ["Old", "pond", "a", "frog", "leaps", "in", "water's", "sound"]
ary.clear

old_pond.split(3) { |s| ary << s }
ary # => ["Old", "pond", "a frog leaps in\n  water's sound\n"]

def split(limit : Int32? = nil)Source

Makes an array by splitting the string on any amount of ASCII whitespace characters (and removing that whitespace).

If limit is present, up to limit new strings will be created, with the entire remainder added to the last string.

old_pond = "
  Old pond
  a frog leaps in
  water's sound
"
old_pond.split    # => ["Old", "pond", "a", "frog", "leaps", "in", "water's", "sound"]
old_pond.split(3) # => ["Old", "pond", "a frog leaps in\n  water's sound\n"]

def squeezeSource

Returns a new String, that has all characters removed, that were the same as the previous one.

"a       bbb".squeeze # => "a b"

def squeeze(*sets : String)Source

Sets should be a list of strings following the rules described at Char#in_set?. Returns a new String with all runs of the same character replaced by one instance, if they match the given set.

If no set is given, all characters are matched.

"aaabbbcccddd".squeeze("b-d") # => "aaabcd"
"a       bbb".squeeze         # => "a b"

def squeeze(&)Source

Yields each char in this string to the block. Returns a new String, that has all characters removed, that were the same as the previous one and for which the given block returned a truthy value.

"aaabbbccc".squeeze &.in?('a', 'b') # => "abccc"
"aaabbbccc".squeeze &.in?('a', 'c') # => "abbbc"

def squeeze(char : Char)Source

Returns a new String, with all runs of char replaced by one instance.

"a    bbb".squeeze(' ') # => "a bbb"

def starts_with?(str : String) : BoolSource

Returns true if this string starts with the given str.

"hello".starts_with?("h")  # => true
"hello".starts_with?("he") # => true
"hello".starts_with?("hu") # => false

def starts_with?(char : Char) : BoolSource

Returns true if this string starts with the given char.

"hello".starts_with?('h') # => true
"hello".starts_with?('e') # => false

def starts_with?(re : Regex) : BoolSource

Returns true if the regular expression re matches at the start of this string.

"22hello".starts_with?(/[0-9]/) # => true
"22hello".starts_with?(/[a-z]/) # => false
"h22".starts_with?(/[a-z]/)     # => true
"h22".starts_with?(/[A-Z]/)     # => false
"h22".starts_with?(/[a-z]{2}/)  # => false
"hh22".starts_with?(/[a-z]{2}/) # => true

def strip(char : Char)Source

Returns a new string where leading and trailing occurrences of char are removed.

"aaabcdaaa".strip('a') # => "bcd"

def strip(&block : Char -> _)Source

Returns a new string where leading and trailing characters for which the block returns a truthy value are removed.

"bcadefcba".strip { |c| 'a' <= c <= 'c' } # => "def"

def stripSource

Returns a new String with leading and trailing whitespace removed.

"    hello    ".strip # => "hello"
"\tgoodbye\r\n".strip # => "goodbye"

def strip(chars : String)Source

Returns a new string where leading and trailing occurrences of any char in chars are removed. The chars argument is not a prefix or suffix; rather; all combinations of its values are stripped.

"abcdefcba".strip("abc") # => "def"

def sub(char : Char, replacement)Source

Returns a String where the first occurrence of char is replaced by replacement.

"hello".sub('l', "lo")      # => "helolo"
"hello world".sub('o', 'a') # => "hella world"

def sub(pattern : Regex, hash : Hash(String, _) | NamedTuple)Source

Returns a String where the first occurrences of the given pattern is replaced with the matching entry from the hash of replacements. If the first match is not included in the hash, nothing is replaced.

"hello".sub(/(he|l|o)/, {"he": "ha", "l": "la"}) # => "hallo"
"hello".sub(/(he|l|o)/, {"l": "la"})             # => "hello"

def sub(&block : Char -> _)Source

Returns a new String where the first character is yielded to the given block and replaced by its return value.

"hello".sub { |char| char + 1 } # => "iello"
"hello".sub { "hi" }            # => "hiello"

def sub(string : String, &)Source

Returns a String where the first occurrences of the given string is replaced with the block's value.

"hello yellow".sub("ll") { "dd" } # => "heddo yellow"

def sub(pattern : Regex, &)Source

Returns a String where the first occurrence of pattern is replaced by the block's return value.

"hello".sub(/./) { |s| s[0].ord.to_s + ' ' } # => "104 ello"

def sub(pattern : Regex, replacement, backreferences = true)Source

Returns a String where the first occurrence of pattern is replaced by replacement

"hello".sub(/[aeiou]/, "*") # => "h*llo"

Within replacement, the special match variable $~ will not refer to the current match.

If backreferences is true (the default value), replacement can include backreferences:

"hello".sub(/[aeiou]/, "(\\0)") # => "h(e)llo"

When substitution is performed, any backreferences found in replacement will be replaced with the contents of the corresponding capture group in pattern. Backreferences to capture groups that were not present in pattern or that did not match will be skipped. See Regex for information about capture groups.

Backreferences are expressed in the form "\\d", where d is a group number, or "\\k<name>" where name is the name of a named capture group. A sequence of literal characters resembling a backreference can be expressed by placing "\\" before the sequence.

"foo".sub(/o/, "x\\0x")                  # => "fxoxo"
"foofoo".sub(/(?<bar>oo)/, "|\\k<bar>|") # => "f|oo|foo"
"foo".sub(/o/, "\\\\0")                  # => "f\\0o"

Raises ArgumentError if an incomplete named back-reference is present in replacement.

Raises IndexError if a named group referenced in replacement is not present in pattern.

def sub(string : String, replacement)Source

Returns a String where the first occurrences of the given string is replaced with the given replacement.

"hello yellow".sub("ll", "dd") # => "heddo yellow"

def sub(index : Int, replacement : Char)Source

Returns a new String with the character at the given index replaced by replacement.

"hello".sub(1, 'a') # => "hallo"

def sub(index : Int, replacement : String)Source

Returns a new String with the character at the given index replaced by replacement.

"hello".sub(1, "eee") # => "heeello"

def sub(range : Range, replacement : String)Source

Returns a new String with characters at the given range replaced by replacement.

"hello".sub(1..2, "eee") # => "heeelo"

def sub(hash : Hash(Char, _))Source

Returns a String where the first char in the string matching a key in the given hash is replaced by the corresponding hash value.

"hello".sub({'a' => 'b', 'l' => 'd'}) # => "hedlo"

def sub(range : Range, replacement : Char)Source

Returns a new String with characters at the given range replaced by replacement.

"hello".sub(1..2, 'a') # => "halo"

def succSource

Returns the successor of the string. The successor is calculated by incrementing characters starting from the rightmost alphanumeric (or the rightmost character if there are no alphanumerics) in the string. Incrementing a digit always results in another digit, and incrementing a letter results in another letter of the same case.

If the increment generates a "carry", the character to the left of it is incremented. This process repeats until there is no carry, adding an additional character if necessary.

"abcd".succ      # => "abce"
"THX1138".succ   # => "THX1139"
"((koala))".succ # => "((koalb))"
"1999zzz".succ   # => "2000aaa"
"ZZZ9999".succ   # => "AAAA0000"
"***".succ       # => "**+"

def titleize(options : Unicode::CaseOptions = :none) : StringSource

Returns a new String with the first letter after any space converted to uppercase and every other letter converted to lowercase.

"hEllO tAb\tworld".titleize      # => "Hello Tab\tWorld"
"  spaces before".titleize       # => "  Spaces Before"
"x-men: the last stand".titleize # => "X-men: The Last Stand"

def titleize(io : IO, options : Unicode::CaseOptions = :none) : NilSource

Writes a titleized version of self to the given io.

io = IO::Memory.new
"x-men: the last stand".titleize io
io.to_s # => X-men: The Last Stand

def to_big_dSource

Converts self to BigDecimal.

require "big"
"1212341515125412412412421".to_big_d

def to_big_fSource

Converts self to a BigFloat.

require "big"
"1234.0".to_big_f

def to_big_i(base = 10) : BigIntSource

Returns a BigInt from this string, in the given base.

Raises ArgumentError if this string doesn't denote a valid integer.

require "big"

"3a060dbf8d1a5ac3e67bc8f18843fc48".to_big_i(16)

def to_f(whitespace : Bool = true, strict : Bool = true)Source

Returns the result of interpreting characters in this string as a floating point number (Float64). This method raises an exception if the string is not a valid float representation.

Options:

  • whitespace: if true, leading and trailing whitespaces are allowed
  • strict: if true, extraneous characters past the end of the number are disallowed
"123.45e1".to_f                # => 1234.5
"45.67 degrees".to_f           # raises ArgumentError
"thx1138".to_f(strict: false)  # raises ArgumentError
" 1.2".to_f(whitespace: false) # raises ArgumentError
"1.2foo".to_f(strict: false)   # => 1.2

def to_f32(whitespace : Bool = true, strict : Bool = true)Source

Same as #to_f but returns a Float32.

def to_f32?(whitespace : Bool = true, strict : Bool = true)Source

Same as #to_f? but returns a Float32.

def to_f64(whitespace : Bool = true, strict : Bool = true)Source

Same as #to_f.

def to_f64?(whitespace : Bool = true, strict : Bool = true)Source

Same as #to_f?.

def to_f?(whitespace : Bool = true, strict : Bool = true)Source

Returns the result of interpreting characters in this string as a floating point number (Float64). This method returns nil if the string is not a valid float representation.

Options:

  • whitespace: if true, leading and trailing whitespaces are allowed
  • strict: if true, extraneous characters past the end of the number are disallowed
"123.45e1".to_f?                # => 1234.5
"45.67 degrees".to_f?           # => nil
"thx1138".to_f?                 # => nil
" 1.2".to_f?(whitespace: false) # => nil
"1.2foo".to_f?(strict: false)   # => 1.2

def to_i(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false, &)Source

Same as #to_i, but returns the block's value if there is not a valid number at the start of this string, or if the resulting integer doesn't fit an Int32.

"12345".to_i { 0 } # => 12345
"hello".to_i { 0 } # => 0

def to_i(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false)Source

Returns the result of interpreting leading characters in this string as an integer base base (between 2 and 36).

If there is not a valid number at the start of this string, or if the resulting integer doesn't fit an Int32, an ArgumentError is raised.

Options:

  • whitespace: if true, leading and trailing whitespaces are allowed
  • underscore: if true, underscores in numbers are allowed
  • prefix: if true, the prefixes "0x", "0o" and "0b" override the base
  • strict: if true, extraneous characters past the end of the number are disallowed
  • leading_zero_is_octal: if true, then a number prefixed with "0" will be treated as an octal
"12345".to_i             # => 12345
"0a".to_i                # raises ArgumentError
"hello".to_i             # raises ArgumentError
"0a".to_i(16)            # => 10
"1100101".to_i(2)        # => 101
"1100101".to_i(8)        # => 294977
"1100101".to_i(10)       # => 1100101
"1100101".to_i(base: 16) # => 17826049

"12_345".to_i                   # raises ArgumentError
"12_345".to_i(underscore: true) # => 12345

"  12345  ".to_i                    # => 12345
"  12345  ".to_i(whitespace: false) # raises ArgumentError

"0x123abc".to_i               # raises ArgumentError
"0x123abc".to_i(prefix: true) # => 1194684

"99 red balloons".to_i                # raises ArgumentError
"99 red balloons".to_i(strict: false) # => 99

"0755".to_i                              # => 755
"0755".to_i(leading_zero_is_octal: true) # => 493

def to_i16(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : Int16Source

Same as #to_i but returns an Int16.

def to_i16(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false, &)Source

Same as #to_i but returns an Int16 or the block's value.

def to_i16?(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : Int16?Source

Same as #to_i but returns an Int16 or nil.

def to_i32(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : Int32Source

Same as #to_i.

def to_i32(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false, &)Source

Same as #to_i.

def to_i32?(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : Int32?Source

Same as #to_i.

def to_i64(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : Int64Source

Same as #to_i but returns an Int64.

def to_i64(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false, &)Source

Same as #to_i but returns an Int64 or the block's value.

def to_i64?(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : Int64?Source

Same as #to_i but returns an Int64 or nil.

def to_i8(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false, &)Source

Same as #to_i but returns an Int8 or the block's value.

def to_i8(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : Int8Source

Same as #to_i but returns an Int8.

def to_i8?(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : Int8?Source

Same as #to_i but returns an Int8 or nil.

def to_i?(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false)Source

Same as #to_i, but returns nil if there is not a valid number at the start of this string, or if the resulting integer doesn't fit an Int32.

"12345".to_i?             # => 12345
"99 red balloons".to_i?   # => nil
"0a".to_i?(strict: false) # => 0
"hello".to_i?             # => nil

def to_json(json : JSON::Builder)Source

def to_json_object_keySource

def to_s : StringSource

Returns self.

def to_s(io : IO) : NilSource

Appends self to io.

def to_slice : BytesSource

Returns the underlying bytes of this String.

The returned slice is read-only.

def to_u16(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false, &)Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt16 or the block's value.

def to_u16(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : UInt16Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt16.

def to_u16?(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : UInt16?Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt16 or nil.

def to_u32(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : UInt32Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt32.

def to_u32(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false, &)Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt32 or the block's value.

def to_u32?(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : UInt32?Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt32 or nil.

def to_u64(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : UInt64Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt64.

def to_u64(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false, &)Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt64 or the block's value.

def to_u64?(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : UInt64?Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt64 or nil.

def to_u8(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false, &)Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt8 or the block's value.

def to_u8(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : UInt8Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt8.

def to_u8?(base : Int = 10, whitespace : Bool = true, underscore : Bool = false, prefix : Bool = false, strict : Bool = true, leading_zero_is_octal : Bool = false) : UInt8?Source

Same as #to_i but returns an UInt8 or nil.

def to_unsafe : Pointer(UInt8)Source

Returns a pointer to the underlying bytes of this String.

def to_utf16 : Slice(UInt16)Source

Returns the UTF-16 encoding of the given string.

Invalid chars (in the range U+D800..U+DFFF) are encoded with the unicode replacement char value 0xfffd.

The byte following the end of this slice (but not included in it) is defined to be zero. This allows passing the result of this function into C functions that expect a null-terminated UInt16*.

"hi 𐂥".to_utf16 # => Slice[104_u16, 105_u16, 32_u16, 55296_u16, 56485_u16]

def to_yaml(yaml : YAML::Nodes::Builder)Source

def tr(from : String, to : String)Source

Returns a new string translating characters using from and to as a map. If to is shorter than from, the last character in to is used for the rest. If to is empty, this acts like String#delete.

"aabbcc".tr("abc", "xyz") # => "xxyyzz"
"aabbcc".tr("abc", "x")   # => "xxxxxx"
"aabbcc".tr("a", "xyz")   # => "xxbbcc"

def underscore(io : IO, options : Unicode::CaseOptions = :none) : NilSource

Writes an underscored version of self to the given io.

io = IO::Memory.new
"DoesWhatItSaysOnTheTin".underscore io
io.to_s # => "does_what_it_says_on_the_tin"

def underscore(options : Unicode::CaseOptions = :none) : StringSource

Converts camelcase boundaries to underscores.

"DoesWhatItSaysOnTheTin".underscore                         # => "does_what_it_says_on_the_tin"
"PartyInTheUSA".underscore                                  # => "party_in_the_usa"
"HTTP_CLIENT".underscore                                    # => "http_client"
"3.14IsPi".underscore                                       # => "3.14_is_pi"
"InterestingImage".underscore(Unicode::CaseOptions::Turkic) # => "ınteresting_ımage"

def unsafe_byte_at(index : Int) : UInt8Source

Returns the byte at the given index without bounds checking.

def unsafe_byte_slice(byte_offset) : SliceSource

Returns the underlying bytes of this String starting at given byte_offset.

The returned slice is read-only.

def unsafe_byte_slice(byte_offset, count) : SliceSource

Returns count of underlying bytes of this String starting at given byte_offset.

The returned slice is read-only.

def upcase(io : IO, options : Unicode::CaseOptions = :none) : NilSource

Writes a upcased version of self to the given io.

io = IO::Memory.new
"hEllO".upcase io
io.to_s # => HELLO

def upcase(options : Unicode::CaseOptions = :none) : StringSource

Returns a new String with each lowercase letter replaced with its uppercase counterpart.

"hEllO".upcase # => "HELLO"

def valid_encoding?Source

Returns true if this String is encoded correctly according to the UTF-8 encoding.

© 2012–2020 Manas Technology Solutions.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://crystal-lang.org/api/0.35.1/String.html