Too much information - list

I have this code running fine but then it shows too much information and I only want the last line in the code.
Code here:
import scala.io.Source
object CovidWorld {
def main(args: Array[String]): Unit = {
val filename = Source.fromFile("OOPAssignment3.txt")
try{
for (line <- filename.getLines.toList) {
if (line.contains("Malaysia") && line.split(",").apply(7).nonEmpty) {
val allDeathString: String = line.split(",").apply(7)
print("\n\n Malaysia latest total amount of death: " + allDeathString)
}
}
}
finally{
filename.close
//print("\nThe file is now closed")
}
}
}
This is the result I obtain from it.result of the running code
I just want the last line of the information instead of the entire thing. Anyone can figure out how? Thanks in advance for the help :)

You can replace the inside of your try block with:
filename
.getLines
.filter(line => line.contains("Malaysia") && line.split(",").apply(7).nonEmpty)
.toList
.takeRight(1)
.foreach(line => {
val allDeathString: String = line.split(",").apply(7)
print("\n\n Malaysia latest total amount of death: " + allDeathString)
})
The key part for your purposes is takeRight which selects n elements from the end of the list. When n == 1 you're taking only the last match which is what you want here.

Related

Typescript regex exclude whole string if followed by specific string

I'm been running into weird issues with regex and Typescript in which I'm trying to have my expression replace the value of test minus the first instance if followed by test. In other words, replace the first two lines that have test but for the third line below, replace only the second value of test.
[test]
[test].[db]
[test].[test]
Where it should look like:
[newvalue]
[newvalue].[db]
[test].[newvalue]
I've come up with lots of variations but this is the one that I thought was simple enough to solve it and regex101 can confirm this works:
\[(\w+)\](?!\.\[test\])
But when using Typescript (custom task in VSTS build), it actually replaces the values like this:
[newvalue]
[newvalue].[db]
[newvalue].[test]
Update: It looks like a regex like (test)(?!.test) breaks when changing the use cases removing the square brackets, which makes me think this might be somewhere in the code. Could the problem be with the index that the value is replaced at?
Some of the code in Typescript that is calling this:
var filePattern = tl.getInput("filePattern", true);
var tokenRegex = tl.getInput("tokenRegex", true);
for (var i = 0; i < files.length; i++) {
var file = files[i];
console.info(`Starting regex replacement in [${file}]`);
var contents = fs.readFileSync(file).toString();
var reg = new RegExp(tokenRegex, "g");
// loop through each match
var match: RegExpExecArray;
// keep a separate var for the contents so that the regex index doesn't get messed up
// by replacing items underneath it
var newContents = contents;
while((match = reg.exec(contents)) !== null) {
var vName = match[1];
// find the variable value in the environment
var vValue = tl.getVariable(vName);
if (typeof vValue === 'undefined') {
tl.warning(`Token [${vName}] does not have an environment value`);
} else {
newContents = newContents.replace(match[0], vValue);
console.info(`Replaced token [${vName }]`);
}
}
}
Full code is for the task I'm using this with: https://github.com/colindembovsky/cols-agent-tasks/blob/master/Tasks/ReplaceTokens/replaceTokens.ts
For me this regex is working like you are expecting:
\[(test)\](?!\.\[test\])
with a Typescript code like that
myString.replace(/\[(test)\](?!\.\[test\])/g, "[newvalue]");
Instead, the regex you are using should replace also the [db] part.
I've tried with this code:
class Greeter {
myString1: string;
myString2: string;
myString3: string;
greeting: string;
constructor(str1: string, str2: string, str3: string) {
this.myString1 = str1.replace(/\[(test)\](?!\.\[test\])/g, "[newvalue]");
this.myString2 = str2.replace(/\[(test)\](?!\.\[test\])/g, "[newvalue]");
this.myString3 = str3.replace(/\[(test)\](?!\.\[test\])/g, "[newvalue]");
this.greeting = this.myString1 + "\n" + this.myString2 + "\n" + this.myString3;
}
greet() {
return "Hello, these are your replacements:\n" + this.greeting;
}
}
let greeter = new Greeter("[test]", "[test].[db]", "[test].[test]");
let button = document.createElement('button');
button.textContent = "Say Hello";
button.onclick = function() {
alert(greeter.greet());
}
document.body.appendChild(button);
Online playground here.

Evaluate es6 template literals without eval() and new Function [duplicate]

Is it possible to create a template string as a usual string,
let a = "b:${b}";
and then convert it into a template string,
let b = 10;
console.log(a.template()); // b:10
without eval, new Function and other means of dynamic code generation?
In my project I've created something like this with ES6:
String.prototype.interpolate = function(params) {
const names = Object.keys(params);
const vals = Object.values(params);
return new Function(...names, `return \`${this}\`;`)(...vals);
}
const template = 'Example text: ${text}';
const result = template.interpolate({
text: 'Foo Boo'
});
console.log(result);
As your template string must get reference to the b variable dynamically (in runtime), so the answer is: NO, it's impossible to do it without dynamic code generation.
But, with eval it's pretty simple:
let tpl = eval('`'+a+'`');
No, there is not a way to do this without dynamic code generation.
However, I have created a function which will turn a regular string into a function which can be provided with a map of values, using template strings internally.
Generate Template String Gist
/**
* Produces a function which uses template strings to do simple interpolation from objects.
*
* Usage:
* var makeMeKing = generateTemplateString('${name} is now the king of ${country}!');
*
* console.log(makeMeKing({ name: 'Bryan', country: 'Scotland'}));
* // Logs 'Bryan is now the king of Scotland!'
*/
var generateTemplateString = (function(){
var cache = {};
function generateTemplate(template){
var fn = cache[template];
if (!fn){
// Replace ${expressions} (etc) with ${map.expressions}.
var sanitized = template
.replace(/\$\{([\s]*[^;\s\{]+[\s]*)\}/g, function(_, match){
return `\$\{map.${match.trim()}\}`;
})
// Afterwards, replace anything that's not ${map.expressions}' (etc) with a blank string.
.replace(/(\$\{(?!map\.)[^}]+\})/g, '');
fn = Function('map', `return \`${sanitized}\``);
}
return fn;
}
return generateTemplate;
})();
Usage:
var kingMaker = generateTemplateString('${name} is king!');
console.log(kingMaker({name: 'Bryan'}));
// Logs 'Bryan is king!' to the console.
Hope this helps somebody. If you find a problem with the code, please be so kind as to update the Gist.
What you're asking for here:
//non working code quoted from the question
let b=10;
console.log(a.template());//b:10
is exactly equivalent (in terms of power and, er, safety) to eval: the ability to take a string containing code and execute that code; and also the ability for the executed code to see local variables in the caller's environment.
There is no way in JS for a function to see local variables in its caller, unless that function is eval(). Even Function() can't do it.
When you hear there's something called "template strings" coming to JavaScript, it's natural to assume it's a built-in template library, like Mustache. It isn't. It's mainly just string interpolation and multiline strings for JS. I think this is going to be a common misconception for a while, though. :(
There are many good solutions posted here, but none yet which utilizes the ES6 String.raw method. Here is my contriubution. It has an important limitation in that it will only accept properties from a passed in object, meaning no code execution in the template will work.
function parseStringTemplate(str, obj) {
let parts = str.split(/\$\{(?!\d)[\wæøåÆØÅ]*\}/);
let args = str.match(/[^{\}]+(?=})/g) || [];
let parameters = args.map(argument => obj[argument] || (obj[argument] === undefined ? "" : obj[argument]));
return String.raw({ raw: parts }, ...parameters);
}
let template = "Hello, ${name}! Are you ${age} years old?";
let values = { name: "John Doe", age: 18 };
parseStringTemplate(template, values);
// output: Hello, John Doe! Are you 18 years old?
Split string into non-argument textual parts. See regex.
parts: ["Hello, ", "! Are you ", " years old?"]
Split string into property names. Empty array if match fails.
args: ["name", "age"]
Map parameters from obj by property name. Solution is limited by shallow one level mapping. Undefined values are substituted with an empty string, but other falsy values are accepted.
parameters: ["John Doe", 18]
Utilize String.raw(...) and return result.
TLDR:
https://jsfiddle.net/bj89zntu/1/
Everyone seems to be worried about accessing variables. Why not just pass them? I'm sure it won't be too hard to get the variable context in the caller and pass it down. Use
ninjagecko's answer to get the props from obj.
function renderString(str,obj){
return str.replace(/\$\{(.+?)\}/g,(match,p1)=>{return index(obj,p1)})
}
Here is the full code:
function index(obj,is,value) {
if (typeof is == 'string')
is=is.split('.');
if (is.length==1 && value!==undefined)
return obj[is[0]] = value;
else if (is.length==0)
return obj;
else
return index(obj[is[0]],is.slice(1), value);
}
function renderString(str,obj){
return str.replace(/\$\{.+?\}/g,(match)=>{return index(obj,match)})
}
renderString('abc${a}asdas',{a:23,b:44}) //abc23asdas
renderString('abc${a.c}asdas',{a:{c:22,d:55},b:44}) //abc22asdas
The issue here is to have a function that has access to the variables of its caller. This is why we see direct eval being used for template processing. A possible solution would be to generate a function taking formal parameters named by a dictionary's properties, and calling it with the corresponding values in the same order. An alternative way would be to have something simple as this:
var name = "John Smith";
var message = "Hello, my name is ${name}";
console.log(new Function('return `' + message + '`;')());
And for anyone using Babel compiler we need to create closure which remembers the environment in which it was created:
console.log(new Function('name', 'return `' + message + '`;')(name));
I liked s.meijer's answer and wrote my own version based on his:
function parseTemplate(template, map, fallback) {
return template.replace(/\$\{[^}]+\}/g, (match) =>
match
.slice(2, -1)
.trim()
.split(".")
.reduce(
(searchObject, key) => searchObject[key] || fallback || match,
map
)
);
}
Similar to Daniel's answer (and s.meijer's gist) but more readable:
const regex = /\${[^{]+}/g;
export default function interpolate(template, variables, fallback) {
return template.replace(regex, (match) => {
const path = match.slice(2, -1).trim();
return getObjPath(path, variables, fallback);
});
}
//get the specified property or nested property of an object
function getObjPath(path, obj, fallback = '') {
return path.split('.').reduce((res, key) => res[key] || fallback, obj);
}
Note: This slightly improves s.meijer's original, since it won't match things like ${foo{bar} (the regex only allows non-curly brace characters inside ${ and }).
UPDATE: I was asked for an example using this, so here you go:
const replacements = {
name: 'Bob',
age: 37
}
interpolate('My name is ${name}, and I am ${age}.', replacements)
#Mateusz Moska, solution works great, but when i used it in React Native(build mode), it throws an error: Invalid character '`', though it works when i run it in debug mode.
So i wrote down my own solution using regex.
String.prototype.interpolate = function(params) {
let template = this
for (let key in params) {
template = template.replace(new RegExp('\\$\\{' + key + '\\}', 'g'), params[key])
}
return template
}
const template = 'Example text: ${text}',
result = template.interpolate({
text: 'Foo Boo'
})
console.log(result)
Demo: https://es6console.com/j31pqx1p/
NOTE: Since I don't know the root cause of an issue, i raised a ticket in react-native repo, https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/14107, so that once they can able to fix/guide me about the same :)
You can use the string prototype, for example
String.prototype.toTemplate=function(){
return eval('`'+this+'`');
}
//...
var a="b:${b}";
var b=10;
console.log(a.toTemplate());//b:10
But the answer of the original question is no way.
I required this method with support for Internet Explorer. It turned out the back ticks aren't supported by even IE11. Also; using eval or it's equivalent Function doesn't feel right.
For the one that notice; I also use backticks, but these ones are removed by compilers like babel. The methods suggested by other ones, depend on them on run-time. As said before; this is an issue in IE11 and lower.
So this is what I came up with:
function get(path, obj, fb = `$\{${path}}`) {
return path.split('.').reduce((res, key) => res[key] || fb, obj);
}
function parseTpl(template, map, fallback) {
return template.replace(/\$\{.+?}/g, (match) => {
const path = match.substr(2, match.length - 3).trim();
return get(path, map, fallback);
});
}
Example output:
const data = { person: { name: 'John', age: 18 } };
parseTpl('Hi ${person.name} (${person.age})', data);
// output: Hi John (18)
parseTpl('Hello ${person.name} from ${person.city}', data);
// output: Hello John from ${person.city}
parseTpl('Hello ${person.name} from ${person.city}', data, '-');
// output: Hello John from -
I currently can't comment on existing answers so I am unable to directly comment on Bryan Raynor's excellent response. Thus, this response is going to update his answer with a slight correction.
In short, his function fails to actually cache the created function, so it will always recreate, regardless of whether it's seen the template before. Here is the corrected code:
/**
* Produces a function which uses template strings to do simple interpolation from objects.
*
* Usage:
* var makeMeKing = generateTemplateString('${name} is now the king of ${country}!');
*
* console.log(makeMeKing({ name: 'Bryan', country: 'Scotland'}));
* // Logs 'Bryan is now the king of Scotland!'
*/
var generateTemplateString = (function(){
var cache = {};
function generateTemplate(template){
var fn = cache[template];
if (!fn){
// Replace ${expressions} (etc) with ${map.expressions}.
var sanitized = template
.replace(/\$\{([\s]*[^;\s\{]+[\s]*)\}/g, function(_, match){
return `\$\{map.${match.trim()}\}`;
})
// Afterwards, replace anything that's not ${map.expressions}' (etc) with a blank string.
.replace(/(\$\{(?!map\.)[^}]+\})/g, '');
fn = cache[template] = Function('map', `return \`${sanitized}\``);
}
return fn;
};
return generateTemplate;
})();
Still dynamic but seems more controlled than just using a naked eval:
const vm = require('vm')
const moment = require('moment')
let template = '### ${context.hours_worked[0].value} \n Hours worked \n #### ${Math.abs(context.hours_worked_avg_diff[0].value)}% ${fns.gt0(context.hours_worked_avg_diff[0].value, "more", "less")} than usual on ${fns.getDOW(new Date())}'
let context = {
hours_worked:[{value:10}],
hours_worked_avg_diff:[{value:10}],
}
function getDOW(now) {
return moment(now).locale('es').format('dddd')
}
function gt0(_in, tVal, fVal) {
return _in >0 ? tVal: fVal
}
function templateIt(context, template) {
const script = new vm.Script('`'+template+'`')
return script.runInNewContext({context, fns:{getDOW, gt0 }})
}
console.log(templateIt(context, template))
https://repl.it/IdVt/3
I made my own solution doing a type with a description as a function
export class Foo {
...
description?: Object;
...
}
let myFoo:Foo = {
...
description: (a,b) => `Welcome ${a}, glad to see you like the ${b} section`.
...
}
and so doing:
let myDescription = myFoo.description('Bar', 'bar');
I came up with this implementation and it works like a charm.
function interpolateTemplate(template: string, args: any): string {
return Object.entries(args).reduce(
(result, [arg, val]) => result.replace(`$\{${arg}}`, `${val}`),
template,
)
}
const template = 'This is an example: ${name}, ${age} ${email}'
console.log(interpolateTemplate(template,{name:'Med', age:'20', email:'example#abc.com'}))
You could raise an error if arg is not found in template
This solution works without ES6:
function render(template, opts) {
return new Function(
'return new Function (' + Object.keys(opts).reduce((args, arg) => args += '\'' + arg + '\',', '') + '\'return `' + template.replace(/(^|[^\\])'/g, '$1\\\'') + '`;\'' +
').apply(null, ' + JSON.stringify(Object.keys(opts).reduce((vals, key) => vals.push(opts[key]) && vals, [])) + ');'
)();
}
render("hello ${ name }", {name:'mo'}); // "hello mo"
Note: the Function constructor is always created in the global scope, which could potentially cause global variables to be overwritten by the template, e.g. render("hello ${ someGlobalVar = 'some new value' }", {name:'mo'});
You should try this tiny JS module, by Andrea Giammarchi, from github :
https://github.com/WebReflection/backtick-template
/*! (C) 2017 Andrea Giammarchi - MIT Style License */
function template(fn, $str, $object) {'use strict';
var
stringify = JSON.stringify,
hasTransformer = typeof fn === 'function',
str = hasTransformer ? $str : fn,
object = hasTransformer ? $object : $str,
i = 0, length = str.length,
strings = i < length ? [] : ['""'],
values = hasTransformer ? [] : strings,
open, close, counter
;
while (i < length) {
open = str.indexOf('${', i);
if (-1 < open) {
strings.push(stringify(str.slice(i, open)));
open += 2;
close = open;
counter = 1;
while (close < length) {
switch (str.charAt(close++)) {
case '}': counter -= 1; break;
case '{': counter += 1; break;
}
if (counter < 1) {
values.push('(' + str.slice(open, close - 1) + ')');
break;
}
}
i = close;
} else {
strings.push(stringify(str.slice(i)));
i = length;
}
}
if (hasTransformer) {
str = 'function' + (Math.random() * 1e5 | 0);
if (strings.length === values.length) strings.push('""');
strings = [
str,
'with(this)return ' + str + '([' + strings + ']' + (
values.length ? (',' + values.join(',')) : ''
) + ')'
];
} else {
strings = ['with(this)return ' + strings.join('+')];
}
return Function.apply(null, strings).apply(
object,
hasTransformer ? [fn] : []
);
}
template.asMethod = function (fn, object) {'use strict';
return typeof fn === 'function' ?
template(fn, this, object) :
template(this, fn);
};
Demo (all the following tests return true):
const info = 'template';
// just string
`some ${info}` === template('some ${info}', {info});
// passing through a transformer
transform `some ${info}` === template(transform, 'some ${info}', {info});
// using it as String method
String.prototype.template = template.asMethod;
`some ${info}` === 'some ${info}'.template({info});
transform `some ${info}` === 'some ${info}'.template(transform, {info});
Faz assim (This way):
let a = 'b:${this.b}'
let b = 10
function template(templateString, templateVars) {
return new Function('return `' + templateString + '`').call(templateVars)
}
result.textContent = template(a, {b})
<b id=result></b>
Since we're reinventing the wheel on something that would be a lovely feature in javascript.
I use eval(), which is not secure, but javascript is not secure. I readily admit that I'm not excellent with javascript, but I had a need, and I needed an answer so I made one.
I chose to stylize my variables with an # rather than an $, particularly because I want to use the multiline feature of literals without evaluating til it's ready. So variable syntax is #{OptionalObject.OptionalObjectN.VARIABLE_NAME}
I am no javascript expert, so I'd gladly take advice on improvement but...
var prsLiteral, prsRegex = /\#\{(.*?)(?!\#\{)\}/g
for(i = 0; i < myResultSet.length; i++) {
prsLiteral = rt.replace(prsRegex,function (match,varname) {
return eval(varname + "[" + i + "]");
// you could instead use return eval(varname) if you're not looping.
})
console.log(prsLiteral);
}
A very simple implementation follows
myResultSet = {totalrecords: 2,
Name: ["Bob", "Stephanie"],
Age: [37,22]};
rt = `My name is #{myResultSet.Name}, and I am #{myResultSet.Age}.`
var prsLiteral, prsRegex = /\#\{(.*?)(?!\#\{)\}/g
for(i = 0; i < myResultSet.totalrecords; i++) {
prsLiteral = rt.replace(prsRegex,function (match,varname) {
return eval(varname + "[" + i + "]");
// you could instead use return eval(varname) if you're not looping.
})
console.log(prsLiteral);
}
In my actual implementation, I choose to use #{{variable}}. One more set of braces. Absurdly unlikely to encounter that unexpectedly. The regex for that would look like /\#\{\{(.*?)(?!\#\{\{)\}\}/g
To make that easier to read
\#\{\{ # opening sequence, #{{ literally.
(.*?) # capturing the variable name
# ^ captures only until it reaches the closing sequence
(?! # negative lookahead, making sure the following
# ^ pattern is not found ahead of the current character
\#\{\{ # same as opening sequence, if you change that, change this
)
\}\} # closing sequence.
If you're not experienced with regex, a pretty safe rule is to escape every non-alphanumeric character, and don't ever needlessly escape letters as many escaped letters have special meaning to virtually all flavors of regex.
You can refer to this solution
const interpolate = (str) =>
new Function(`return \`${new String(str)}\`;`)();
const foo = 'My';
const obj = {
text: 'Hanibal Lector',
firstNum: 1,
secondNum: 2
}
const str = "${foo} name is : ${obj.text}. sum = ${obj.firstNum} + ${obj.secondNum} = ${obj.firstNum + obj.secondNum}";
console.log(interpolate(str));
I realize I am late to the game, but you could:
const a = (b) => `b:${b}`;
let b = 10;
console.log(a(b)); // b:10

Struggling with simple Groovy List operations

I've abstracted a very simple situation here, in which I want to pass a list of strings into my cleanLines function and get a list of strings back out. Unfortunately, I'm new to Groovy and I've spent about a day trying to get this to work with no avail. Here's a stand-alone test that exhibits the problem I'm having:
import static org.junit.Assert.*;
import java.util.List;
import org.junit.Test;
class ConfigFileTest {
private def tab = '\t'
private def returnCarriage = '\r'
private def equals = '='
List <String> cleanLines(List <String> lines) {
lines = lines.collect(){it.findAll(){c -> c != tab && c != returnCarriage}}
lines = lines.findAll(){it.contains(equals)}
lines = lines.collect{it.trim()}
}
#Test
public void test() {
List <String> dirtyLines = [" Colour=Red",
"Shape=Square "]
List <String> cleanedLines = ["Colour=Red",
"Shape=Square"]
assert cleanLines(dirtyLines) == cleanedLine
}
}
I believe that I've followed the correct usage for collect(), findAll() and trim(). But when I run the test, it crashes on the trim() line stating
groovy.lang.MissingMethodException: No signature of method:
java.util.ArrayList.trim() is applicable for argument types: ()
values: []
. Something's suspicious.
I've been staring at this for too long and noticed that my IDE thinks the type of my first lines within the cleanLines function is List<String>, but that by the second line it has type Collection and by the third it expects type List<Object<E>>. I think that String is an Object and so this might be okay, but it certainly hints at a misunderstanding on my part. What am I doing wrong? How can I get my test to pass here?
Here's a corrected script:
import groovy.transform.Field
#Field
def tab = '\t'
#Field
def returnCarriage = '\r'
#Field
def equals = '='
List <String> cleanLines(List <String> lines) {
lines = lines.findAll { it.contains(equals) }
lines = lines.collect { it.replaceAll('\\s+', '') }
lines = lines.collect { it.trim() }
}
def dirtyLines = [" Colour=Red",
"Shape=Square "]
def cleanedLines = ["Colour=Red", "Shape=Square"]
assert cleanLines(dirtyLines) == cleanedLines
In general findAll and collect are maybe not mutually exclusive but have different purposes. Use findAll to find elements that matches certain criteria, whereas collect when you need to process/transform the whole list.
this line
lines = lines.collect(){it.findAll(){c -> c != tab && c != returnCarriage}}`
replaces the original list of Strings with the list of lists. Hence NSME for ArrayList.trim(). You might want to replace findAll{} with find{}
You can clean the lines like this:
def dirtyLines = [" Colour=Red", "Shape=Square "]
def cleanedLines = ["Colour=Red", "Shape=Square"]
assert dirtyLines.collect { it.trim() } == cleanedLines
If you separate the first line of cleanLines() into two separate lines and print lines after each, you will see the problem.
it.findAll { c -> c != tab && c != returnCarriage }
will return a list of strings that match the criteria. The collect method is called on every string in the list of lines. So you end up with a list of lists of strings. I think what you are looking for is something like this:
def cleanLines(lines) {
return lines.findAll { it.contains(equals) }
.collect { it.replaceAll(/\s+/, '') }
}

AS3 and HTML5 - parse string into array using regex

I've been looking and playing with RegEx for a while now and am trying to find this solution that I can apply to both AS3 and to HTML5.
I've got a custom user entry section, 256 chars that they can customize.
What I would like is for them to use my predefined table of codes 00 - 99 and they can insert them into the box to automatically generate a response that can go through a few hundred examples.
Here is a simple example:
Please call: 04
And ask for help for product ID:
03
I'd be able to take this and say, okay i got the following into an array:
[Please call: ]
[04]
[/n]
[And ask for help for product ID: ]
[/n]
[03]
and possibly apply a flag to say whether this is a database entry or not
[Please call: ][false]
[04][true]
[/n][false]
[And ask for help for product ID: ][false]
[/n][false]
[03][true]
this would be something that my program could read. Where I know that for the ## matches, to find a database entry and insert, though for anything else, use the strings.
I have been playing around on
http://gskinner.com/RegExr/
to try and brute force an answer to no avail so far.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
The best I've come up with so far for matches is the following. Though this is my first time playing with the regex functions and would need to find out how to push these entries into my ordered array.
\d\d
\D+
And would need some way to combine them to pull an array... or I'll be stuck with a crappy loop:
//AS3 example
database_line_item:int = 127;
previous_value_was_int:boolean = false;
_display_text:string = "";
for(var i:int = 0; i < string.length; i++){
if(string.charAt(i) is int){
if(previous_value_was_in){
previous_value_was_int = true;
}else{
_display_text += getDatabaseValue(string.charAt(i-1)+string.charAt(i), database_line_item);
previous_value_was_int = false;
}
}else{
//Hopefully this handles carriage returns, if not, will have to add that in.
_display_text += string.charAt(i);
}
}
// >>>>>>>>> HTML5 Example <<<<<<<<<<<<<
...
and I would cycle through the database_line_item, though for maybe 400 line items, this will be a taxing, to go through that string. Splitting it into smaller arrays would be easier to handle.
Here is the magic reg : /([^0-9\n\r]+)|(\d+)|(\r\n?|\n)/gi
Exemple output :
[Please call: ][false]
[4][true]
[/n][false]
[And ask for help for product ID:][false]
[/n][false]
[3][true]
Exemple code that do the job and put the data into an array :
package
{
import flash.display.Sprite;
public class TestReg extends Sprite
{
public function TestReg()
{
super();
var data : Array = parse("Please call: 04\n"+
"And ask for help for product ID:\n"+
"03");
// Output
for(var i : uint = 0; i < data.length; i += 2)
trace("[" + data[ i ] + "][" + data[ i + 1 ] + "]");
}
private var _search : RegExp = /([^0-9\n\r]+)|(\d+)|(\r\n?|\n)/gi;
public function parse(str : String) : Array
{
var result : Array = [];
var data : Array = str.match( _search );
for each(var item : * in data)
{
// Replace new line by /n
if(item.charAt( 0 ) == "\n" || item.charAt( 0 ) == "\r")
item = "/n";
// Convert to int if is a number
if( ! isNaN( parseFloat( item.charAt( 0 ) ) ) )
item = parseInt( item );
result.push( item );
result.push( !( item is String ));
}
return result;
}
}
}

Scala way / idiom of dealing with immutable List

I have found successes using ideas of immutable List but I am stumped when come to this piece of code here. I find myself has written something more Java than of Scala style. I would prefer to use List(...) instead of Buffer(...) but I don't see how I can pass the same modified immutable List to the next function. guesses is also modified within eliminate(...).
Any suggestions to help me to make this the Scala way of doing this is appreciated. Thanks
val randomGuesses = List(...) // some long list of random integers
val guesses = randomGuesses.zipWithIndex.toBuffer
for ( s <- loop()) {
val results = alphaSearch(guesses)
if (results.size == 1) {
guesses(resultes.head._2) = results.head._1
eliminate(guesses, resultes.head._2)
}
else {
val results = betaSearch(guesses)
if (results.size == 1) {
guesses(resultes.head._2) = results.head._1
eliminate(guesses, resultes.head._2)
} else {
val results = betaSearch(guesses)
if (results.size == 1) {
guesses(resultes.head._2) = results.head._1
eliminate(guesses, resultes.head._2)
}
}
}
}
Here are some general tips since this might be better suited for codereview and the code posted is incomplete with no samples.
You can use pattern matching instead of if and else for checking the size.
results.size match{
case 1 => ... //Code in the if block
case _ => ... //Code in the else block
}
Instead of mutating guesses create a new List.
val newGuesses = ...
Then pass newGuesses into eliminate.
Lastly, it looks like eliminate modifies guesses. Change this to return a new list. e.g.
def eliminate(list: List[Int]) = {
//Eliminate something from list and return a new `List`
}