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I am having trouble with the delimiter in the TStringList Class. Take a look:

var
  s: string;
  sl: TStringList;

begin
  sl := TStringList.Create;
  s := 'Users^Jonas Anderson^Daniel XYZ^Thomas ABC^Andreas HAHA^test1223';
  sl.Delimiter := '^';
  sl.DelimitedText := s;
  ShowMessage(sl[1]);
end;

sl[1] SHOULD return 'Jonas Anderson'

sl[1] DOES return 'Jonas'

It seems that the delimiter is now '^' AND ' '

Any ideas?

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What version of Delphi are you working in? – Rax Olgud Aug 26 at 14:27
I'm working on Delpi 7 – pr0wl Aug 26 at 14:37

2 Answers

vote up 13 vote down check

You should set s1.StrictDelimiter := True for spaces not to be considered delimiters, more info here.

Since you work in a version that does not support the above (as was clarified after the answer was submitted), you have two options:

  1. Find a character you know will not be used in the original text (e.g. underscore), convert all spaces to that character before splitting, and convert back after splitting. This is robosoft's suggestion.
  2. If you don't have inverted commas and spaces in the text, you can use Alexander's trick and wrap the text between delimiters in inverted command, so that 'hello hello^bye bye' turns to '"hello hello"^"bye bye"'. If you do choose this path and it works for you, please accept Alexander's answer and not mine, he also provides the code to implement it.

Both workarounds not using StrictDelimiter have limitations: the first requires some unused character, and the second requires no inverted commas and spaces in the original text.

Maybe it's time to upgrade to a newer version of Delphi :)

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Bummer! Any workaround starting point? – pr0wl Aug 26 at 14:48
1  
What do you want to work around? Looks like a solution to me. – Smasher Aug 26 at 14:51
1  
I do have Delphi 7, so this does not work for me. – pr0wl Aug 26 at 15:00
3  
Your starting point would be to read the source code for SetDelimitedText in Classes.pas, and either subclass TStrings to create a version that handles this the way you need, or just write a stand-alone function to split the string on carets and return a string list. – Todd Aug 26 at 15:04
1  
Could you temporarily turn spaces into something else, then change them back afterwards? Any other character that wouldn't normally appear in your list would work. It's a hack, or as we prefer 'necessary evil as a workaround'. :-) – robsoft Aug 26 at 15:17
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vote up 7 vote down
sl.DelimitedText := '"' + StringReplace(S, sl.Delimiter, '"' + sl.Delimiter + '"', [rfReplaceAll]) + '"';
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1  
Crap, you beat me, I was typing exactly the same answer :) – The_Fox Aug 26 at 16:01
Very clever, thank you Alexander, aswell as The_Fox, even if you diddn't help me directly, but you intended to do so :) – pr0wl Aug 26 at 21:35
1  
+1 Very nice, but has a problem if the original string contains a subsection like ' " " ' (i.e. inverted commas and spaces in the text) – Rax Olgud Aug 27 at 5:12
>>> has a problem if the original string contains a subsection like ' " " ' And how can user name contain '"' char? :) – Alexander Aug 27 at 5:18
@Alexander - Here's an example: 'Bill "The Womanizer" Clinton' :) – Rax Olgud Aug 27 at 12:14

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