391

I have this string:

0000000020C90037:TEMP:data

I need this string:

TEMP:data.

With PHP I would do this:

$str = '0000000020C90037:TEMP:data';
$arr = explode(':', $str);
$var = $arr[1].':'.$arr[2];

How do I effectively explode a string in JavaScript the way it works in PHP?

0

17 Answers 17

656

This is a direct conversion from your PHP code:

//Loading the variable
var mystr = '0000000020C90037:TEMP:data';

//Splitting it with : as the separator
var myarr = mystr.split(":");

//Then read the values from the array where 0 is the first
//Since we skipped the first element in the array, we start at 1
var myvar = myarr[1] + ":" + myarr[2];

// Show the resulting value
console.log(myvar);
// 'TEMP:data'
10
  • 77
    it should be noted that the array starts at [0]
    – Herr
    Jan 23, 2011 at 21:21
  • 55
    @Herr Kaleun... That is understood... But OP wanted the last two items in the array. Jan 24, 2011 at 14:34
  • 4
    +1: That's correct; here's a link from MDN: developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/…. And the "opposite" direction, so the PHP implode() equivalent is myArray.join(':'): developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/…
    – Sk8erPeter
    Mar 13, 2012 at 19:53
  • 15
    NOTE: split(delimiter,limit)'s limit parameter does NOT work the same as explode($delimiter,$string,$limit)'s limit parameter. Example: explode('.','1.2.3.4',3) === array('1','2','3.4') - while in Javascript, you'll get: '1.2.3.4'.split('.',3) === ['1', '2', '3']. Anyone know how to easily replicate PHP's method? Jan 24, 2013 at 4:02
  • 1
    I've added a code comments to clear up the array[0] stuff, could be confusing the newbies...
    – NDM
    Jul 5, 2013 at 11:35
54
String.prototype.explode = function (separator, limit)
{
    const array = this.split(separator);
    if (limit !== undefined && array.length >= limit)
    {
        array.push(array.splice(limit - 1).join(separator));
    }
    return array;
};

Should mimic PHP's explode() function exactly.

'a'.explode('.', 2); // ['a']
'a.b'.explode('.', 2); // ['a', 'b']
'a.b.c'.explode('.', 2); // ['a', 'b.c']
2
  • 11
    Kudos for being the ONLY one, as far as I can see, to provide an ACTUAL equivalent to PHP's explode functionality (as per the original question).
    – faazshift
    Jan 28, 2014 at 18:59
  • 2
    What a simple and elegant solution, I wish this was the accepted response.
    – soger
    Jul 7, 2016 at 14:35
48

You don't need to split. You can use indexOf and substr:

str = str.substr(str.indexOf(':')+1);

But the equivalent to explode would be split.

2
  • 7
    Someone probably thought you were being snarky. Sometimes you have to explain everything. Eg, "Your problem is best solved by 'indexOf' ...but 'split' answers your question literally." Oct 18, 2012 at 20:09
  • 1
    Downvoter: "How dare you provide a simpler and more performant solution instead of validating my preconceptions??"
    – jchook
    May 18, 2018 at 19:36
32

Looks like you want split

0
10

Try this:

arr = str.split (":");
7

create's an object :

// create a data object to store the information below.
    var data   = new Object();
// this could be a suffix of a url string. 
    var string = "?id=5&first=John&last=Doe";
// this will now loop through the string and pull out key value pairs seperated 
// by the & character as a combined string, in addition it passes up the ? mark
    var pairs = string.substring(string.indexOf('?')+1).split('&');
    for(var key in pairs)
    {
        var value = pairs[key].split("=");
        data[value[0]] = value[1];
    }

// creates this object 
    var data = {"id":"5", "first":"John", "last":"Doe"};

// you can then access the data like this
    data.id    = "5";
    data.first = "John";
    data.last  = "Doe";
1
  • 7
    Seems a little overkill, ty for the response tho May 4, 2012 at 14:59
6

Use String.split

"0000000020C90037:TEMP:data".split(':')

5

If you like php, take a look at php.JS - JavaScript explode

Or in normal JavaScript functionality: `

var vInputString = "0000000020C90037:TEMP:data";
var vArray = vInputString.split(":");
var vRes = vArray[1] + ":" + vArray[2]; `
5
  • I wanted to look at her, but only got messy JavaScript in front of me. Uhm, emptyArray = { 0: '' }? :-/ Dec 22, 2010 at 23:08
  • I have not said that it is the best solution, but it is a good solution if you're new to JavScript and is familiar with php. But there was a reason why I wrote another example. :) "Keep it simple stupid!";)
    – eriksv88
    Dec 22, 2010 at 23:13
  • That sounds reasonable, but I think one shouldn't want to transform one programming language in another; that could be misleading to newbie's who might think that OOP in JavaScript is like OOP in C++. Moreover, someone might simply copy-pasted the linked function and think that one has to define arrays that way. Dec 22, 2010 at 23:36
  • Yes, completely agree there! But it's not really getting the code into his hand. and that's it. If he knows php, so maybe he misses little things in php. It is best logic I am referring to the logic, not as a copy pastels solution, there is never a good solution! My experience is that the day of realizes that it has a lot to learn, that's when you are on the right track.
    – eriksv88
    Dec 22, 2010 at 23:44
  • +1 As far as I can see this is the only solution which functions the same as PHP. If the delimiter is not found the result is the original string explode('foo','bar'); // 'bar' This is the reason I arrived here and for my purposes a copy and paste script which I intend to use with limits is absolutely perfect. I don't have to get sidelined into creating my own. Why reinvent the wheel after all, k.i.s.s.
    – Andy Gee
    Oct 4, 2016 at 13:02
4

console.log(('0000000020C90037:TEMP:data').split(":").slice(1).join(':'))

outputs: TEMP:data

  • .split() will disassemble a string into parts
  • .join() reassembles the array back to a string
  • when you want the array without it's first item, use .slice(1)
1
  • This answer should have 554 upvotes, not the accepted answer. Also, for the past 3 years the accepted answer has been completely wrong, concatenating indices 0 and 1 when the OP asked for 1 and 2. Oct 31, 2018 at 15:18
2

With no intentions to critique John Hartsock, just in case the number of delimiters may vary for anyone using the given code, I would formally suggest to use this instead...

var mystr = '0000000020C90037:TEMP:data';
var myarr = mystr.split(":");
var arrlen = myarr.length;
var myvar = myarr[arrlen-2] + ":" + myarr[arrlen-1];
1
var str = '0000000020C90037:TEMP:data';    // str = "0000000020C90037:TEMP:data"
str = str.replace(/^[^:]+:/, "");          // str = "TEMP:data"
1
  • Very witty answer. I wonder how well it performs compared to a traditional split. Oct 31, 2018 at 15:20
1

Just a little addition to psycho brm´s answer (his version doesn't work in IE<=8). This code is cross-browser compatible:

function explode (s, separator, limit)
{
    var arr = s.split(separator);
    if (limit) {
        arr.push(arr.splice(limit-1, (arr.length-(limit-1))).join(separator));
    }
    return arr;
}
1

I used slice, split and join You can just write one line of code

      let arrys = (str.split(":").slice(1)).join(":");
0

So I know that this post is pretty old, but I figured I may as well add a function that has helped me over the years. Why not just remake the explode function using split as mentioned above? Well here it is:

function explode(str,begin,end)
{
   t=str.split(begin);
   t=t[1].split(end);
   return t[0];
}

This function works well if you are trying to get the values between two values. For instance:

data='[value]insertdataherethatyouwanttoget[/value]';

If you were interested in getting the information from between the two [values] "tags", you could use the function like the following.

out=explode(data,'[value]','[/value]');
//Variable out would display the string: insertdataherethatyouwanttoget

But let's say you don't have those handy "tags" like the example above displayed. No matter.

out=explode(data,'insert','wanttoget');
//Now out would display the string: dataherethatyou

Wana see it in action? Click here.

0
var str = "helloword~this~is~me";
var exploded = str.splice(~);

the exploded variable will return array and you can access elements of the array be accessing it true exploded[nth] where nth is the index of the value you want to get

1
  • 2
    This does not even work! splice accepts 2 digits and strings as parameters, not a ~ (this causes a syntax error). And splice is not for this purpose, it's to get/take out items from or add to an array.
    – CPHPython
    Aug 29, 2018 at 14:29
0

try like this,

ans = str.split (":");

And you can use two parts of the string like,

ans[0] and ans[1]

1
  • 2
    Perhaps explain how this differs from the accepted answer posted 8 years ago.
    – Lece
    Apr 18, 2018 at 10:40
0

If you want to defined your own function, try this:

function explode (delimiter, string, limit) {
  if (arguments.length < 2 ||
    typeof delimiter === 'undefined' ||
    typeof string === 'undefined') {
    return null
  }
  if (delimiter === '' ||
    delimiter === false ||
    delimiter === null) {
    return false
  }
  if (typeof delimiter === 'function' ||
    typeof delimiter === 'object' ||
    typeof string === 'function' ||
    typeof string === 'object') {
    return {
      0: ''
    }
  }
  if (delimiter === true) {
    delimiter = '1'
  }

  // Here we go...
  delimiter += ''
  string += ''

  var s = string.split(delimiter)

  if (typeof limit === 'undefined') return s

  // Support for limit
  if (limit === 0) limit = 1

  // Positive limit
  if (limit > 0) {
    if (limit >= s.length) {
      return s
    }
    return s
      .slice(0, limit - 1)
      .concat([s.slice(limit - 1)
        .join(delimiter)
      ])
  }

  // Negative limit
  if (-limit >= s.length) {
    return []
  }

  s.splice(s.length + limit)
  return s
}

Taken from: http://locutus.io/php/strings/explode/

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