Trimming (computer programming)
In computer programming, trimming (trim) or stripping (strip) is a string manipulation in which leading and trailing whitespace is removed from a string.
For example, the string (enclosed by apostrophes)
' this is a test '
would be changed, after trimming, to
'this is a test'
Variants
- Left or right trimming
- The most popular variants of the trim function strip only the beginning or end of the string. Typically named ltrim and rtrim respectively, or in the case of Python: lstrip and rstrip. C# uses TrimStart and TrimEnd, and Common Lisp string-left-trim and string-right-trim. Pascal and Java do not have these variants built-in, although Object Pascal (Delphi) has TrimLeft and TrimRight functions.[1]
- Whitespace character list parameterization
- Many trim functions have an optional parameter to specify a list of characters to trim, instead of the default whitespace characters. For example, PHP and Python allow this optional parameter, while Pascal and Java do not. With Common Lisp's
string-trim
function, the parameter (called character-bag) is required. The C++ Boost library defines space characters according to locale, as well as offering variants with a predicate parameter (a functor) to select which characters are trimmed.
- Special empty string return value
- An uncommon variant of trim returns a special result if no characters remain after the trim operation. For example, Apache Jakarta's StringUtils has a function called
stripToNull
which returnsnull
in place of an empty string.
- Space normalization
- Space normalization is a related string manipulation where in addition to removing surrounding whitespace, any sequence of whitespace characters within the string is replaced with a single space. Space normalization is performed by the function named
Trim()
in spreadsheet applications (including Excel, Calc, Gnumeric, and Google Docs), and by thenormalize-space()
function in XSLT and XPath,
- In-place trimming
- While most algorithms return a new (trimmed) string, some alter the original string in-place. Notably, the Boost library allows either in-place trimming or a trimmed copy to be returned.
Definition of whitespace
The characters which are considered whitespace varies between programming languages and implementations. For example, C traditionally only counts space, tab, line feed, and carriage return characters, while languages which support Unicode typically include all Unicode space characters. Some implementations also include ASCII control codes (non-printing characters) along with whitespace characters.
Java's trim method considers ASCII spaces and control codes as whitespace, contrasting with the Java isWhitespace()
method,[2] which recognizes all Unicode space characters.
Delphi's Trim function considers characters U+0000 (NULL) through U+0020 (SPACE) to be whitespace.
Usage
References
- ↑ "Trim". Freepascal.org. 2013-02-02. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
- ↑ "Character (Java 2 Platform SE 5.0)". Java.sun.com. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
External links
- Tcl: string trim
- Faster JavaScript Trim - compares various JavaScript trim implementations
- php string cut and trimming- php string cut and trimming