0

I've created my own autocomplete feature and I've come across a bug I'd like to fix. Here's an example of an incomplete sentence I might want to autocomplete the final word for:

let text = 'Hello there, I am her'

In my functionality the user clicks ctrl + enter and it autcompletes the word with a suggestion displayed on the page. In this case let's say the suggestion is 'here'. Also my controller knows where the user is based on the insertion cursor (so I have the index).

If I use replace like so:

text.replace(word, suggestion);

(Where word is 'her' and suggestion is 'here') it will replace the first occurrence. Obviously there are endless combinations of where this word might be in the text, how do I replace one at a certain index in text string? I know I can do it through some messy if conditions, but is there an elegant way to do this?

(If it is relevant I am using angular keydown/keyup for this)

EDIT>>>>> This is not a duplicate on the question linked as in that case they are always replacing the last occurrence. If I did that then my program wouldn't support a user going back in their sentence and attempting to autocomplete a new word there

1

2 Answers 2

0

So, you have a position in a string and a number of characters to replace (=length of an incomplete word). In this case, would this work?

let text = 'appl and appl and appl'

function replaceAt(str, pos, len, replace) {
    return str.slice(0, pos) + replace + str.slice(pos + len);
}

console.log(replaceAt(text, 0, 4, 'apple'))
console.log(replaceAt(text, 9, 4, 'apple'))

2
  • This works great thanks! What I actually had was the index of the end of the word, but that's a quick fix. For some reason now if I replace one of the earlier occurrences it moves my insertion cursor to the end of the string, but that's a different (less important) issue...
    – DeejC
    Jan 5, 2018 at 12:21
  • DeejC while this answer is a good alternative, look @ split() and join() functions, they are extremely nice for string manipulations.
    – simon
    Jan 5, 2018 at 12:22
0

Gonna point you in a direction that should get you started.

let sentence = 'Hello lets replace all words like hello with Hi';
let fragments = sentence.split(' ');
for (let i=0; i<fragments.length; i++){
 if(fragments[i].toLowerCase() == 'hello')
   fragments[i] = 'Hi'
}
let formattedsentence = fragments.join(' ');
console.log(formattedsentence); //"Hi lets replace all words like Hi with Hi"
6
  • Think you would struggle to find the index of the fragments array you want if the array contains duplicate values? Would get a bit messy I think
    – DeejC
    Jan 5, 2018 at 12:22
  • Fragments will contain any index you want, its up to you to figure out which index to change. In this above case, I threw in a .toLowerCase() to also match against those as well. This is the additional logic you'd have to throw in the loop to extract what you want to modify, and what you dont.
    – simon
    Jan 5, 2018 at 12:24
  • In my case, it found 2 matches. If I didn't use .toLowerCase(), it would have only found 1.
    – simon
    Jan 5, 2018 at 12:25
  • If there were 2 instances of 'hello' and then you find 2 matches, how do you know which match to pick based off the index of the original sentence?
    – DeejC
    Jan 5, 2018 at 12:36
  • In my example, its going to pick whatever you specify. In that case it is 'hello' and any instance of 'hello', regardless if its uppercase or lower.
    – simon
    Jan 5, 2018 at 12:47

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.