5

In a C++ code, I'm trying to search for a word in a sentence but it keeps doing partial search. I want it to search only for the complete word not parts of it too, any help?

size_t kk;
string word="spo";
string sentence="seven spoons";

kk=sentence.find(word);
if (kk !=string::npos)
cout << "something" << endl;
0

6 Answers 6

14

It sounds like what you want is handled by the concept of word boundaries or word characters in regular expressions.

Here's a program that will return only a complete match. That is, it will only return a word if that word completely matches the exact word you're searching for. If some word in sentence has your target word as a strict substring then it will not be returned.

#include <regex>
#include <string>
#include <iostream>

int main() {
  std::string word = "spo"; // spo is a word?
  std::string sentence = "seven spoons";

  std::regex r("\\b" + word + "\\b"); // the pattern \b matches a word boundary
  std::smatch m;

  if (std::regex_search(sentence, m, r)) { // this won't find anything because 'spoons' is not the word you're searching for
    std::cout << "match 1: " << m.str() << '\n';
  }

  sentence = "what does the word 'spo' mean?";    
  if (std::regex_search(sentence, m, r)) { // this does find the word 'spo'
    std::cout << "match 2: " << m.str() << '\n';
  }
}

Or alternatively maybe you mean you want to find any word that matches a partial word you're searching for. regex can do that as well:

  std::string partial_word = "spo";
  std::regex r("\\w*" + partial_word + "\\w*"); // the pattern \w matches a word character

This produces:

match 1: spoons
match 2: spo
4
  • What if the search word were "seven" (which is there, but doesn't have a space before it) or "spoons" (which is there, but doesn't have a space after it)? Mar 19, 2014 at 20:33
  • @FredLarson The definition of word boundaries accounts for that. It works.
    – bames53
    Mar 19, 2014 at 20:34
  • Ah, gotcha. +1 for you. Mar 19, 2014 at 20:38
  • what if I want to exclude full words that are inside of a string i.e surrounded by doubly or singly quotes Jan 2, 2023 at 22:25
5

There are a bunch of options here:

a) Search for [space]WORD[space] instead of just WORD

string word="spo";
string sentence="seven spoons";
kk=sentence.find(" "+word+" ");

Note that this wont work, if your words are separated by newline characters or other white spaces.

b) Split the string into words, store them in a vector, and check if the desired word is somewhere in the vector, by using std::find.

stringstream parser(sentence);
istream_iterator<string> start(parser);
istream_iterator<string> end;

vector<string> words(start, end);
if(find(words.begin(), words.end(), word)!=words.end()) cout<<"found!";

If you're gonna search for words often, this maybe the best choice, since you can store the vector somewhere for future reference, so you don't have to split it. Also - if you want this to work, be sure to #include <algorithm> and #include <vector>.

c) Search for the word and check if isspace(string[position-1]) && isspace(string[position+wordLength])

string word="spo";
string sentence="seven spoons";
kk=sentence.find(" "+word+" ");
if(kk!=string::npos){
    if((kk==0 || isspace(sentence[kk-1])) && (kk+word.length()==sentence.length() || isspace(kk+word.length()+1)))
       cout << "found!";
}
1
  • Nice and practial answer! Even it was years ago, answer c) contains a mistake. It should be: if((kk==0 || isspace(sentence[kk-1])) && (kk+word.length()==sentence.length() || isspace(sentence[kk+word.length()])))
    – mrzo
    Jul 8, 2021 at 12:41
2

Something like this :

std::size_t kk;
std::string word="spoo";
std::string sentence="seven spoons tables";

std::stringstream ss(sentence) ;
std::istream_iterator<std::string> f ;

auto it =std::find_if(  std::istream_iterator<std::string> (ss),
                        f,
                        [=](const std::string& str){
                        return str == word;
                        }
 );

if(it != f )
 std::cout << "Success" <<std::endl;

See here

1

I think the best way is to split your string using whitespace and punctuation characters as delimiters, then use std::find on the result.

#include <boost/algorithm/string.hpp>
#include <vector>
#include <string>
#include <algorithm>

int main()
{
    std::string word="spo";
    std::string sentence="seven spoons";
    std::vector<std::string> words;
    boost::split(words, sentence, boost::is_any_of("\n\t .,!?\"()"));
    auto match = std::find(begin(words), end(words), word);
    if (match != end(words))
    {
        // Found it!
    }
    else
    {
        // Not there.
    }
 }
1
string word="spo";  
string sentence="seven spoons";  

string::size_type nIndex = sentence.find( word, 0 );  
if( nIndex != string::npos )  
{  
if ((nIndex + word.length() + 1) == sentence.length())  
{  
    cout << "Found" << endl;  
}  
else  
{  
string::size_type nSpace = sentence.find( " ", nIndex );  
if (nSpace == (nIndex + word.length()))  
{  
cout << "Found" << endl;  
}  
}  
}  
else  
{  
cout << "No Match" << endl;  
}  
-1

This seems to have worked.

#include <string>

/*find word in sentence and return the index of first occurrence*/
int find_whole(string sentence,string word){
    size_t pos=sentence.find(word);
    size_t offset=pos+sentence.size()+1;

    if((pos!=string::npos) && (sentence.substr(pos,offset)==word))
        return pos;
    return string::npos;
}
0

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.