How can I extract "456" from "xxx_456" where xxx is of indefinite length?
12 Answers
slice
works just fine in IE and other browsers, it's part of the specification and it's the most efficient method too:
alert("xxx_456".slice(-3));
//-> 456
slice Method (String) - MSDN
slice - Mozilla Developer Center
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2@user1429980 If with "reverse" you mean to remove the last three digits it is
"xxx_456".slice(0, -3)
– shudderNov 7, 2017 at 12:54
var str = "xxx_456"; var str_sub = str.substr(str.lastIndexOf("_")+1);
If it is not always three digits at the end (and seperated by an underscore). If the end delimiter is not always an underscore, then you could use regex:
var pat = /([0-9]{1,})$/; var m = str.match(pat);
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1+1 lastIndexOf is exactly what you want here, faster than regex and more flexible than substr.– Phil HMar 8, 2010 at 9:35
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7@Phil: not measurably faster, unless it's being called thousands of times. You'd need to call them millions of times before the difference would be noticeable.– outisMar 8, 2010 at 9:47
The substring method allows you to specify start and end index:
var str = "xxx_456";
var subStr = str.substring(str.length - 3, str.length);
you can just split it up and get the last element
var string="xxx_456";
var a=string.split("_");
alert(a[1]); #or a.pop
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1+1, I would have provided the split-pop method in my own answer if you hadn't mentioned it :-)– Andy EMar 8, 2010 at 10:04
Simple regex for any number of digits at the end of a string:
'xxx_456'.match(/\d+$/)[0]; //456
'xxx_4567890'.match(/\d+$/)[0]; //4567890
or use split/pop indeed:
('yyy_xxx_45678901').split(/_/).pop(); //45678901
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that was a clever :) a performance friendly method Nov 3, 2021 at 17:50
String.prototype.reverse( ) {
return Array.prototype.slice.call(this)
.reverse()
.join()
.replace(/,/g,'')
}
using a reverse string method
var str = "xxx_456"
str = str.reverse() // 654_xxx
str = str.substring(0,3) // 654
str = str.reverse() //456
if your reverse method returns the string then chain the methods for a cleaner solution.
A crazy regex approach
"xxx_456".match(/...$/)[0] //456
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could also be 'xxx_456'.match(/_.+$/)[0] or 'xxx_456'.replace(/(^.+_)(.+$)/,'$1')?– KooiIncMar 8, 2010 at 9:40
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1@Kooilnc: No need to overcomplicate regexes just because you can. Your first example would also match the
_
.– Andy EMar 8, 2010 at 10:07 -
@Andy E: you're right about the _. Second possibility: $1 should be $2 by the way.– KooiIncMar 8, 2010 at 12:17
here is my custom function
function reverse_substring(str,from,to){
var temp="";
var i=0;
var pos = 0;
var append;
for(i=str.length-1;i>=0;i--){
//alert("inside loop " + str[i]);
if(pos == from){
append=true;
}
if(pos == to){
append=false;
break;
}
if(append){
temp = str[i] + temp;
}
pos++;
}
alert("bottom loop " + temp);
}
var str = "bala_123";
reverse_substring(str,0,3);
This function works for reverse index.
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is this complex? i just implemented substring in reverse fashion. thats it. and this is for what the user asked from his title.– coderMar 8, 2010 at 10:31
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1
Also you can get the result by using substring
and lastIndexOf
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alert("xxx_456".substring("xxx_456".lastIndexOf("_")+1));
Although this is an old question, to support answer by user187291
In case of fixed length of desired substring I would use substr()
with negative argument for its short and readable syntax
"xxx_456".substr(-3)
For now it is compatible with common browsers and not yet strictly deprecated.
One way of extracting only the numbers
name = "xxx_456"
substring = reverse(reverse(name)[1:3])
substring