1

I have a string with a number at the end, after a dash ("-"). I'd like to create that same string with that number incremented by 1. Pretty simple, but I'm wondering if there's a better approach to this? Thanks!

string oldString = "BA-0001-3";
int lastIndex = oldString.LastIndexOf("-");
string oldNumber = oldString.SubString(lastIndex + 1);
string oldPartialString = oldString.SubString(0, lastIndex);
int newNumber = Convert.ToInt32(oldNumber) + 1;

string newString = oldPartialString + newNumber.ToString();
4
  • I think this is fine but just cache the value of oldString.LastIndexOf("-").
    – Fantius
    Oct 4, 2010 at 20:50
  • Good point Fantius...forgot about that.
    – morganpdx
    Oct 4, 2010 at 20:54
  • 2
    Why not a class with an int value and a string value and on the ToString method you return the string with the int? That way you can easily increment without parsing the int Oct 4, 2010 at 20:56
  • A ton of great answers and food for thought. Thanks everyone.
    – morganpdx
    Oct 4, 2010 at 21:38

6 Answers 6

8

Regex?

Example:

Regex.Replace("BA-0001-3", @"[A-Z]{2}-\d{4}-(\d+)", 
    m => (Convert.ToInt32(m.Groups[1].Value) + 1).ToString())
2
  • 3
    Not very helpful without an example. Oct 4, 2010 at 20:45
  • 5
    @Ed Swangren: from the current answer, sure. From the previous version, just a blurted reference - that's not good enough for SO. Oct 4, 2010 at 20:53
7

I would probably use my friend string.Split:

string oldString = "BA-0001-3";
string[] parts = oldString.Split('-');
parts[parts.Length-1] = (Convert.ToInt32(parts[parts.Length-1])+1).ToString();
string newString = string.Join("-", parts);

A small tweak that will perhaps make it quicker (by accessing parts.Length and subtracting 1 only once - didn't profile so it's purely a guess, and it is likely a marginal difference anyway), but above all more robust (by using int.TryParse):

string oldString = "BA-0001-3";
string[] parts = oldString.Split('-');
int number;
int lastIndex = parts.Length-1;
parts[lastIndex] = (int.TryParse(parts[lastIndex], out number) ? ++number : 1).ToString();
string newString = string.Join("-", parts);
6
  • I considered using .Split, but it just seemed a bit overpowered for this. Any thoughts on pros/cons of this approach?
    – morganpdx
    Oct 4, 2010 at 20:49
  • 1
    @morganpdx: Don't know if it's really a pro, but I like that it clearly decomposes the string into its "building blocks" and let you manipulate the pieces separately. This is highly subjective of course, but it my eyes it feels more precise than using SubString with offsets. Oct 4, 2010 at 20:52
  • 1
    I'd first go for Split() too. No messing around with char indexes in strings... With indexes it is easy to get off-by-one errors. If you need to do more than 1 000 000 a second, you can consider optimizing it.
    – user180326
    Oct 4, 2010 at 20:56
  • True, I can see the attraction :) And adding the int.TryParse definitely ups the cool factor...
    – morganpdx
    Oct 4, 2010 at 20:58
  • I like this solution, however after testing it doesn't increment the number. Any idea why?
    – morganpdx
    Oct 4, 2010 at 21:59
2

Updated per Ahmad Mageed's comments below. This is his answer much more than it is mine now :-)

I would do it the way you have it now, but for fun wanted to see if I could do it with linq.

var x = "BA-0001-3".Split('-');

var y = x.First() + "-" + x.ElementAt(1) + "-" + (Convert.ToInt32(x.Last()) + 1);

This works in LINQPad.

Edit: Obviously I'm not a pro with linq. Hopefully there will be other answers/comments on how this can be improved.

2
  • 1
    This works but can be tidied up a bit. There's no need for the AsEnumerable() call or the entire first LINQ query. Your code works just as well if you write: var x = "BA-0001-3".Split('-'); Also you can use First(), ElementAt(N), and Last() to avoid the Take/Skip/Single calls. That makes it a lot more compact, especially since we're working with a small amount of elements. Oct 4, 2010 at 21:03
  • very cool. I never would have thought to use LINQ. But then, i'm a complete linq newbie.
    – morganpdx
    Oct 4, 2010 at 21:09
1

Here's an example of how it could be done with RegEx:

public void Test()
{
    System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex rx = new Regex(@"(?<prefix>.*\-)(?<digit>\d+)");
    string input = "BA-0001-3";
    string output = string.Empty;

    int digit = 0;
    if (int.TryParse(rx.Replace(input, "${digit}"), out digit))
    {
        output = rx.Replace(input, "${prefix}" + (digit + 1));
    }
    Console.WriteLine(output);
}
0
1

Using the regex (which already seems to have now been filled in with more details) I end up with something like:

var regex = new Regex(@"^(?<Category>[A-Za-z]{1,2})-(?<Code>[0-9]{4})-(?<Number>[0-9]+)$");
var newCode = regex.Replace("BA-0001-3", new MatchEvaluator(ReplaceWithIncrementedNumber));

Where the MatchEvaluator function is:

public static string ReplaceWithIncrementedNumber(Match match)
{
    Debug.Assert(match.Success);
    var number = Int32.Parse(match.Groups["Number"].Value);
    return String.Format("{0}-{1}-{2}", match.Groups["Category"].Value, match.Groups["Code"].Value, number + 1);
}
0

Here is an example of a class that exposes the three parts of your "part number". Not particularly fancy (also note the absence of error checking/validation).

  class Program
  {
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
      PartNumber p1 = new PartNumber("BA-0001-3");
      for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++)
      {
        p1.Sub++;
        Debug.WriteLine(p1);
      }

      PartNumber p2 = new PartNumber("BA", 2, 3);
      for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++)
      {
        p2.Sub++;
        Debug.WriteLine(p2);
      }

    }
  }

  class PartNumber
  {
    public PartNumber(string make, int model, int sub)
    {
      Make = make;
      Model = model;
      Sub = sub;
    }

    public PartNumber(string part)
    {
      //Might want to validate the string here
      string [] fields = part.Split('-');

      //Are there 3 fields?  Are second and third fields valid ints?
      Make = fields[0];
      Model = Int32.Parse(fields[1]);
      Sub = Int32.Parse(fields[2]);
    }

    public string Make { get; set; }
    public int Model { get; set; }
    public int Sub { get; set; }

    public override string ToString()
    {
      return string.Format("{0}-{1:D4}-{2}", Make, Model, Sub);
    }
  }

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.