I have the following:
string test = "9586-202-10072"
How would I get all characters to the right of the final -
so 10072. The number of characters is always different to the right of the last dash.
How can this be done?
You can get the position of the last -
with str.LastIndexOf('-')
. So the next step is obvious:
var result = str.Substring(str.LastIndexOf('-') + 1);
Correction:
As Brian states below, using this on a string with no dashes will result in the original string being returned.
Additional:
Since the introduction of C# 8 you can rewrite the code to use range indicator:
var result = str[(str.LastIndexOf('-') + 1)..];
str
is null or if it doesn't contain a hyphen at all. (In the case where there's no hyphen it doesn't throw; it returns the entire source string.)
LastIndexOf
returns -1 if nothing is found (this is documented behavior, so it is safe to rely on it). str.Substring(1-1)
gives you a string equal to str
. No surprises, here.
You could use LINQ, and save yourself the explicit parsing:
string test = "9586-202-10072";
string lastFragment = test.Split('-').Last();
Console.WriteLine(lastFragment);
I can see this post was viewed over 46,000 times. I would bet many of the 46,000 viewers are asking this question simply because they just want the file name... and these answers can be a rabbit hole if you cannot make your substring verbatim using the at sign.
If you simply want to get the file name, then there is a simple answer which should be mentioned here. Even if it's not the precise answer to the question.
result = Path.GetFileName(fileName);
see https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.io.path.getfilename(v=vs.110).aspx
YourString.Substring(YourString.LastIndexOf("-"));
With the latest C#
8 and later you can use Range Indexer as follows:-
string test = "9586-202-10072"
var foo = test?[(test.LastIndexOf('-') + 1)..];
// foo is => 10072
string atest = "9586-202-10072";
int indexOfHyphen = atest.LastIndexOf("-");
if (indexOfHyphen >= 0)
{
string contentAfterLastHyphen = atest.Substring(indexOfHyphen + 1);
Console.WriteLine(contentAfterLastHyphen );
}
I created a string extension for this, hope it helps.
public static string GetStringAfterChar(this string value, char substring)
{
if (!string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(value))
{
var index = value.LastIndexOf(substring);
return index > 0 ? value.Substring(index + 1) : value;
}
return string.Empty;
}
test.Substring[(test.LastIndexOf('-') + 1)..]
C# 8 (late 2019) introduces range
operator and simplifies it a bit further. The two dots here means from the index (inclusive) till the end of string.
and... in case you need the left part of a string:
private string AllTheLeftPart(string theString)
{
string rightPart = theString.Substring(theString.LastIndexOf('-') + 1);
string leftPart theString.Replace("-" + rightPart, String.Empty);
return leftPart ;
}