The following are the basic methods of string splicing and segmentation, for reference only:
1. String splicing
The most basic method is to use '+' to "add" two strings, for example:
Java code
var name='Nicholas'+' '+'Conti';
console.log(name);//The result is: Nicolas Conti
If the string is too long or you want to splice it step by step, you can choose "+=" operator:
Java code
var str='Uncle'+'is'+'benevolent'+',';
str +='Love the people like a child '+', '+'The specialty is the ability to cry';
console.log(str)//The result is: The emperor's uncle is benevolent, loves the people like a son, and the specialty is the ability to cry
There is another The method is to use the concat() method:
Java code
var string='Yun Chang has a red face,';
string.concat('The beard is quite long, '+' is sure to be conceited ,'+'Unlucky will come sooner or later')//Result: Yun Chang is red-faced, conceited, unlucky will come sooner or later
In addition, the concat() method can also be used to splice arrays:
Java code
var array=['老','夫'];
var array2=['Fa','Da','Le'];
console.log(array.concat(array2)); //The result is: ['Lao','Fu','Fa','Da','Le']
Moreover, the concat() method will not change the original array, and the concatenation will form a new array;
It should also be noted that after concatenating strings, they are still strings, and after concatenating arrays, they are still arrays.
2. String splitting
The split() method has various usages:
We can split it in several different ways:
Java code
var string= 'I ate ten bowls today Face'
console.log(string.split(''));//Result ['I', ' ', 'Jin', ' ', 'Tian', ' ', 'eat', ' ', ' ', ' ', '十', ' ', 'bowl', ' ', 'noodles']
console.log(string.split(' '));//Result ['I', 'Jin' , 'day', 'eat', 'le', 'ten', 'bowl', 'noodles']
console.log(string.split());//Result ['I ate ten bowls today Face']
We can see that using an empty string will separate each character, using spaces to split the string by spaces, and not using parameters will divide the entire string into an array with only one string element. Note that no matter which splitting method is used, the result is an array.
Above we only used the first parameter of the split() method. When using it, you can change the first parameter in the brackets as needed to select the split position. In fact, the split() method also has a second parameter. , use the second parameter to specify the length of the array after splitting:
Java code
var string= 'I ate a bowl of noodles today'
console.log(string.split(' ',6) ); Result: ['I', 'Jin', 'Tian', 'Eat', 'Le', 'Bowl']
console.log(string);//I ate a bowl of noodles today
In addition, as you can see from the last line, the metastring will not be changed after splitting using the split() method.