If I have a string as "10,20,30" and I need to split it taking
the part after the last comma and all before it, in Python I use
rsplit with optional argument 1:
s = "10,20,30"
a, b = s.rsplit(",", 1)
assert a, b == "10,20", "30"
The optional second argument tells Python when to stop splitting,
and the "r" suffix of split means from the right:
"10,20,30,40,50".rsplit(",", 2)
['10,20,30', '40', '50']
"10,20,30,40,50".split(",", 2)
['10', '20', '30,40,50']
One awkward way to do the same thing in D+Phobos is:
import std.algorithm: find;
import std.range: retro;
void main() {
auto s = "10,20,30";
string a = s.retro.find(",").retro[0 .. $ - 1];
string b = s[a.length + 1 .. $];
assert (a == "10,20");
assert(b == "30");
}
I don't see a rsplit or rSplit or rightSplit in std.string, but I
see findSplitAfter and findSplitBefore in std.algorithm:
s.findSplitAfter(",")
==>
Tuple!(string, string)("10,", "20,30")
s.findSplitBefore(",")
==>
Tuple!(string, string)("10", ",20,30")
If I use std.range.retro:
s.retro.findSplitBefore(",")
==>
Tuple!(Result, Result)(03, ,02,01)
Also notice the lack of " inside the tuple, those aren't strings.
And indeed this is not accepted:
s.retro.findSplitBefore(",")[0].retro
So do you think it's a good idea to add a rSplit(string,count=-1)
(or rightSplit) to std.string or std.array (and maybe add a
second argument to std.array.split), or I am missing something
from Phobos?
Bye and thank you,
bearophile