3

I have the challenge in AppleScript to manipulate a string as follows:

  • Base string is an email recipient display name, say: First Last ([email protected])
  • I'd like to "trim" the display name to remove the actual email address in the brackets
  • The desired result should be First Last - so the space in front of the first bracket needs to be removed.

What is the best and most efficient way to do this in AppleScript?

3 Answers 3

5

I'd also use offsets. text 1 thru 2 of "xyz" is equivalent to items 1 thru 2 of "xyz" as string.

set x to "First Last ([email protected])"
set pos to offset of " (" in x
{text 1 thru (pos - 1) of x, text (pos + 2) thru -2 of x}

As far as I know, you don't have to restore text item delimiters.

set x to "First Last ([email protected])"
set text item delimiters to {" (", ")"}
set {fullname, email} to text items 1 thru 2 of x

If others were searching about string manipulation in general, here are methods for replacing and splitting text and joining lists:

on replace(input, x, y)
    set text item delimiters to x
    set ti to text items of input
    set text item delimiters to y
    ti as text
end replace

on split(input, x)
    if input does not contain x then return {input}
    set text item delimiters to x
    text items of input
end split

on join(input, x)
    set text item delimiters to x
    input as text
end join

String comparisons ignore case by default:

"A" is "a" -- true
"ab" starts with "A" -- true
considering case
    "A" is "a" -- false
    "ab" starts with "A" -- false
end considering

Reversing text:

reverse of items of "esrever" as text

You can use do shell script to change the case of text:

do shell script "printf %s " & quoted form of "aä" & " | LC_CTYPE=UTF-8 tr [:lower:] [:upper:]" without altering line endings

echo interprets escape sequences by default in OS X's /bin/sh. You could also use shopt -u xpg_echo; echo -n instead of printf %s. LC_CTYPE=UTF-8 makes character classes include some non-ASCII characters. If without altering line endings is left out, linefeeds are replaced with carriage returns and a newline at the end of the output is removed.

paragraphs of splits strings around \n, \r, and \r\n. It doesn't strip delimiters.

paragraphs of ("a" & linefeed & "b" & return & "c" & linefeed)
-- {"a", "b", "c", ""}

The plain text version of the clipboard uses CR line endings. This converts line endings to LF:

set text item delimiters to linefeed
(paragraphs of (get the clipboard as text)) as text

Unicode text has been equivalent with text and string since 10.5:

There is no longer a distinction between Unicode and non-Unicode text. There is exactly one text class, named “text”: that is, class of "foo" returns text.

3
set theSample to "First Last ([email protected])"

return trimEmailAddress(theSample)
-->Result: "First Last"

on trimEmailAddress(sourceAddress)
    set AppleScript's text item delimiters to {" ("}
    set addressParts to (every text item in sourceAddress) as list
    set AppleScript's text item delimiters to ""
    set nameOnly to item 1 of addressParts

    return nameOnly
end trimEmailAddress
1
  • 1
    Great solution. The extraction of the name-only part can be simplified to set nameOnly to first text item of sourceAddress, obviating the need for the auxiliary statements involving addressParts.
    – mklement0
    Sep 7, 2012 at 3:21
1

You may want to use a simpler solution like this:

set theSample to "First Last ([email protected])"

on trimEmailAddress(sourceAddress)
    set cutPosition to (offset of " (" in sourceAddress) - 1
    return text 1 thru cutPosition of sourceAddress
end trimEmailAddress

return trimEmailAddress(theSample)
-->  "First Last"
1
  • > text 1 thru 2 of "xyz" is equivalent to items 1 thru 2 of "xyz" as string Oh! Thanks Lauri for the tip, didn't know this one!!
    – Zitoun
    Apr 22, 2013 at 12:52

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