$Lstr Right: Difference between revisions
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<span class="pageSubtitle">Rightmost characters of a longstring</span> | <span class="pageSubtitle">Rightmost characters of a longstring</span> | ||
<p class="warn"><b>Note: </b> | <p class="warn"><b>Note: </b>Many $functions have been deprecated in favor of Object Oriented methods. The OO equivalent for the $Lstr_Right function is the <var>[[Right (String function)|Right]]</var> function.</p> | ||
This function takes a string or longstring input and produces the rightmost characters of the input, possibly padded to an indicated length. | This function takes a string or longstring input and produces the rightmost characters of the input, possibly padded to an indicated length. |
Latest revision as of 22:52, 20 September 2018
Rightmost characters of a longstring
Note: Many $functions have been deprecated in favor of Object Oriented methods. The OO equivalent for the $Lstr_Right function is the Right function.
This function takes a string or longstring input and produces the rightmost characters of the input, possibly padded to an indicated length.
The $Lstr_Right function accepts three arguments and returns a string result.
The first argument is an arbitrary string or longstring. This is a required argument.
The second argument is a number between 1 and 2**31-1 that indicates the result length. This is a required argument.
The third argument is a string containing a single character to be used as the pad character if the result length is longer than the string specified by argument one. This is an optional argument and defaults to a blank.
Syntax
%result = $Lstr_Right(longstring, len, pad)
%result is the rightmost characters of the input longstring, padded with the pad character if necessary.
Usage notes
- $Lstr_Right acts very much like $PAD except:
- The target length and pad character arguments are reversed.
- It cancels the request if the result target is too short to hold the result.
- It cancels the request if the pad character argument is longer than one byte.
- It can operate on LONGSTRING inputs.
- It produces a LONGSTRING output.
Examples
- To set %BIG to
all
:%BIG = $Lstr_Right('McGonagall', 3)
- To set %BIG to 290 question marks followed by
Dumbledore
:%BIG = $Lstr_Right('Dumbledore', 300, '?')