67

I simply have a string that looks something like this:

"7,true,NA,false:67,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false"

All I want to do is to count how many times the string "true" appears in that string. I'm feeling like the answer is something like String.CountAllTheTimesThisStringAppearsInThatString() but for some reason I just can't figure it out. Help?

6
  • 2
    stackoverflow.com/questions/541954/…
    – jball
    Jun 10, 2010 at 16:59
  • 8
    @jball I think all the solutions there are for counting occurrences of a character
    – AakashM
    Jun 10, 2010 at 17:56
  • @AakashM, look at the second link. Also, this is the perfect opportunity to provide a more correct (i.e., string based, not char based) answer to that question.
    – jball
    Jun 10, 2010 at 18:46
  • 5
    I'm glad you don't work for Microsoft and get to name methods! Sep 28, 2016 at 10:18
  • 1
    The linked questions ("This question already has answers here: ") has mostly answers for counting multiple character occurrences, not multiple substring occurrences.
    – Alex P.
    Jun 7, 2023 at 13:56

7 Answers 7

212
Regex.Matches(input, "true").Count
4
  • 2
    Based on brevity alone - you win ;) Jun 10, 2010 at 18:36
  • 1
    there is no matches in C# string. oops. Regex. Nevermind
    – xarzu
    Feb 5, 2014 at 14:31
  • 1
    Why are we escaping input it's not a regular expression?
    – tpower
    Aug 2, 2017 at 9:00
  • @tpower, same question I had. I researched Regex.Escape and ran tests in LINQPad to confirm. I edited the edit to remove that. Dec 4, 2017 at 19:00
17

Probably not the most efficient, but think it's a neat way to do it.

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        Console.WriteLine(CountAllTheTimesThisStringAppearsInThatString("7,true,NA,false:67,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false", "true"));
        Console.WriteLine(CountAllTheTimesThisStringAppearsInThatString("7,true,NA,false:67,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false", "false"));

    }

    static Int32 CountAllTheTimesThisStringAppearsInThatString(string orig, string find)
    {
        var s2 = orig.Replace(find,"");
        return (orig.Length - s2.Length) / find.Length;
    }
}
1
  • 3
    ha ha - I should mark yours as correct just for using my proposed method name. :) Jun 11, 2010 at 18:58
14

Your regular expression should be \btrue\b to get around the 'miscontrue' issue Casper brings up. The full solution would look like this:

string searchText = "7,true,NA,false:67,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false";
string regexPattern = @"\btrue\b";
int numberOfTrues = Regex.Matches(searchText, regexPattern).Count;

Make sure the System.Text.RegularExpressions namespace is included at the top of the file.

1
  • 1
    The string variable should not be called Regex - it collides with the .NET Regex class name itself. Apr 8, 2015 at 16:42
5

Here, I'll over-architect the answer using LINQ. Just shows that there's more than 'n' ways to cook an egg:

public int countTrue(string data)
{
    string[] splitdata = data.Split(',');

    var results = from p in splitdata
            where p.Contains("true")
            select p;

    return results.Count();
}
1
  • Thanks its work fine and smart too :) Aug 14, 2014 at 9:15
5

This will fail though if the string can contain strings like "miscontrue".

   Regex.Matches("7,true,NA,false:67,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false", "true").Count;
3

With Linq...

string s = "7,true,NA,false:67,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false";
var count = s.Split(new[] {',', ':'}).Count(s => s == "true" );
2

do this , please note that you will have to define the regex for 'test'!!!

string s = "7,true,NA,false:67,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false:5,false,NA,false";
string[] parts = (new Regex("")).Split(s);
//just do a count on parts

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