Empty string: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:String manipulation]] |
[[Category:String manipulation]] |
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=={{header|C}}== |
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In C the strings are <code>char</code> pointers. A string terminates with null char '\0', which is not considered part of the string. Thus an empty string is "\0", while a null string is a null pointer which points to nothing. |
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<lang C>/* to test a null string */ |
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if (str) { ... } |
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/* to test if string is empty */ |
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if (str[0] == '\0') { ... } |
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/* or equivelantly use strlen function */ |
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if (strlen(str) == 0) { ... } |
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/* or compare to a known empty string, same thing. "== 0" means strings are equal */ |
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if (strcmp(str, "") == 0) { ... } |
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</lang> |
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=={{header|D}}== |
=={{header|D}}== |
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D treats null strings and empty strings as equal on the value level, but different on object level. You |
D treats null strings and empty strings as equal on the value level, but different on object level. You |
Revision as of 23:16, 4 July 2011
Some languages have syntax or semantics for dealing specifically with empty strings.
The task is to:
- Demonstrate how to assign an empty string to a variable.
- Demonstrate how to check that a string is empty
- Demonstrate how to check that a string is not empty.
C
In C the strings are char
pointers. A string terminates with null char '\0', which is not considered part of the string. Thus an empty string is "\0", while a null string is a null pointer which points to nothing.
<lang C>/* to test a null string */
if (str) { ... }
/* to test if string is empty */
if (str[0] == '\0') { ... }
/* or equivelantly use strlen function */
if (strlen(str) == 0) { ... }
/* or compare to a known empty string, same thing. "== 0" means strings are equal */
if (strcmp(str, "") == 0) { ... }
</lang>
D
D treats null strings and empty strings as equal on the value level, but different on object level. You need to take this into account when checking for empty. <lang d>void main(){
string s1 = null; string s2 = ""; // the content is the same assert(!s1.length); assert(!s2.length); assert(s1 == "" && s1 == null); assert(s2 == "" && s2 == null); assert(s1 == s2);
// but they don't point to the same memory region assert(s1 is null && s1 !is ""); assert(s2 is "" && s2 !is null); assert(s1 !is s2); assert(s1.ptr == null); assert(*s2.ptr == '\0'); assert(isEmpty(s1)); assert(isEmptyNotNull(s2));
}
bool isEmpty(string s) {
return !s.length;
}
bool isEmptyNotNull(string s) {
return s is "";
}</lang>
Java
String.isEmpty()
is part of Java 1.6. Other options for previous versions are noted.
<lang java5>String s = "";
if(s != null && s.isEmpty()){//optionally, instead of "s.isEmpty()": "s.length() == 0" or "s.equals("")"
System.out.println("s is empty");
}else{
System.out.println("s is not empty");
}</lang>
Perl 6
In Perl 6 we can't just test a string for truth to determine if it has a value. The string "0" will test as false even though it has a value. Instead we must test for length.
<lang perl6>my $s = ; say 'String is empty' unless $s.chars; say 'String is not empty' if $s.chars;</lang>
Python
<lang python>s = if not s:
print('String s is empty.')
if s:
print('String s is not empty.')</lang>