110

Is there a function to count the number of words in a string? For example:

str1 <- "How many words are in this sentence"

to return a result of 7.

1
  • 1
    str_count(temp$question1," ")+1 would be easy if you know each words are separated by space. It is under library stringr. May 27, 2017 at 17:29

20 Answers 20

82

Use the regular expression symbol \\W to match non-word characters, using + to indicate one or more in a row, along with gregexpr to find all matches in a string. Words are the number of word separators plus 1.

lengths(gregexpr("\\W+", str1)) + 1

This will fail with blank strings at the beginning or end of the character vector, when a "word" doesn't satisfy \\W's notion of non-word (one could work with other regular expressions, \\S+, [[:alpha:]], etc., but there will always be edge cases with a regex approach), etc. It is likely more efficient than strsplit solutions, which will allocate memory for each word. Regular expressions are described in ?regex.

Update As noted in the comments and in a different answer by @Andri the approach fails with (zero) and one-word strings, and with trailing punctuation

str1 = c("", "x", "x y", "x y!" , "x y! z")
lengths(gregexpr("[A-z]\\W+", str1)) + 1L
# [1] 2 2 2 3 3

Many of the other answers also fail in these or similar (e.g., multiple spaces) cases. I think my answer's caveat about 'notion of one word' in the original answer covers problems with punctuation (solution: choose a different regular expression, e.g., [[:space:]]+), but the zero and one word cases are a problem; @Andri's solution fails to distinguish between zero and one words. So taking a 'positive' approach to finding words one might

sapply(gregexpr("[[:alpha:]]+", str1), function(x) sum(x > 0))

Leading to

sapply(gregexpr("[[:alpha:]]+", str1), function(x) sum(x > 0))
# [1] 0 1 2 2 3

Again the regular expression might be refined for different notions of 'word'.

I like the use of gregexpr() because it's memory efficient. An alternative using strsplit() (like @user813966, but with a regular expression to delimit words) and making use of the original notion of delimiting words is

lengths(strsplit(str1, "\\W+"))
# [1] 0 1 2 2 3

This needs to allocate new memory for each word that is created, and for the intermediate list-of-words. This could be relatively expensive when the data is 'big', but probably it's effective and understandable for most purposes.

5
  • str1 <- c('s ss sss ss', "asdf asd hello this is your life!"); sapply(gregexpr("\\W+", str1), length) + 1 returns 4 and 8. First correct, second one too many. I think it is counting the punctuation. May 15, 2015 at 0:49
  • I think it is counting the punctuation at the end of the sentence. Pretty sure you would want to tell regex to ignore start and end matches (sorry no good with it or I would fix it myself). May 15, 2015 at 0:58
  • sapply(gregexpr("\\W+", "word"), length) + 1 returns 2
    – jaycode
    May 16, 2015 at 8:57
  • Thanks @fsmart -- I think the concern about punctuation is covered by the disclaimer about 'notion of non-word' in the original answer. I've updated the response. May 18, 2015 at 13:44
  • Thanks @jaycode, the inability to count 1 (or zero) word inputs is a problem. I've updated the original answer. May 18, 2015 at 13:44
65

Most simple way would be:

require(stringr)
str_count("one,   two three 4,,,, 5 6", "\\S+")

... counting all sequences on non-space characters (\\S+).

But what about a little function that lets us also decide which kind of words we would like to count and which works on whole vectors as well?

require(stringr)
nwords <- function(string, pseudo=F){
  ifelse( pseudo, 
          pattern <- "\\S+", 
          pattern <- "[[:alpha:]]+" 
        )
  str_count(string, pattern)
}

nwords("one,   two three 4,,,, 5 6")
# 3

nwords("one,   two three 4,,,, 5 6", pseudo=T)
# 6
0
56

I use the str_count function from the stringr library with the escape sequence \w that represents:

any ‘word’ character (letter, digit or underscore in the current locale: in UTF-8 mode only ASCII letters and digits are considered)

Example:

> str_count("How many words are in this sentence", '\\w+')
[1] 7

Of all other 9 answers that I was able to test, only two (by Vincent Zoonekynd, and by petermeissner) worked for all inputs presented here so far, but they also require stringr.

But only this solution works with all inputs presented so far, plus inputs such as "foo+bar+baz~spam+eggs" or "Combien de mots sont dans cette phrase ?".

Benchmark:

library(stringr)

questions <-
  c(
    "", "x", "x y", "x y!", "x y! z",
    "foo+bar+baz~spam+eggs",
    "one,   two three 4,,,, 5 6",
    "How many words are in this sentence",
    "How  many words    are in this   sentence",
    "Combien de mots sont dans cette phrase ?",
    "
    Day after day, day after day,
    We stuck, nor breath nor motion;
    "
  )

answers <- c(0, 1, 2, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 7, 7, 12)

score <- function(f) sum(unlist(lapply(questions, f)) == answers)

funs <-
  c(
    function(s) sapply(gregexpr("\\W+", s), length) + 1,
    function(s) sapply(gregexpr("[[:alpha:]]+", s), function(x) sum(x > 0)),
    function(s) vapply(strsplit(s, "\\W+"), length, integer(1)),
    function(s) length(strsplit(gsub(' {2,}', ' ', s), ' ')[[1]]),
    function(s) length(str_match_all(s, "\\S+")[[1]]),
    function(s) str_count(s, "\\S+"),
    function(s) sapply(gregexpr("\\W+", s), function(x) sum(x > 0)) + 1,
    function(s) length(unlist(strsplit(s," "))),
    function(s) sapply(strsplit(s, " "), length),
    function(s) str_count(s, '\\w+')
  )

unlist(lapply(funs, score))

Output (11 is the maximum possible score):

6 10 10  8  9  9  7  6  6 11
6
  • 1
    This approach is excellent, but one issue that I still encounter with it is that it double-counts words that contain an apostrophe (e.g. "I'm" or "John's"). Is there any way to address this?
    – Thredolsen
    Mar 26, 2019 at 14:49
  • 3
    @Thredolsen if you are sure there won't be apostrophes that should be treated as word separators, you could use a character class '[\\w\']+' (can't test it, so xkcd.com/1638 may apply), otherwise I'm not sure if regex is powerful enough to handle it in general case :)
    – arekolek
    Mar 26, 2019 at 15:32
  • 1
    Not sure if that's a good assumption, but if there's always only one or two letters after the apostrophe, then '\\w+(\'\\w{1,2})?' could be a good solution.
    – arekolek
    Mar 26, 2019 at 15:52
  • Thank you. Both approaches work for the most part, but '[\\w\']+' appears to be better in my case, since some words contain more than 2 characters after an apostrophe (e.g.: o'clock). Related follow-up question: is there any way to also exclude cases where a colon is followed directly by a numeric character (e.g. count '10:15' as one word, rather than two)?
    – Thredolsen
    Mar 26, 2019 at 22:30
  • 2
    In this comment I'm going to be using plain regex syntax so examples are going to need some extra backslashes. To cover words like o'clock and friggin' you could do \w+('\w*)? (I don't know if there are words that start with apostrophe?). To additionally handle hours you could try to match them like \d?\d:\d\d|\w+('\w*)? or do something even more complicated depending on your needs. But this is less and less about R and more about how you define a word, so maybe you can post a separate question to cover your specific needs?
    – arekolek
    Mar 27, 2019 at 8:59
33

You can use strsplit and sapply functions

sapply(strsplit(str1, " "), length)
2
  • 3
    Just an update that you can now use the somewhat new lengths function in base R, which finds the length of each element: lengths(strsplot(str, " ")) May 13, 2019 at 0:49
  • this is very good the problem is when you have something like "word,word,word" in that case it will return 1 Dec 12, 2019 at 14:35
18
str2 <- gsub(' {2,}',' ',str1)
length(strsplit(str2,' ')[[1]])

The gsub(' {2,}',' ',str1) makes sure all words are separated by one space only, by replacing all occurences of two or more spaces with one space.

The strsplit(str,' ') splits the sentence at every space and returns the result in a list. The [[1]] grabs the vector of words out of that list. The length counts up how many words.

> str1 <- "How many words are in this     sentence"
> str2 <- gsub(' {2,}',' ',str1)
> str2
[1] "How many words are in this sentence"
> strsplit(str2,' ')
[[1]]
[1] "How"      "many"     "words"    "are"      "in"       "this"     "sentence"
> strsplit(str2,' ')[[1]]
[1] "How"      "many"     "words"    "are"      "in"       "this"     "sentence"
> length(strsplit(str2,' ')[[1]])
[1] 7
3
  • What about tabs, new lines or nonbreakable spaces? Feb 20, 2017 at 10:35
  • Way to resurrect a 5yr old answer! Use '\s' (in R, '\\s') to include any type of whitespace rather than ' '. Feb 20, 2017 at 23:19
  • I've got a notification about my answer and looked at others to improve them slightly :D Don't get mad! :) PS. I like math and coffee too! Feb 21, 2017 at 9:48
14

You can use str_match_all, with a regular expression that would identify your words. The following works with initial, final and duplicated spaces.

library(stringr)
s <-  "
  Day after day, day after day,
  We stuck, nor breath nor motion;
"
m <- str_match_all( s, "\\S+" )  # Sequences of non-spaces
length(m[[1]])
13

Try this function from stringi package

   require(stringi)
   > s <- c("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit.",
    +        "nibh augue, suscipit a, scelerisque sed, lacinia in, mi.",
    +        "Cras vel lorem. Etiam pellentesque aliquet tellus.",
    +        "")
    > stri_stats_latex(s)
        CharsWord CharsCmdEnvir    CharsWhite         Words          Cmds        Envirs 
              133             0            30            24             0             0 
2
  • 6
    @bartektartanusthat is some nice functionality!
    – John
    Mar 14, 2014 at 11:12
  • 5
    Thank you :) Check the rest of functions from this package! I'm sure you will find something interesting :) Any comments are welcomed! Mar 14, 2014 at 11:58
12

Also from stringi package, the straight forward function stri_count_words

stringi::stri_count_words(str1)
#[1] 7
8

You can use wc function in library qdap:

> str1 <- "How many words are in this sentence"
> wc(str1)
[1] 7
7

Try this

length(unlist(strsplit(str1," ")))
7

You can remove double spaces and count the number of " " in the string to get the count of words. Use stringr and rm_white {qdapRegex}

str_count(rm_white(s), " ") +1
7
require(stringr)
str_count(x,"\\w+")

will be fine with double/triple spaces between words

All other answers have issues with more than one space between the words.

5

The solution 7 does not give the correct result in the case there's just one word. You should not just count the elements in gregexpr's result (which is -1 if there where not matches) but count the elements > 0.

Ergo:

sapply(gregexpr("\\W+", str1), function(x) sum(x>0) ) + 1 
1
  • This will still have problems if str1 starts or ends with non-word characters. If that's a concern, this version will only look for spaces between words: sapply(gregexpr("\\b\\W+\\b", str, perl=TRUE), function(x) sum(x>0) ) + 1 Jul 1, 2013 at 16:23
4

require(stringr)

Define a very simple function

str_words <- function(sentence) {

  str_count(sentence, " ") + 1

}

Check

str_words(This is a sentence with six words)
2

Use nchar

if vector of strings is called x

(nchar(x) - nchar(gsub(' ','',x))) + 1

Find out number of spaces then add one

2

You could use stringr functions str_split() and boundary(), which will recognize the boundaries of words while ignoring punctuation and any extra spaces

sapply(str_split("It's 12 o'clock already", boundary("word")), length)
#[1] 4
sapply(str_split("  It's  >12  o'clock already ?! ", boundary("word")), length)
#[1] 4
1

With stringr package, one can also write a simple script that could traverse a vector of strings for example through a for loop.

Let's say

df$text

contains a vector of strings that we are interested in analysing. First, we add additional columns to the existing dataframe df as below:

df$strings    = as.integer(NA)
df$characters = as.integer(NA)

Then we run a for-loop over the vector of strings as below:

for (i in 1:nrow(df)) 
{
   df$strings[i]    = str_count(df$text[i], '\\S+') # counts the strings
   df$characters[i] = str_count(df$text[i])         # counts the characters & spaces
}

The resulting columns: strings and character will contain the counts of words and characters and this will be achieved in one-go for a vector of strings.

1

I've found the following function and regex useful for word counts, especially in dealing with single vs. double hyphens, where the former generally should not count as a word break, eg, well-known, hi-fi; whereas double hyphen is a punctuation delimiter that is not bounded by white-space--such as for parenthetical remarks.

txt <- "Don't you think e-mail is one word--and not two!" #10 words
words <- function(txt) { 
length(attributes(gregexpr("(\\w|\\w\\-\\w|\\w\\'\\w)+",txt)[[1]])$match.length) 
}

words(txt) #10 words

Stringi is a useful package. But it over-counts words in this example due to hyphen.

stringi::stri_count_words(txt) #11 words
0

Just for completeness, adding a quanteda solution. Will use the tricky example provided by @Soren that stumps stringi:

txt <- "Don't you think e-mail is one word--and not two!" #10 words
toks <- quanteda::tokens(txt, remove_punct = TRUE, 
                         remove_symbols = TRUE,
                         remove_numbers = TRUE)
ntoken(toks) #10
-1

There's a simple solution using split and len:

text = 'This is a test for counting words'

# default separator: space
result = len(text.split())

print("There are " + str(result) + " words.")

You can get more details at https://www.delftstack.com/howto/python/python-count-words-in-string/

2
  • This question is in R but this solution uses Python.
    – Martin Gal
    Apr 5, 2022 at 22:15
  • Sorry, you are right! Apr 7, 2022 at 0:33

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