Description
Below is a function I created and have found extremely useful for splitting strings based on a particular delimiter. The implementation only requires STL which makes it easy to port to any OS that supports STL. The function is fairly lightweight although I haven't done extensive performance testing.
The delimiter can be n number of characters represented as a string. The parts of the string in between the delimiter are then put into a string vector. The class StringUtils
contains one static
function SplitString
. The int
returned is the number of delimiters found within the input string.
I used this utility mainly for parsing strings that were being passed across platform boundaries. Whether you are using raw sockets or middleware such as TIBCO� it is uncomplicated to pass string data. I found it more efficient to pass delimited string data verses repeated calls or messages. Another place I used this was in passing BSTR
s back and forth between a Visual Basic client and an ATL COM DLL. It proved to be easier than passing a SAFEARRAY
as an [in] or [out] parameter. This was also beneficial when I did not want the added overhead of MFC and hence could not use CString
.
Implementation
The SplitString
function uses the STL string functions find
and substr
to iterate through the input string. The hardest part was figuring out how to get the substring of the input string based on the offsets of the delimiter, not forgetting to take into account the length of the delimiter. Another hurdle was making sure not to call substr
with an offset greater than the length of the input string.
Header
#ifndef __STRINGUTILS_H_
#define __STRINGUTILS_H_
#include <string>
#include <vector>
using namespace std;
class StringUtils
{
public:
static int SplitString(const string& input,
const string& delimiter, vector<string>& results,
bool includeEmpties = true);
};
#endif
Source
int StringUtils::SplitString(const string& input,
const string& delimiter, vector<string>& results,
bool includeEmpties)
{
int iPos = 0;
int newPos = -1;
int sizeS2 = (int)delimiter.size();
int isize = (int)input.size();
if(
( isize == 0 )
||
( sizeS2 == 0 )
)
{
return 0;
}
vector<int> positions;
newPos = input.find (delimiter, 0);
if( newPos < 0 )
{
return 0;
}
int numFound = 0;
while( newPos >= iPos )
{
numFound++;
positions.push_back(newPos);
iPos = newPos;
newPos = input.find (delimiter, iPos+sizeS2);
}
if( numFound == 0 )
{
return 0;
}
for( int i=0; i <= (int)positions.size(); ++i )
{
string s("");
if( i == 0 )
{
s = input.substr( i, positions[i] );
}
int offset = positions[i-1] + sizeS2;
if( offset < isize )
{
if( i == positions.size() )
{
s = input.substr(offset);
}
else if( i > 0 )
{
s = input.substr( positions[i-1] + sizeS2,
positions[i] - positions[i-1] - sizeS2 );
}
}
if( includeEmpties || ( s.size() > 0 ) )
{
results.push_back(s);
}
}
return numFound;
}
Output using demo project
main.exe "|mary|had|a||little|lamb||" "|"
int SplitString(
const string& input,
const string& delimiter,
vector<string>& results,
bool includeEmpties = true
)
-------------------------------------------------------
input = |mary|had|a||little|lamb||
delimiter = |
return value = 8
results.size() = 9
results[0] = ''
results[1] = 'mary'
results[2] = 'had'
results[3] = 'a'
results[4] = ''
results[5] = 'little'
results[6] = 'lamb'
results[7] = ''
results[8] = ''
int SplitString(
const string& input,
const string& delimiter,
vector<string>& results,
bool includeEmpties = false
)
-------------------------------------------------------
input = |mary|had|a||little|lamb||
delimiter = |
return value = 8
results.size() = 5
results[0] = 'mary'
results[1] = 'had'
results[2] = 'a'
results[3] = 'little'
results[4] = 'lamb'
MFC version
For those of you who absolutely cannot use STL and are committed to MFC I made a few minor changes to the above implementation. It uses CString
instead of std::string
and a CStringArray
instead of a std::vector
:
int StringUtils::SplitString(const CString& input,
const CString& delimiter, CStringArray& results)
{
int iPos = 0;
int newPos = -1;
int sizeS2 = delimiter.GetLength();
int isize = input.GetLength();
CArray<INT, int> positions;
newPos = input.Find (delimiter, 0);
if( newPos < 0 ) { return 0; }
int numFound = 0;
while( newPos > iPos )
{
numFound++;
positions.Add(newPos);
iPos = newPos;
newPos = input.Find (delimiter, iPos+sizeS2+1);
}
for( int i=0; i <= positions.GetSize(); i++ )
{
CString s;
if( i == 0 )
s = input.Mid( i, positions[i] );
else
{
int offset = positions[i-1] + sizeS2;
if( offset < isize )
{
if( i == positions.GetSize() )
s = input.Mid(offset);
else if( i > 0 )
s = input.Mid( positions[i-1] + sizeS2,
positions[i] - positions[i-1] - sizeS2 );
}
}
if( s.GetLength() > 0 )
results.Add(s);
}
return numFound;
}
String neutral version
I added this version in case you might need to use it with any type of string. The only requirement is the string class must have a constructor that takes a char*
. The code only depends on the STL vector. I also added the option to not include empty strings in the results, which will occur if delimiters are adjacent:
template< typename StrT >
int split(const char* str, const char* delim,
vector<StrT>& results, bool empties = true)
{
char* pstr = const_cast<char*>(str);
char* r = NULL;
r = strstr(pstr, delim);
int dlen = strlen(delim);
while( r != NULL )
{
char* cp = new char[(r-pstr)+1];
memcpy(cp, pstr, (r-pstr));
cp[(r-pstr)] = '\0';
if( strlen(cp) > 0 || empties )
{
StrT s(cp);
results.push_back(s);
}
delete[] cp;
pstr = r + dlen;
r = strstr(pstr, delim);
}
if( strlen(pstr) > 0 || empties )
{
results.push_back(StrT(pstr));
}
return results.size();
}
String neutral usage
int i = 0;
vector<CString> results;
split("a-b-c--d-e-", "-", results);
for( i=0; i < results.size(); ++i )
{
cout << results[i].GetBuffer(0) << endl;
results[i].ReleaseBuffer();
}
vector<string> stdResults;
split("a-b-c--d-e-", "-", stdResults);
for( i=0; i < stdResults.size(); ++i )
{
cout << stdResults[i].c_str() << endl;
}
stdResults.clear();
split("a-b-c--d-e-", "-", stdResults, false);
for( i=0; i < stdResults.size(); ++i )
{
cout << stdResults[i].c_str() << endl;
}
Conclusion
Hope you find this as useful as I did. Feel free to let me know of any bugs or enhancements. Enjoy ;)