6

The following simple program will find the last letter in a string that a user enters and then remove everything after that point. So, if a person enters one string.... everything after the g should be removed. I've got the following as a little program:

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        Console.Write("Enter in the value of the string: ");
        List<char> charList = Console.ReadLine().Trim().ToList();

        int x = charList.LastIndexOf(charList.Last(char.IsLetter)) ;
        Console.WriteLine("this is the last letter {0}", x);
        Console.WriteLine("This is the length of the string {0}", charList.Count);
        Console.WriteLine("We should have the last {0} characters removed", charList.Count - x);

        for (int i = x; i < charList.Count; i++)
        {
            charList.Remove(charList[i]);
        }

        foreach (char c in charList)
        {
            Console.Write(c);
        }
        Console.ReadLine();
    }
}

I've tried numerous variations of this and none of them getting it exactly write. This particular program with an input of string.... the output of the program is strin.. So somehow it's leaving on what it should be taking away and it's actually taking away letters that it shouldn't. Can anyone give an indication as to why this is happening? The desired output, again should be string.

3
  • 1
    Why not just use input.Substring(0, x + 1)? Apr 29, 2013 at 12:58
  • @Grant Thomas: Because x might be -1 if it doesn't exist and everythign is removed, maybe that's the intention, it's not really clear from the 'spec'. Apr 29, 2013 at 13:09
  • @MichelKeijzers That's irrelevant. The point is that all the looping is a farce - validation of the value is trivial. Apr 29, 2013 at 13:11

10 Answers 10

5

Try this:

string input = Console.ReadLine();                // ABC.ABC.
int index = input.Select((c, i) => new { c, i })
                 .Where(x => char.IsLetter(x.c))
                 .Max(x => x.i);
string trimmedInput = input.Substring(0, index + 1);
Console.WriteLine(trimmedInput);                  // ABC.ABC
4
  • +1 No need for substring. String.Join("", input.TakeWhile(char.IsLetter))
    – I4V
    Apr 29, 2013 at 13:02
  • This will fail! This will not look for the last letter, it will look for the first NON-letter and delete the rest, including the letters coming after it. Apr 29, 2013 at 13:03
  • 1
    Yes this fails on "ABC.ABC." which (according to the spec) should produce "ABC.ABC" Apr 29, 2013 at 13:06
  • @MartinMulder / MatthewWatson Not as elegant as my initial solution, but it satisfies the requirements better.
    – p.s.w.g
    Apr 29, 2013 at 13:12
3

Jsut for the explanation, that's because each time you remove a character, you increment the i counter but also decrementing charList.Count so you're actually removing 1 character, leaving the next one, then removing again and so on...

For example, with the input "string...." and x being 5 (index of the G letter) you're doing :

1st iteration : Remove the g char so x becomes 6 and charList.Count becomes 9 (10-1)

Next iteration : Remove the char at index 6 which is now the second . (your string being "strin....").

So you missed the first point.

I let you check other answers as they contains more elegant solutions for your problems.

1
  • This is what I was looking for. Thanks for this insight, I'm sure this will help me on down the line somewhere. Apr 29, 2013 at 13:04
2

I think it would be a lot more straight forward to simply Substring the string the user entered. So consider the following modified code:

 class Program
 {
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        Console.Write("Enter in the value of the string: ");
        var s = Console.ReadLine().Trim();
        List<char> charList = s.ToList();

        int x = charList.LastIndexOf(charList.Last(char.IsLetter)) ;
        Console.WriteLine("this is the last letter {0}", x);
        Console.WriteLine("This is the length of the string {0}", charList.Count);
        Console.WriteLine("We should have the last {0} characters removed", charList.Count - x);

        Console.WriteLine(s.Substring(0, x + 1);
        Console.ReadLine();
    }
}

here we store the value the user entered into s, find the last index of a letter, and then Substring through that letter when writing out to the console.

2
  • A more elegant solution to the problem than mine, I would have to say. +1 Apr 29, 2013 at 13:03
  • This will result in searching the array of chars twice. Apr 29, 2013 at 13:08
2
string s = console.ReadLine();
s = s.Substring(0, s.ToList().FindLastIndex(char.IsLetter) + 1);
0
1

You also can use a function of string called SubString, to get everything from the first to the last letter index.

2
  • do you have any idea what the program is behaving the way it is now? Apr 29, 2013 at 13:01
  • When removing you do: for (int i = x; i < charList.Count; i++) .. I think it should be x + 1 instead of x. Apr 29, 2013 at 13:07
1

Here's a pretty inefficient way to do it (just for fun!)

var trimmedInput = string.Join("", input.Reverse().SkipWhile(x => !char.IsLetter(x)).Reverse());
2
  • If it so inefficient, why post it? Apr 29, 2013 at 13:11
  • @MartinMulder "Just for fun". Possibly that's not your kind of thing! But it does demonstrate some uses of Linq to reverse sequences, which may be of some interest. Apr 29, 2013 at 13:13
1

You could use this extension:

public static string TrimLettersLeft(this string input)
{ 
    int lastLetterIndex = -1;
    for (int i = input.Length - 1; i >= 0; i--)
    {
        if (Char.IsLetter(input[i]))
        {
            lastLetterIndex = i;
            break;
        }
    }

    if( lastLetterIndex == -1)
        return input;
    else
        return input.Substring(0, lastLetterIndex + 1);
}

Input: test...abc... Output: test...abc

DEMO

1

Solution will be like this.

string charList = "string..."; //any string place here
int x = charList.LastIndexOf(charList.Last(char.IsLetter));
String str = charList.ToString().Substring(0, x + 1);
0

This will match every word character (A-Z, 0-9 and _):

string Input = Console.ReadLine();
string Userinput = String.Empty;
Regex TextSearch = new Regex(@"\w*");

if(TextSearch.IsMatch(Input))
    Userinput = TextSearch.Match(Input).Groups[0].Value;
else
    // No valid Input
1
0

What I believe would be the shortest, simplest option:

Edit: A comment pointed out an initial error here, so I added a little fix. Should work nicely now (might not be the optimal solution, but I thought it was a fun an simple solution anyway):

var userInput = Console.ReadLine();

Console.WriteLine(new string(userInput.Reverse()
                                      .SkipWhile(c => !char.IsLetter(c))
                                      .Reverse()
                                      .ToArray()));
4
  • This will fail! This will not look for the last letter, it will look for the first NON-letter and delete the rest, including the letters coming after it. Apr 29, 2013 at 13:08
  • @MartinMulder Thanks for pointing that out, you were quite right. Made a little change now, so I believe it should be correct now.
    – Kjartan
    Apr 29, 2013 at 13:26
  • Great... but... be aware: This answer was already presented by Matthew Watson. Apr 29, 2013 at 13:28
  • Coincidence, so what? My original answer was here first, and fixed with a minor twist. Big deal. (Besides, mine is arguably more readable, both initially and after the edit ;) )
    – Kjartan
    Apr 29, 2013 at 13:41

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