I'm going to create an edit options in a flash input text fields: I need live word count. How count the words that user is typing live?
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RegEx is your friend. Match spaces not at the beginning or end of the string, get the length of the array, and add 1 (for the first word) to it. Easy enough.– JoshAug 8, 2013 at 17:06
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Why add 1? The length of the array is how many words there are.– RibsAug 8, 2013 at 17:08
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@Ribs You're thinking of split, which might be the better route here (and why I upvoted your answer). With RegEx, we will count the spaces. This sentence has 9 words but only 8 spaces. So you have to add one to account for that difference.– JoshAug 8, 2013 at 17:12
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ah, I see what you mean now. Thx for the upvote. :) I like the regex idea tho too.– RibsAug 8, 2013 at 17:13
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What is the 'cut and paste' bit you want?– putvandeAug 8, 2013 at 19:16
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2 Answers
Try something like this, where we count groups of non-whitespace characters:
function countWords(input:String):int
{
// Match collections of non-whitespace characters.
return input.match(/[^\s]+/g).length;
}
Some tests:
trace(countWords("")); // 0
trace(countWords("Simple test.")); // 2
trace(countWords(" This is an untrimmed string ")); // 5
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I want count the words live. Each space key pressed update the word counts. I don't know how do this. Aug 9, 2013 at 7:37
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@Amir You have to attach an event listener to the TextField for when the content changes and use my function inside that.– MartyAug 9, 2013 at 7:41
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If you mean 'myTextfield.addEventListener(Event.CHANGE,countWords);' it does't work. Aug 9, 2013 at 7:52
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@Amir No you have to make a handler function and use countWords within that.– MartyAug 9, 2013 at 8:27
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myTextfield.addEventListener(Event.CHANGE,count); function count(e:Event):void{ trace(countWords(myTextfield.text)); function countWords(input:String):int { return input.match(/[^\s]+/g).length; } }
Aug 9, 2013 at 10:18
To get the number of words in a text field, split the string in the textfield by the spaces. This will return an array of all the words in the textfield. Get the length of the array to tell how many words were entered:
var words:Array = myTextFieldInput.split( ' ' );
var numberOfWords = words.length;
As for copying text from a textfield and pasting it into another, as long as the textfield is selectable, that behavior should be native to the operating system.
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Be careful of spaces next to each other, line breaks, etc. Also your naming of
myTextField
is a little misleading because you can'tsplit
a TextField.– MartyAug 9, 2013 at 7:06 -