Java has a convenient split method:
String str = "The quick brown fox";
String[] results = str.split(" ");
Is there an easy way to do this in C++?
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Your simple case can easily be built using the |
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The Boost tokenizer class can make this sort of thing quite simple:
Updated for C++11:
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You can use streams, iterators, and the copy algorithm to do this fairly directly.
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Use strtok. In my opinion, there isn't a need to build a class around tokenizing unless strtok doesn't provide you with what you need. It might not, but in 15+ years of writing various parsing code in C and C++, I've always used strtok. Here is an example
A few caveats (which might not suit your needs). The string is "destroyed" in the process, meaning that EOS characters are placed inline in the delimter spots. Correct usage might require you to make a non-const version of the string. You can also change the list of delimiters mid parse. In my own opinion, the above code is far simpler and easier to use than writing a separate class for it. To me, this is one of those functions that the language provides and it does it well and cleanly. It's simply a "C based" solution. It's appropriate, it's easy, and you don't have to write a lot of extra code :-) |
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Another quick way is to use
If you want, you can make a simple |
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No offense folks, but for such a simple problem, you are making things way too complicated. There are a lot of reasons to use Boost. But for something this simple, it's like hitting a fly with a 20# sledge.
For example (for Doug's case),
And yes, we could have split() return a new vector rather than passing one in. It's trivial to wrap and overload. But depending on what I'm doing, I often find it better to re-use pre-existing objects rather than always creating new ones. (Just as long as I don't forget to empty the vector in between!) Reference: http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/string/string/. (I was originally writing a response to Doug's question: C++ Strings Modifying and Extracting based on Separators (closed). But since Martin York closed that question with a pointer over here... I'll just generalize my code.) |
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Boost has a strong split function: boost::algorithm::split. |
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I know you asked for a C++ solution, but you might consider this helpful: Qt
The advantage over Boost in this example is that it's a direct one to one mapping to your post's code. See more at Qt documentation |
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Here is a sample tokenizer class that might do what you want
Example:
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Here's a real simple one:
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If you're willing to use C, you can use the strtok function. You should pay attention to multi-threading issues when using it. |
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Check this example. It might help you..
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pystring is a small library which implements a bunch of Python's string functions, including the split method:
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For simple stuff I just use the following:
Cowardly disclaimer: I write real-time data processing software where the data comes in through binary files, sockets, or some API call (I/O cards, camera's). I never use this function for something more complicated or time-critical than reading external configuration files on startup. |
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You can simply use a regular expression library and solve that using regular expressions. Use expression (\w+) and the variable in \1 (or $1 depending on the library implementation of regular expressions). |
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Many overly complicated suggestions here. Try this simple std::string solution:
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Here's an approach that allows you control over whether empty tokens are included (like strsep) or excluded (like strtok).
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I thought that was what the
EDIT: oops! that should have been:
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MFC/ATL has a very nice tokenizer. From MSDN:
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There is no direct way to do this. Refer this code project source code to find out how to build a class for this. |
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If the maximum length of the input string to be tokenized is known, one can exploit this and implement a very fast version. I am sketching the basic idea below, which was inspired by both strtok() and the "suffix array"-data structure described Jon Bentley's "Programming Perls" 2nd edition, chapter 15. The C++ class in this case only gives some organization and convenience of use. The implementation shown can be easily extended for removing leading and trailing whitespace characters in the tokens. Basically one can replace the separator characters with string-terminating '\0'-characters and set pointers to the tokens withing the modified string. In the extreme case when the string consists only of separators, one gets string-length plus 1 resulting empty tokens. It is practical to duplicate the string to be modified. Header file:
Implementattion file:
A scenario of usage would be:
output:
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you can take advantage of boost::make_find_iterator. Something similar to this:
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This a simple loop to tokenise with only standard library files
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A simple Visual C++ version using System::String
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