| 1 | // Copyright 2006 The Closure Library Authors. All Rights Reserved. |
| 2 | // |
| 3 | // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| 4 | // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| 5 | // You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| 6 | // |
| 7 | // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| 8 | // |
| 9 | // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| 10 | // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS-IS" BASIS, |
| 11 | // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| 12 | // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| 13 | // limitations under the License. |
| 14 | |
| 15 | /** |
| 16 | * @fileoverview Utilities for string manipulation. |
| 17 | * @author arv@google.com (Erik Arvidsson) |
| 18 | */ |
| 19 | |
| 20 | |
| 21 | /** |
| 22 | * Namespace for string utilities |
| 23 | */ |
| 24 | goog.provide('goog.string'); |
| 25 | goog.provide('goog.string.Unicode'); |
| 26 | |
| 27 | |
| 28 | /** |
| 29 | * @define {boolean} Enables HTML escaping of lowercase letter "e" which helps |
| 30 | * with detection of double-escaping as this letter is frequently used. |
| 31 | */ |
| 32 | goog.define('goog.string.DETECT_DOUBLE_ESCAPING', false); |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | /** |
| 36 | * @define {boolean} Whether to force non-dom html unescaping. |
| 37 | */ |
| 38 | goog.define('goog.string.FORCE_NON_DOM_HTML_UNESCAPING', false); |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| 41 | /** |
| 42 | * Common Unicode string characters. |
| 43 | * @enum {string} |
| 44 | */ |
| 45 | goog.string.Unicode = { |
| 46 | NBSP: '\xa0' |
| 47 | }; |
| 48 | |
| 49 | |
| 50 | /** |
| 51 | * Fast prefix-checker. |
| 52 | * @param {string} str The string to check. |
| 53 | * @param {string} prefix A string to look for at the start of {@code str}. |
| 54 | * @return {boolean} True if {@code str} begins with {@code prefix}. |
| 55 | */ |
| 56 | goog.string.startsWith = function(str, prefix) { |
| 57 | return str.lastIndexOf(prefix, 0) == 0; |
| 58 | }; |
| 59 | |
| 60 | |
| 61 | /** |
| 62 | * Fast suffix-checker. |
| 63 | * @param {string} str The string to check. |
| 64 | * @param {string} suffix A string to look for at the end of {@code str}. |
| 65 | * @return {boolean} True if {@code str} ends with {@code suffix}. |
| 66 | */ |
| 67 | goog.string.endsWith = function(str, suffix) { |
| 68 | var l = str.length - suffix.length; |
| 69 | return l >= 0 && str.indexOf(suffix, l) == l; |
| 70 | }; |
| 71 | |
| 72 | |
| 73 | /** |
| 74 | * Case-insensitive prefix-checker. |
| 75 | * @param {string} str The string to check. |
| 76 | * @param {string} prefix A string to look for at the end of {@code str}. |
| 77 | * @return {boolean} True if {@code str} begins with {@code prefix} (ignoring |
| 78 | * case). |
| 79 | */ |
| 80 | goog.string.caseInsensitiveStartsWith = function(str, prefix) { |
| 81 | return goog.string.caseInsensitiveCompare( |
| 82 | prefix, str.substr(0, prefix.length)) == 0; |
| 83 | }; |
| 84 | |
| 85 | |
| 86 | /** |
| 87 | * Case-insensitive suffix-checker. |
| 88 | * @param {string} str The string to check. |
| 89 | * @param {string} suffix A string to look for at the end of {@code str}. |
| 90 | * @return {boolean} True if {@code str} ends with {@code suffix} (ignoring |
| 91 | * case). |
| 92 | */ |
| 93 | goog.string.caseInsensitiveEndsWith = function(str, suffix) { |
| 94 | return goog.string.caseInsensitiveCompare( |
| 95 | suffix, str.substr(str.length - suffix.length, suffix.length)) == 0; |
| 96 | }; |
| 97 | |
| 98 | |
| 99 | /** |
| 100 | * Case-insensitive equality checker. |
| 101 | * @param {string} str1 First string to check. |
| 102 | * @param {string} str2 Second string to check. |
| 103 | * @return {boolean} True if {@code str1} and {@code str2} are the same string, |
| 104 | * ignoring case. |
| 105 | */ |
| 106 | goog.string.caseInsensitiveEquals = function(str1, str2) { |
| 107 | return str1.toLowerCase() == str2.toLowerCase(); |
| 108 | }; |
| 109 | |
| 110 | |
| 111 | /** |
| 112 | * Does simple python-style string substitution. |
| 113 | * subs("foo%s hot%s", "bar", "dog") becomes "foobar hotdog". |
| 114 | * @param {string} str The string containing the pattern. |
| 115 | * @param {...*} var_args The items to substitute into the pattern. |
| 116 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code str} in which each occurrence of |
| 117 | * {@code %s} has been replaced an argument from {@code var_args}. |
| 118 | */ |
| 119 | goog.string.subs = function(str, var_args) { |
| 120 | var splitParts = str.split('%s'); |
| 121 | var returnString = ''; |
| 122 | |
| 123 | var subsArguments = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 1); |
| 124 | while (subsArguments.length && |
| 125 | // Replace up to the last split part. We are inserting in the |
| 126 | // positions between split parts. |
| 127 | splitParts.length > 1) { |
| 128 | returnString += splitParts.shift() + subsArguments.shift(); |
| 129 | } |
| 130 | |
| 131 | return returnString + splitParts.join('%s'); // Join unused '%s' |
| 132 | }; |
| 133 | |
| 134 | |
| 135 | /** |
| 136 | * Converts multiple whitespace chars (spaces, non-breaking-spaces, new lines |
| 137 | * and tabs) to a single space, and strips leading and trailing whitespace. |
| 138 | * @param {string} str Input string. |
| 139 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code str} with collapsed whitespace. |
| 140 | */ |
| 141 | goog.string.collapseWhitespace = function(str) { |
| 142 | // Since IE doesn't include non-breaking-space (0xa0) in their \s character |
| 143 | // class (as required by section 7.2 of the ECMAScript spec), we explicitly |
| 144 | // include it in the regexp to enforce consistent cross-browser behavior. |
| 145 | return str.replace(/[\s\xa0]+/g, ' ').replace(/^\s+|\s+$/g, ''); |
| 146 | }; |
| 147 | |
| 148 | |
| 149 | /** |
| 150 | * Checks if a string is empty or contains only whitespaces. |
| 151 | * @param {string} str The string to check. |
| 152 | * @return {boolean} Whether {@code str} is empty or whitespace only. |
| 153 | */ |
| 154 | goog.string.isEmptyOrWhitespace = function(str) { |
| 155 | // testing length == 0 first is actually slower in all browsers (about the |
| 156 | // same in Opera). |
| 157 | // Since IE doesn't include non-breaking-space (0xa0) in their \s character |
| 158 | // class (as required by section 7.2 of the ECMAScript spec), we explicitly |
| 159 | // include it in the regexp to enforce consistent cross-browser behavior. |
| 160 | return /^[\s\xa0]*$/.test(str); |
| 161 | }; |
| 162 | |
| 163 | |
| 164 | /** |
| 165 | * Checks if a string is empty. |
| 166 | * @param {string} str The string to check. |
| 167 | * @return {boolean} Whether {@code str} is empty. |
| 168 | */ |
| 169 | goog.string.isEmptyString = function(str) { |
| 170 | return str.length == 0; |
| 171 | }; |
| 172 | |
| 173 | |
| 174 | /** |
| 175 | * Checks if a string is empty or contains only whitespaces. |
| 176 | * |
| 177 | * TODO(user): Deprecate this when clients have been switched over to |
| 178 | * goog.string.isEmptyOrWhitespace. |
| 179 | * |
| 180 | * @param {string} str The string to check. |
| 181 | * @return {boolean} Whether {@code str} is empty or whitespace only. |
| 182 | */ |
| 183 | goog.string.isEmpty = goog.string.isEmptyOrWhitespace; |
| 184 | |
| 185 | |
| 186 | /** |
| 187 | * Checks if a string is null, undefined, empty or contains only whitespaces. |
| 188 | * @param {*} str The string to check. |
| 189 | * @return {boolean} Whether {@code str} is null, undefined, empty, or |
| 190 | * whitespace only. |
| 191 | * @deprecated Use goog.string.isEmptyOrWhitespace(goog.string.makeSafe(str)) |
| 192 | * instead. |
| 193 | */ |
| 194 | goog.string.isEmptyOrWhitespaceSafe = function(str) { |
| 195 | return goog.string.isEmptyOrWhitespace(goog.string.makeSafe(str)); |
| 196 | }; |
| 197 | |
| 198 | |
| 199 | /** |
| 200 | * Checks if a string is null, undefined, empty or contains only whitespaces. |
| 201 | * |
| 202 | * TODO(user): Deprecate this when clients have been switched over to |
| 203 | * goog.string.isEmptyOrWhitespaceSafe. |
| 204 | * |
| 205 | * @param {*} str The string to check. |
| 206 | * @return {boolean} Whether {@code str} is null, undefined, empty, or |
| 207 | * whitespace only. |
| 208 | */ |
| 209 | goog.string.isEmptySafe = goog.string.isEmptyOrWhitespaceSafe; |
| 210 | |
| 211 | |
| 212 | /** |
| 213 | * Checks if a string is all breaking whitespace. |
| 214 | * @param {string} str The string to check. |
| 215 | * @return {boolean} Whether the string is all breaking whitespace. |
| 216 | */ |
| 217 | goog.string.isBreakingWhitespace = function(str) { |
| 218 | return !/[^\t\n\r ]/.test(str); |
| 219 | }; |
| 220 | |
| 221 | |
| 222 | /** |
| 223 | * Checks if a string contains all letters. |
| 224 | * @param {string} str string to check. |
| 225 | * @return {boolean} True if {@code str} consists entirely of letters. |
| 226 | */ |
| 227 | goog.string.isAlpha = function(str) { |
| 228 | return !/[^a-zA-Z]/.test(str); |
| 229 | }; |
| 230 | |
| 231 | |
| 232 | /** |
| 233 | * Checks if a string contains only numbers. |
| 234 | * @param {*} str string to check. If not a string, it will be |
| 235 | * casted to one. |
| 236 | * @return {boolean} True if {@code str} is numeric. |
| 237 | */ |
| 238 | goog.string.isNumeric = function(str) { |
| 239 | return !/[^0-9]/.test(str); |
| 240 | }; |
| 241 | |
| 242 | |
| 243 | /** |
| 244 | * Checks if a string contains only numbers or letters. |
| 245 | * @param {string} str string to check. |
| 246 | * @return {boolean} True if {@code str} is alphanumeric. |
| 247 | */ |
| 248 | goog.string.isAlphaNumeric = function(str) { |
| 249 | return !/[^a-zA-Z0-9]/.test(str); |
| 250 | }; |
| 251 | |
| 252 | |
| 253 | /** |
| 254 | * Checks if a character is a space character. |
| 255 | * @param {string} ch Character to check. |
| 256 | * @return {boolean} True if {@code ch} is a space. |
| 257 | */ |
| 258 | goog.string.isSpace = function(ch) { |
| 259 | return ch == ' '; |
| 260 | }; |
| 261 | |
| 262 | |
| 263 | /** |
| 264 | * Checks if a character is a valid unicode character. |
| 265 | * @param {string} ch Character to check. |
| 266 | * @return {boolean} True if {@code ch} is a valid unicode character. |
| 267 | */ |
| 268 | goog.string.isUnicodeChar = function(ch) { |
| 269 | return ch.length == 1 && ch >= ' ' && ch <= '~' || |
| 270 | ch >= '\u0080' && ch <= '\uFFFD'; |
| 271 | }; |
| 272 | |
| 273 | |
| 274 | /** |
| 275 | * Takes a string and replaces newlines with a space. Multiple lines are |
| 276 | * replaced with a single space. |
| 277 | * @param {string} str The string from which to strip newlines. |
| 278 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code str} stripped of newlines. |
| 279 | */ |
| 280 | goog.string.stripNewlines = function(str) { |
| 281 | return str.replace(/(\r\n|\r|\n)+/g, ' '); |
| 282 | }; |
| 283 | |
| 284 | |
| 285 | /** |
| 286 | * Replaces Windows and Mac new lines with unix style: \r or \r\n with \n. |
| 287 | * @param {string} str The string to in which to canonicalize newlines. |
| 288 | * @return {string} {@code str} A copy of {@code} with canonicalized newlines. |
| 289 | */ |
| 290 | goog.string.canonicalizeNewlines = function(str) { |
| 291 | return str.replace(/(\r\n|\r|\n)/g, '\n'); |
| 292 | }; |
| 293 | |
| 294 | |
| 295 | /** |
| 296 | * Normalizes whitespace in a string, replacing all whitespace chars with |
| 297 | * a space. |
| 298 | * @param {string} str The string in which to normalize whitespace. |
| 299 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code str} with all whitespace normalized. |
| 300 | */ |
| 301 | goog.string.normalizeWhitespace = function(str) { |
| 302 | return str.replace(/\xa0|\s/g, ' '); |
| 303 | }; |
| 304 | |
| 305 | |
| 306 | /** |
| 307 | * Normalizes spaces in a string, replacing all consecutive spaces and tabs |
| 308 | * with a single space. Replaces non-breaking space with a space. |
| 309 | * @param {string} str The string in which to normalize spaces. |
| 310 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code str} with all consecutive spaces and tabs |
| 311 | * replaced with a single space. |
| 312 | */ |
| 313 | goog.string.normalizeSpaces = function(str) { |
| 314 | return str.replace(/\xa0|[ \t]+/g, ' '); |
| 315 | }; |
| 316 | |
| 317 | |
| 318 | /** |
| 319 | * Removes the breaking spaces from the left and right of the string and |
| 320 | * collapses the sequences of breaking spaces in the middle into single spaces. |
| 321 | * The original and the result strings render the same way in HTML. |
| 322 | * @param {string} str A string in which to collapse spaces. |
| 323 | * @return {string} Copy of the string with normalized breaking spaces. |
| 324 | */ |
| 325 | goog.string.collapseBreakingSpaces = function(str) { |
| 326 | return str.replace(/[\t\r\n ]+/g, ' ').replace( |
| 327 | /^[\t\r\n ]+|[\t\r\n ]+$/g, ''); |
| 328 | }; |
| 329 | |
| 330 | |
| 331 | /** |
| 332 | * Trims white spaces to the left and right of a string. |
| 333 | * @param {string} str The string to trim. |
| 334 | * @return {string} A trimmed copy of {@code str}. |
| 335 | */ |
| 336 | goog.string.trim = (goog.TRUSTED_SITE && String.prototype.trim) ? |
| 337 | function(str) { |
| 338 | return str.trim(); |
| 339 | } : |
| 340 | function(str) { |
| 341 | // Since IE doesn't include non-breaking-space (0xa0) in their \s |
| 342 | // character class (as required by section 7.2 of the ECMAScript spec), |
| 343 | // we explicitly include it in the regexp to enforce consistent |
| 344 | // cross-browser behavior. |
| 345 | return str.replace(/^[\s\xa0]+|[\s\xa0]+$/g, ''); |
| 346 | }; |
| 347 | |
| 348 | |
| 349 | /** |
| 350 | * Trims whitespaces at the left end of a string. |
| 351 | * @param {string} str The string to left trim. |
| 352 | * @return {string} A trimmed copy of {@code str}. |
| 353 | */ |
| 354 | goog.string.trimLeft = function(str) { |
| 355 | // Since IE doesn't include non-breaking-space (0xa0) in their \s character |
| 356 | // class (as required by section 7.2 of the ECMAScript spec), we explicitly |
| 357 | // include it in the regexp to enforce consistent cross-browser behavior. |
| 358 | return str.replace(/^[\s\xa0]+/, ''); |
| 359 | }; |
| 360 | |
| 361 | |
| 362 | /** |
| 363 | * Trims whitespaces at the right end of a string. |
| 364 | * @param {string} str The string to right trim. |
| 365 | * @return {string} A trimmed copy of {@code str}. |
| 366 | */ |
| 367 | goog.string.trimRight = function(str) { |
| 368 | // Since IE doesn't include non-breaking-space (0xa0) in their \s character |
| 369 | // class (as required by section 7.2 of the ECMAScript spec), we explicitly |
| 370 | // include it in the regexp to enforce consistent cross-browser behavior. |
| 371 | return str.replace(/[\s\xa0]+$/, ''); |
| 372 | }; |
| 373 | |
| 374 | |
| 375 | /** |
| 376 | * A string comparator that ignores case. |
| 377 | * -1 = str1 less than str2 |
| 378 | * 0 = str1 equals str2 |
| 379 | * 1 = str1 greater than str2 |
| 380 | * |
| 381 | * @param {string} str1 The string to compare. |
| 382 | * @param {string} str2 The string to compare {@code str1} to. |
| 383 | * @return {number} The comparator result, as described above. |
| 384 | */ |
| 385 | goog.string.caseInsensitiveCompare = function(str1, str2) { |
| 386 | var test1 = String(str1).toLowerCase(); |
| 387 | var test2 = String(str2).toLowerCase(); |
| 388 | |
| 389 | if (test1 < test2) { |
| 390 | return -1; |
| 391 | } else if (test1 == test2) { |
| 392 | return 0; |
| 393 | } else { |
| 394 | return 1; |
| 395 | } |
| 396 | }; |
| 397 | |
| 398 | |
| 399 | /** |
| 400 | * Compares two strings interpreting their numeric substrings as numbers. |
| 401 | * |
| 402 | * @param {string} str1 First string. |
| 403 | * @param {string} str2 Second string. |
| 404 | * @param {!RegExp} tokenizerRegExp Splits a string into substrings of |
| 405 | * non-negative integers, non-numeric characters and optionally fractional |
| 406 | * numbers starting with a decimal point. |
| 407 | * @return {number} Negative if str1 < str2, 0 is str1 == str2, positive if |
| 408 | * str1 > str2. |
| 409 | * @private |
| 410 | */ |
| 411 | goog.string.numberAwareCompare_ = function(str1, str2, tokenizerRegExp) { |
| 412 | if (str1 == str2) { |
| 413 | return 0; |
| 414 | } |
| 415 | if (!str1) { |
| 416 | return -1; |
| 417 | } |
| 418 | if (!str2) { |
| 419 | return 1; |
| 420 | } |
| 421 | |
| 422 | // Using match to split the entire string ahead of time turns out to be faster |
| 423 | // for most inputs than using RegExp.exec or iterating over each character. |
| 424 | var tokens1 = str1.toLowerCase().match(tokenizerRegExp); |
| 425 | var tokens2 = str2.toLowerCase().match(tokenizerRegExp); |
| 426 | |
| 427 | var count = Math.min(tokens1.length, tokens2.length); |
| 428 | |
| 429 | for (var i = 0; i < count; i++) { |
| 430 | var a = tokens1[i]; |
| 431 | var b = tokens2[i]; |
| 432 | |
| 433 | // Compare pairs of tokens, returning if one token sorts before the other. |
| 434 | if (a != b) { |
| 435 | // Only if both tokens are integers is a special comparison required. |
| 436 | // Decimal numbers are sorted as strings (e.g., '.09' < '.1'). |
| 437 | var num1 = parseInt(a, 10); |
| 438 | if (!isNaN(num1)) { |
| 439 | var num2 = parseInt(b, 10); |
| 440 | if (!isNaN(num2) && num1 - num2) { |
| 441 | return num1 - num2; |
| 442 | } |
| 443 | } |
| 444 | return a < b ? -1 : 1; |
| 445 | } |
| 446 | } |
| 447 | |
| 448 | // If one string is a substring of the other, the shorter string sorts first. |
| 449 | if (tokens1.length != tokens2.length) { |
| 450 | return tokens1.length - tokens2.length; |
| 451 | } |
| 452 | |
| 453 | // The two strings must be equivalent except for case (perfect equality is |
| 454 | // tested at the head of the function.) Revert to default ASCII string |
| 455 | // comparison to stabilize the sort. |
| 456 | return str1 < str2 ? -1 : 1; |
| 457 | }; |
| 458 | |
| 459 | |
| 460 | /** |
| 461 | * String comparison function that handles non-negative integer numbers in a |
| 462 | * way humans might expect. Using this function, the string 'File 2.jpg' sorts |
| 463 | * before 'File 10.jpg', and 'Version 1.9' before 'Version 1.10'. The comparison |
| 464 | * is mostly case-insensitive, though strings that are identical except for case |
| 465 | * are sorted with the upper-case strings before lower-case. |
| 466 | * |
| 467 | * This comparison function is up to 50x slower than either the default or the |
| 468 | * case-insensitive compare. It should not be used in time-critical code, but |
| 469 | * should be fast enough to sort several hundred short strings (like filenames) |
| 470 | * with a reasonable delay. |
| 471 | * |
| 472 | * @param {string} str1 The string to compare in a numerically sensitive way. |
| 473 | * @param {string} str2 The string to compare {@code str1} to. |
| 474 | * @return {number} less than 0 if str1 < str2, 0 if str1 == str2, greater than |
| 475 | * 0 if str1 > str2. |
| 476 | */ |
| 477 | goog.string.intAwareCompare = function(str1, str2) { |
| 478 | return goog.string.numberAwareCompare_(str1, str2, /\d+|\D+/g); |
| 479 | }; |
| 480 | |
| 481 | |
| 482 | /** |
| 483 | * String comparison function that handles non-negative integer and fractional |
| 484 | * numbers in a way humans might expect. Using this function, the string |
| 485 | * 'File 2.jpg' sorts before 'File 10.jpg', and '3.14' before '3.2'. Equivalent |
| 486 | * to {@link goog.string.intAwareCompare} apart from the way how it interprets |
| 487 | * dots. |
| 488 | * |
| 489 | * @param {string} str1 The string to compare in a numerically sensitive way. |
| 490 | * @param {string} str2 The string to compare {@code str1} to. |
| 491 | * @return {number} less than 0 if str1 < str2, 0 if str1 == str2, greater than |
| 492 | * 0 if str1 > str2. |
| 493 | */ |
| 494 | goog.string.floatAwareCompare = function(str1, str2) { |
| 495 | return goog.string.numberAwareCompare_(str1, str2, /\d+|\.\d+|\D+/g); |
| 496 | }; |
| 497 | |
| 498 | |
| 499 | /** |
| 500 | * Alias for {@link goog.string.floatAwareCompare}. |
| 501 | * |
| 502 | * @param {string} str1 |
| 503 | * @param {string} str2 |
| 504 | * @return {number} |
| 505 | */ |
| 506 | goog.string.numerateCompare = goog.string.floatAwareCompare; |
| 507 | |
| 508 | |
| 509 | /** |
| 510 | * URL-encodes a string |
| 511 | * @param {*} str The string to url-encode. |
| 512 | * @return {string} An encoded copy of {@code str} that is safe for urls. |
| 513 | * Note that '#', ':', and other characters used to delimit portions |
| 514 | * of URLs *will* be encoded. |
| 515 | */ |
| 516 | goog.string.urlEncode = function(str) { |
| 517 | return encodeURIComponent(String(str)); |
| 518 | }; |
| 519 | |
| 520 | |
| 521 | /** |
| 522 | * URL-decodes the string. We need to specially handle '+'s because |
| 523 | * the javascript library doesn't convert them to spaces. |
| 524 | * @param {string} str The string to url decode. |
| 525 | * @return {string} The decoded {@code str}. |
| 526 | */ |
| 527 | goog.string.urlDecode = function(str) { |
| 528 | return decodeURIComponent(str.replace(/\+/g, ' ')); |
| 529 | }; |
| 530 | |
| 531 | |
| 532 | /** |
| 533 | * Converts \n to <br>s or <br />s. |
| 534 | * @param {string} str The string in which to convert newlines. |
| 535 | * @param {boolean=} opt_xml Whether to use XML compatible tags. |
| 536 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code str} with converted newlines. |
| 537 | */ |
| 538 | goog.string.newLineToBr = function(str, opt_xml) { |
| 539 | return str.replace(/(\r\n|\r|\n)/g, opt_xml ? '<br />' : '<br>'); |
| 540 | }; |
| 541 | |
| 542 | |
| 543 | /** |
| 544 | * Escapes double quote '"' and single quote '\'' characters in addition to |
| 545 | * '&', '<', and '>' so that a string can be included in an HTML tag attribute |
| 546 | * value within double or single quotes. |
| 547 | * |
| 548 | * It should be noted that > doesn't need to be escaped for the HTML or XML to |
| 549 | * be valid, but it has been decided to escape it for consistency with other |
| 550 | * implementations. |
| 551 | * |
| 552 | * With goog.string.DETECT_DOUBLE_ESCAPING, this function escapes also the |
| 553 | * lowercase letter "e". |
| 554 | * |
| 555 | * NOTE(user): |
| 556 | * HtmlEscape is often called during the generation of large blocks of HTML. |
| 557 | * Using statics for the regular expressions and strings is an optimization |
| 558 | * that can more than half the amount of time IE spends in this function for |
| 559 | * large apps, since strings and regexes both contribute to GC allocations. |
| 560 | * |
| 561 | * Testing for the presence of a character before escaping increases the number |
| 562 | * of function calls, but actually provides a speed increase for the average |
| 563 | * case -- since the average case often doesn't require the escaping of all 4 |
| 564 | * characters and indexOf() is much cheaper than replace(). |
| 565 | * The worst case does suffer slightly from the additional calls, therefore the |
| 566 | * opt_isLikelyToContainHtmlChars option has been included for situations |
| 567 | * where all 4 HTML entities are very likely to be present and need escaping. |
| 568 | * |
| 569 | * Some benchmarks (times tended to fluctuate +-0.05ms): |
| 570 | * FireFox IE6 |
| 571 | * (no chars / average (mix of cases) / all 4 chars) |
| 572 | * no checks 0.13 / 0.22 / 0.22 0.23 / 0.53 / 0.80 |
| 573 | * indexOf 0.08 / 0.17 / 0.26 0.22 / 0.54 / 0.84 |
| 574 | * indexOf + re test 0.07 / 0.17 / 0.28 0.19 / 0.50 / 0.85 |
| 575 | * |
| 576 | * An additional advantage of checking if replace actually needs to be called |
| 577 | * is a reduction in the number of object allocations, so as the size of the |
| 578 | * application grows the difference between the various methods would increase. |
| 579 | * |
| 580 | * @param {string} str string to be escaped. |
| 581 | * @param {boolean=} opt_isLikelyToContainHtmlChars Don't perform a check to see |
| 582 | * if the character needs replacing - use this option if you expect each of |
| 583 | * the characters to appear often. Leave false if you expect few html |
| 584 | * characters to occur in your strings, such as if you are escaping HTML. |
| 585 | * @return {string} An escaped copy of {@code str}. |
| 586 | */ |
| 587 | goog.string.htmlEscape = function(str, opt_isLikelyToContainHtmlChars) { |
| 588 | |
| 589 | if (opt_isLikelyToContainHtmlChars) { |
| 590 | str = str.replace(goog.string.AMP_RE_, '&') |
| 591 | .replace(goog.string.LT_RE_, '<') |
| 592 | .replace(goog.string.GT_RE_, '>') |
| 593 | .replace(goog.string.QUOT_RE_, '"') |
| 594 | .replace(goog.string.SINGLE_QUOTE_RE_, ''') |
| 595 | .replace(goog.string.NULL_RE_, '�'); |
| 596 | if (goog.string.DETECT_DOUBLE_ESCAPING) { |
| 597 | str = str.replace(goog.string.E_RE_, 'e'); |
| 598 | } |
| 599 | return str; |
| 600 | |
| 601 | } else { |
| 602 | // quick test helps in the case when there are no chars to replace, in |
| 603 | // worst case this makes barely a difference to the time taken |
| 604 | if (!goog.string.ALL_RE_.test(str)) return str; |
| 605 | |
| 606 | // str.indexOf is faster than regex.test in this case |
| 607 | if (str.indexOf('&') != -1) { |
| 608 | str = str.replace(goog.string.AMP_RE_, '&'); |
| 609 | } |
| 610 | if (str.indexOf('<') != -1) { |
| 611 | str = str.replace(goog.string.LT_RE_, '<'); |
| 612 | } |
| 613 | if (str.indexOf('>') != -1) { |
| 614 | str = str.replace(goog.string.GT_RE_, '>'); |
| 615 | } |
| 616 | if (str.indexOf('"') != -1) { |
| 617 | str = str.replace(goog.string.QUOT_RE_, '"'); |
| 618 | } |
| 619 | if (str.indexOf('\'') != -1) { |
| 620 | str = str.replace(goog.string.SINGLE_QUOTE_RE_, '''); |
| 621 | } |
| 622 | if (str.indexOf('\x00') != -1) { |
| 623 | str = str.replace(goog.string.NULL_RE_, '�'); |
| 624 | } |
| 625 | if (goog.string.DETECT_DOUBLE_ESCAPING && str.indexOf('e') != -1) { |
| 626 | str = str.replace(goog.string.E_RE_, 'e'); |
| 627 | } |
| 628 | return str; |
| 629 | } |
| 630 | }; |
| 631 | |
| 632 | |
| 633 | /** |
| 634 | * Regular expression that matches an ampersand, for use in escaping. |
| 635 | * @const {!RegExp} |
| 636 | * @private |
| 637 | */ |
| 638 | goog.string.AMP_RE_ = /&/g; |
| 639 | |
| 640 | |
| 641 | /** |
| 642 | * Regular expression that matches a less than sign, for use in escaping. |
| 643 | * @const {!RegExp} |
| 644 | * @private |
| 645 | */ |
| 646 | goog.string.LT_RE_ = /</g; |
| 647 | |
| 648 | |
| 649 | /** |
| 650 | * Regular expression that matches a greater than sign, for use in escaping. |
| 651 | * @const {!RegExp} |
| 652 | * @private |
| 653 | */ |
| 654 | goog.string.GT_RE_ = />/g; |
| 655 | |
| 656 | |
| 657 | /** |
| 658 | * Regular expression that matches a double quote, for use in escaping. |
| 659 | * @const {!RegExp} |
| 660 | * @private |
| 661 | */ |
| 662 | goog.string.QUOT_RE_ = /"/g; |
| 663 | |
| 664 | |
| 665 | /** |
| 666 | * Regular expression that matches a single quote, for use in escaping. |
| 667 | * @const {!RegExp} |
| 668 | * @private |
| 669 | */ |
| 670 | goog.string.SINGLE_QUOTE_RE_ = /'/g; |
| 671 | |
| 672 | |
| 673 | /** |
| 674 | * Regular expression that matches null character, for use in escaping. |
| 675 | * @const {!RegExp} |
| 676 | * @private |
| 677 | */ |
| 678 | goog.string.NULL_RE_ = /\x00/g; |
| 679 | |
| 680 | |
| 681 | /** |
| 682 | * Regular expression that matches a lowercase letter "e", for use in escaping. |
| 683 | * @const {!RegExp} |
| 684 | * @private |
| 685 | */ |
| 686 | goog.string.E_RE_ = /e/g; |
| 687 | |
| 688 | |
| 689 | /** |
| 690 | * Regular expression that matches any character that needs to be escaped. |
| 691 | * @const {!RegExp} |
| 692 | * @private |
| 693 | */ |
| 694 | goog.string.ALL_RE_ = (goog.string.DETECT_DOUBLE_ESCAPING ? |
| 695 | /[\x00&<>"'e]/ : |
| 696 | /[\x00&<>"']/); |
| 697 | |
| 698 | |
| 699 | /** |
| 700 | * Unescapes an HTML string. |
| 701 | * |
| 702 | * @param {string} str The string to unescape. |
| 703 | * @return {string} An unescaped copy of {@code str}. |
| 704 | */ |
| 705 | goog.string.unescapeEntities = function(str) { |
| 706 | if (goog.string.contains(str, '&')) { |
| 707 | // We are careful not to use a DOM if we do not have one or we explicitly |
| 708 | // requested non-DOM html unescaping. |
| 709 | if (!goog.string.FORCE_NON_DOM_HTML_UNESCAPING && |
| 710 | 'document' in goog.global) { |
| 711 | return goog.string.unescapeEntitiesUsingDom_(str); |
| 712 | } else { |
| 713 | // Fall back on pure XML entities |
| 714 | return goog.string.unescapePureXmlEntities_(str); |
| 715 | } |
| 716 | } |
| 717 | return str; |
| 718 | }; |
| 719 | |
| 720 | |
| 721 | /** |
| 722 | * Unescapes a HTML string using the provided document. |
| 723 | * |
| 724 | * @param {string} str The string to unescape. |
| 725 | * @param {!Document} document A document to use in escaping the string. |
| 726 | * @return {string} An unescaped copy of {@code str}. |
| 727 | */ |
| 728 | goog.string.unescapeEntitiesWithDocument = function(str, document) { |
| 729 | if (goog.string.contains(str, '&')) { |
| 730 | return goog.string.unescapeEntitiesUsingDom_(str, document); |
| 731 | } |
| 732 | return str; |
| 733 | }; |
| 734 | |
| 735 | |
| 736 | /** |
| 737 | * Unescapes an HTML string using a DOM to resolve non-XML, non-numeric |
| 738 | * entities. This function is XSS-safe and whitespace-preserving. |
| 739 | * @private |
| 740 | * @param {string} str The string to unescape. |
| 741 | * @param {Document=} opt_document An optional document to use for creating |
| 742 | * elements. If this is not specified then the default window.document |
| 743 | * will be used. |
| 744 | * @return {string} The unescaped {@code str} string. |
| 745 | */ |
| 746 | goog.string.unescapeEntitiesUsingDom_ = function(str, opt_document) { |
| 747 | /** @type {!Object<string, string>} */ |
| 748 | var seen = {'&': '&', '<': '<', '>': '>', '"': '"'}; |
| 749 | var div; |
| 750 | if (opt_document) { |
| 751 | div = opt_document.createElement('div'); |
| 752 | } else { |
| 753 | div = goog.global.document.createElement('div'); |
| 754 | } |
| 755 | // Match as many valid entity characters as possible. If the actual entity |
| 756 | // happens to be shorter, it will still work as innerHTML will return the |
| 757 | // trailing characters unchanged. Since the entity characters do not include |
| 758 | // open angle bracket, there is no chance of XSS from the innerHTML use. |
| 759 | // Since no whitespace is passed to innerHTML, whitespace is preserved. |
| 760 | return str.replace(goog.string.HTML_ENTITY_PATTERN_, function(s, entity) { |
| 761 | // Check for cached entity. |
| 762 | var value = seen[s]; |
| 763 | if (value) { |
| 764 | return value; |
| 765 | } |
| 766 | // Check for numeric entity. |
| 767 | if (entity.charAt(0) == '#') { |
| 768 | // Prefix with 0 so that hex entities (e.g. ) parse as hex numbers. |
| 769 | var n = Number('0' + entity.substr(1)); |
| 770 | if (!isNaN(n)) { |
| 771 | value = String.fromCharCode(n); |
| 772 | } |
| 773 | } |
| 774 | // Fall back to innerHTML otherwise. |
| 775 | if (!value) { |
| 776 | // Append a non-entity character to avoid a bug in Webkit that parses |
| 777 | // an invalid entity at the end of innerHTML text as the empty string. |
| 778 | div.innerHTML = s + ' '; |
| 779 | // Then remove the trailing character from the result. |
| 780 | value = div.firstChild.nodeValue.slice(0, -1); |
| 781 | } |
| 782 | // Cache and return. |
| 783 | return seen[s] = value; |
| 784 | }); |
| 785 | }; |
| 786 | |
| 787 | |
| 788 | /** |
| 789 | * Unescapes XML entities. |
| 790 | * @private |
| 791 | * @param {string} str The string to unescape. |
| 792 | * @return {string} An unescaped copy of {@code str}. |
| 793 | */ |
| 794 | goog.string.unescapePureXmlEntities_ = function(str) { |
| 795 | return str.replace(/&([^;]+);/g, function(s, entity) { |
| 796 | switch (entity) { |
| 797 | case 'amp': |
| 798 | return '&'; |
| 799 | case 'lt': |
| 800 | return '<'; |
| 801 | case 'gt': |
| 802 | return '>'; |
| 803 | case 'quot': |
| 804 | return '"'; |
| 805 | default: |
| 806 | if (entity.charAt(0) == '#') { |
| 807 | // Prefix with 0 so that hex entities (e.g. ) parse as hex. |
| 808 | var n = Number('0' + entity.substr(1)); |
| 809 | if (!isNaN(n)) { |
| 810 | return String.fromCharCode(n); |
| 811 | } |
| 812 | } |
| 813 | // For invalid entities we just return the entity |
| 814 | return s; |
| 815 | } |
| 816 | }); |
| 817 | }; |
| 818 | |
| 819 | |
| 820 | /** |
| 821 | * Regular expression that matches an HTML entity. |
| 822 | * See also HTML5: Tokenization / Tokenizing character references. |
| 823 | * @private |
| 824 | * @type {!RegExp} |
| 825 | */ |
| 826 | goog.string.HTML_ENTITY_PATTERN_ = /&([^;\s<&]+);?/g; |
| 827 | |
| 828 | |
| 829 | /** |
| 830 | * Do escaping of whitespace to preserve spatial formatting. We use character |
| 831 | * entity #160 to make it safer for xml. |
| 832 | * @param {string} str The string in which to escape whitespace. |
| 833 | * @param {boolean=} opt_xml Whether to use XML compatible tags. |
| 834 | * @return {string} An escaped copy of {@code str}. |
| 835 | */ |
| 836 | goog.string.whitespaceEscape = function(str, opt_xml) { |
| 837 | // This doesn't use goog.string.preserveSpaces for backwards compatibility. |
| 838 | return goog.string.newLineToBr(str.replace(/ /g, '  '), opt_xml); |
| 839 | }; |
| 840 | |
| 841 | |
| 842 | /** |
| 843 | * Preserve spaces that would be otherwise collapsed in HTML by replacing them |
| 844 | * with non-breaking space Unicode characters. |
| 845 | * @param {string} str The string in which to preserve whitespace. |
| 846 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code str} with preserved whitespace. |
| 847 | */ |
| 848 | goog.string.preserveSpaces = function(str) { |
| 849 | return str.replace(/(^|[\n ]) /g, '$1' + goog.string.Unicode.NBSP); |
| 850 | }; |
| 851 | |
| 852 | |
| 853 | /** |
| 854 | * Strip quote characters around a string. The second argument is a string of |
| 855 | * characters to treat as quotes. This can be a single character or a string of |
| 856 | * multiple character and in that case each of those are treated as possible |
| 857 | * quote characters. For example: |
| 858 | * |
| 859 | * <pre> |
| 860 | * goog.string.stripQuotes('"abc"', '"`') --> 'abc' |
| 861 | * goog.string.stripQuotes('`abc`', '"`') --> 'abc' |
| 862 | * </pre> |
| 863 | * |
| 864 | * @param {string} str The string to strip. |
| 865 | * @param {string} quoteChars The quote characters to strip. |
| 866 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code str} without the quotes. |
| 867 | */ |
| 868 | goog.string.stripQuotes = function(str, quoteChars) { |
| 869 | var length = quoteChars.length; |
| 870 | for (var i = 0; i < length; i++) { |
| 871 | var quoteChar = length == 1 ? quoteChars : quoteChars.charAt(i); |
| 872 | if (str.charAt(0) == quoteChar && str.charAt(str.length - 1) == quoteChar) { |
| 873 | return str.substring(1, str.length - 1); |
| 874 | } |
| 875 | } |
| 876 | return str; |
| 877 | }; |
| 878 | |
| 879 | |
| 880 | /** |
| 881 | * Truncates a string to a certain length and adds '...' if necessary. The |
| 882 | * length also accounts for the ellipsis, so a maximum length of 10 and a string |
| 883 | * 'Hello World!' produces 'Hello W...'. |
| 884 | * @param {string} str The string to truncate. |
| 885 | * @param {number} chars Max number of characters. |
| 886 | * @param {boolean=} opt_protectEscapedCharacters Whether to protect escaped |
| 887 | * characters from being cut off in the middle. |
| 888 | * @return {string} The truncated {@code str} string. |
| 889 | */ |
| 890 | goog.string.truncate = function(str, chars, opt_protectEscapedCharacters) { |
| 891 | if (opt_protectEscapedCharacters) { |
| 892 | str = goog.string.unescapeEntities(str); |
| 893 | } |
| 894 | |
| 895 | if (str.length > chars) { |
| 896 | str = str.substring(0, chars - 3) + '...'; |
| 897 | } |
| 898 | |
| 899 | if (opt_protectEscapedCharacters) { |
| 900 | str = goog.string.htmlEscape(str); |
| 901 | } |
| 902 | |
| 903 | return str; |
| 904 | }; |
| 905 | |
| 906 | |
| 907 | /** |
| 908 | * Truncate a string in the middle, adding "..." if necessary, |
| 909 | * and favoring the beginning of the string. |
| 910 | * @param {string} str The string to truncate the middle of. |
| 911 | * @param {number} chars Max number of characters. |
| 912 | * @param {boolean=} opt_protectEscapedCharacters Whether to protect escaped |
| 913 | * characters from being cutoff in the middle. |
| 914 | * @param {number=} opt_trailingChars Optional number of trailing characters to |
| 915 | * leave at the end of the string, instead of truncating as close to the |
| 916 | * middle as possible. |
| 917 | * @return {string} A truncated copy of {@code str}. |
| 918 | */ |
| 919 | goog.string.truncateMiddle = function(str, chars, |
| 920 | opt_protectEscapedCharacters, opt_trailingChars) { |
| 921 | if (opt_protectEscapedCharacters) { |
| 922 | str = goog.string.unescapeEntities(str); |
| 923 | } |
| 924 | |
| 925 | if (opt_trailingChars && str.length > chars) { |
| 926 | if (opt_trailingChars > chars) { |
| 927 | opt_trailingChars = chars; |
| 928 | } |
| 929 | var endPoint = str.length - opt_trailingChars; |
| 930 | var startPoint = chars - opt_trailingChars; |
| 931 | str = str.substring(0, startPoint) + '...' + str.substring(endPoint); |
| 932 | } else if (str.length > chars) { |
| 933 | // Favor the beginning of the string: |
| 934 | var half = Math.floor(chars / 2); |
| 935 | var endPos = str.length - half; |
| 936 | half += chars % 2; |
| 937 | str = str.substring(0, half) + '...' + str.substring(endPos); |
| 938 | } |
| 939 | |
| 940 | if (opt_protectEscapedCharacters) { |
| 941 | str = goog.string.htmlEscape(str); |
| 942 | } |
| 943 | |
| 944 | return str; |
| 945 | }; |
| 946 | |
| 947 | |
| 948 | /** |
| 949 | * Special chars that need to be escaped for goog.string.quote. |
| 950 | * @private {!Object<string, string>} |
| 951 | */ |
| 952 | goog.string.specialEscapeChars_ = { |
| 953 | '\0': '\\0', |
| 954 | '\b': '\\b', |
| 955 | '\f': '\\f', |
| 956 | '\n': '\\n', |
| 957 | '\r': '\\r', |
| 958 | '\t': '\\t', |
| 959 | '\x0B': '\\x0B', // '\v' is not supported in JScript |
| 960 | '"': '\\"', |
| 961 | '\\': '\\\\', |
| 962 | // To support the use case of embedding quoted strings inside of <script> |
| 963 | // tags, we have to make sure "<!--", "<script", and "</script" does not |
| 964 | // appear in the resulting string. The specific strings that must be escaped |
| 965 | // are documented at: |
| 966 | // http://www.w3.org/TR/html51/semantics.html#restrictions-for-contents-of-script-elements |
| 967 | '<': '\x3c' |
| 968 | }; |
| 969 | |
| 970 | |
| 971 | /** |
| 972 | * Character mappings used internally for goog.string.escapeChar. |
| 973 | * @private {!Object<string, string>} |
| 974 | */ |
| 975 | goog.string.jsEscapeCache_ = { |
| 976 | '\'': '\\\'' |
| 977 | }; |
| 978 | |
| 979 | |
| 980 | /** |
| 981 | * Encloses a string in double quotes and escapes characters so that the |
| 982 | * string is a valid JS string. The resulting string is safe to embed in |
| 983 | * <script> tags as "<" is escaped. |
| 984 | * @param {string} s The string to quote. |
| 985 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code s} surrounded by double quotes. |
| 986 | */ |
| 987 | goog.string.quote = function(s) { |
| 988 | s = String(s); |
| 989 | var sb = ['"']; |
| 990 | for (var i = 0; i < s.length; i++) { |
| 991 | var ch = s.charAt(i); |
| 992 | var cc = ch.charCodeAt(0); |
| 993 | sb[i + 1] = goog.string.specialEscapeChars_[ch] || |
| 994 | ((cc > 31 && cc < 127) ? ch : goog.string.escapeChar(ch)); |
| 995 | } |
| 996 | sb.push('"'); |
| 997 | return sb.join(''); |
| 998 | }; |
| 999 | |
| 1000 | |
| 1001 | /** |
| 1002 | * Takes a string and returns the escaped string for that character. |
| 1003 | * @param {string} str The string to escape. |
| 1004 | * @return {string} An escaped string representing {@code str}. |
| 1005 | */ |
| 1006 | goog.string.escapeString = function(str) { |
| 1007 | var sb = []; |
| 1008 | for (var i = 0; i < str.length; i++) { |
| 1009 | sb[i] = goog.string.escapeChar(str.charAt(i)); |
| 1010 | } |
| 1011 | return sb.join(''); |
| 1012 | }; |
| 1013 | |
| 1014 | |
| 1015 | /** |
| 1016 | * Takes a character and returns the escaped string for that character. For |
| 1017 | * example escapeChar(String.fromCharCode(15)) -> "\\x0E". |
| 1018 | * @param {string} c The character to escape. |
| 1019 | * @return {string} An escaped string representing {@code c}. |
| 1020 | */ |
| 1021 | goog.string.escapeChar = function(c) { |
| 1022 | if (c in goog.string.jsEscapeCache_) { |
| 1023 | return goog.string.jsEscapeCache_[c]; |
| 1024 | } |
| 1025 | |
| 1026 | if (c in goog.string.specialEscapeChars_) { |
| 1027 | return goog.string.jsEscapeCache_[c] = goog.string.specialEscapeChars_[c]; |
| 1028 | } |
| 1029 | |
| 1030 | var rv = c; |
| 1031 | var cc = c.charCodeAt(0); |
| 1032 | if (cc > 31 && cc < 127) { |
| 1033 | rv = c; |
| 1034 | } else { |
| 1035 | // tab is 9 but handled above |
| 1036 | if (cc < 256) { |
| 1037 | rv = '\\x'; |
| 1038 | if (cc < 16 || cc > 256) { |
| 1039 | rv += '0'; |
| 1040 | } |
| 1041 | } else { |
| 1042 | rv = '\\u'; |
| 1043 | if (cc < 4096) { // \u1000 |
| 1044 | rv += '0'; |
| 1045 | } |
| 1046 | } |
| 1047 | rv += cc.toString(16).toUpperCase(); |
| 1048 | } |
| 1049 | |
| 1050 | return goog.string.jsEscapeCache_[c] = rv; |
| 1051 | }; |
| 1052 | |
| 1053 | |
| 1054 | /** |
| 1055 | * Determines whether a string contains a substring. |
| 1056 | * @param {string} str The string to search. |
| 1057 | * @param {string} subString The substring to search for. |
| 1058 | * @return {boolean} Whether {@code str} contains {@code subString}. |
| 1059 | */ |
| 1060 | goog.string.contains = function(str, subString) { |
| 1061 | return str.indexOf(subString) != -1; |
| 1062 | }; |
| 1063 | |
| 1064 | |
| 1065 | /** |
| 1066 | * Determines whether a string contains a substring, ignoring case. |
| 1067 | * @param {string} str The string to search. |
| 1068 | * @param {string} subString The substring to search for. |
| 1069 | * @return {boolean} Whether {@code str} contains {@code subString}. |
| 1070 | */ |
| 1071 | goog.string.caseInsensitiveContains = function(str, subString) { |
| 1072 | return goog.string.contains(str.toLowerCase(), subString.toLowerCase()); |
| 1073 | }; |
| 1074 | |
| 1075 | |
| 1076 | /** |
| 1077 | * Returns the non-overlapping occurrences of ss in s. |
| 1078 | * If either s or ss evalutes to false, then returns zero. |
| 1079 | * @param {string} s The string to look in. |
| 1080 | * @param {string} ss The string to look for. |
| 1081 | * @return {number} Number of occurrences of ss in s. |
| 1082 | */ |
| 1083 | goog.string.countOf = function(s, ss) { |
| 1084 | return s && ss ? s.split(ss).length - 1 : 0; |
| 1085 | }; |
| 1086 | |
| 1087 | |
| 1088 | /** |
| 1089 | * Removes a substring of a specified length at a specific |
| 1090 | * index in a string. |
| 1091 | * @param {string} s The base string from which to remove. |
| 1092 | * @param {number} index The index at which to remove the substring. |
| 1093 | * @param {number} stringLength The length of the substring to remove. |
| 1094 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code s} with the substring removed or the full |
| 1095 | * string if nothing is removed or the input is invalid. |
| 1096 | */ |
| 1097 | goog.string.removeAt = function(s, index, stringLength) { |
| 1098 | var resultStr = s; |
| 1099 | // If the index is greater or equal to 0 then remove substring |
| 1100 | if (index >= 0 && index < s.length && stringLength > 0) { |
| 1101 | resultStr = s.substr(0, index) + |
| 1102 | s.substr(index + stringLength, s.length - index - stringLength); |
| 1103 | } |
| 1104 | return resultStr; |
| 1105 | }; |
| 1106 | |
| 1107 | |
| 1108 | /** |
| 1109 | * Removes the first occurrence of a substring from a string. |
| 1110 | * @param {string} s The base string from which to remove. |
| 1111 | * @param {string} ss The string to remove. |
| 1112 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code s} with {@code ss} removed or the full |
| 1113 | * string if nothing is removed. |
| 1114 | */ |
| 1115 | goog.string.remove = function(s, ss) { |
| 1116 | var re = new RegExp(goog.string.regExpEscape(ss), ''); |
| 1117 | return s.replace(re, ''); |
| 1118 | }; |
| 1119 | |
| 1120 | |
| 1121 | /** |
| 1122 | * Removes all occurrences of a substring from a string. |
| 1123 | * @param {string} s The base string from which to remove. |
| 1124 | * @param {string} ss The string to remove. |
| 1125 | * @return {string} A copy of {@code s} with {@code ss} removed or the full |
| 1126 | * string if nothing is removed. |
| 1127 | */ |
| 1128 | goog.string.removeAll = function(s, ss) { |
| 1129 | var re = new RegExp(goog.string.regExpEscape(ss), 'g'); |
| 1130 | return s.replace(re, ''); |
| 1131 | }; |
| 1132 | |
| 1133 | |
| 1134 | /** |
| 1135 | * Escapes characters in the string that are not safe to use in a RegExp. |
| 1136 | * @param {*} s The string to escape. If not a string, it will be casted |
| 1137 | * to one. |
| 1138 | * @return {string} A RegExp safe, escaped copy of {@code s}. |
| 1139 | */ |
| 1140 | goog.string.regExpEscape = function(s) { |
| 1141 | return String(s).replace(/([-()\[\]{}+?*.$\^|,:#<!\\])/g, '\\$1'). |
| 1142 | replace(/\x08/g, '\\x08'); |
| 1143 | }; |
| 1144 | |
| 1145 | |
| 1146 | /** |
| 1147 | * Repeats a string n times. |
| 1148 | * @param {string} string The string to repeat. |
| 1149 | * @param {number} length The number of times to repeat. |
| 1150 | * @return {string} A string containing {@code length} repetitions of |
| 1151 | * {@code string}. |
| 1152 | */ |
| 1153 | goog.string.repeat = (String.prototype.repeat) ? |
| 1154 | function(string, length) { |
| 1155 | // The native method is over 100 times faster than the alternative. |
| 1156 | return string.repeat(length); |
| 1157 | } : |
| 1158 | function(string, length) { |
| 1159 | return new Array(length + 1).join(string); |
| 1160 | }; |
| 1161 | |
| 1162 | |
| 1163 | /** |
| 1164 | * Pads number to given length and optionally rounds it to a given precision. |
| 1165 | * For example: |
| 1166 | * <pre>padNumber(1.25, 2, 3) -> '01.250' |
| 1167 | * padNumber(1.25, 2) -> '01.25' |
| 1168 | * padNumber(1.25, 2, 1) -> '01.3' |
| 1169 | * padNumber(1.25, 0) -> '1.25'</pre> |
| 1170 | * |
| 1171 | * @param {number} num The number to pad. |
| 1172 | * @param {number} length The desired length. |
| 1173 | * @param {number=} opt_precision The desired precision. |
| 1174 | * @return {string} {@code num} as a string with the given options. |
| 1175 | */ |
| 1176 | goog.string.padNumber = function(num, length, opt_precision) { |
| 1177 | var s = goog.isDef(opt_precision) ? num.toFixed(opt_precision) : String(num); |
| 1178 | var index = s.indexOf('.'); |
| 1179 | if (index == -1) { |
| 1180 | index = s.length; |
| 1181 | } |
| 1182 | return goog.string.repeat('0', Math.max(0, length - index)) + s; |
| 1183 | }; |
| 1184 | |
| 1185 | |
| 1186 | /** |
| 1187 | * Returns a string representation of the given object, with |
| 1188 | * null and undefined being returned as the empty string. |
| 1189 | * |
| 1190 | * @param {*} obj The object to convert. |
| 1191 | * @return {string} A string representation of the {@code obj}. |
| 1192 | */ |
| 1193 | goog.string.makeSafe = function(obj) { |
| 1194 | return obj == null ? '' : String(obj); |
| 1195 | }; |
| 1196 | |
| 1197 | |
| 1198 | /** |
| 1199 | * Concatenates string expressions. This is useful |
| 1200 | * since some browsers are very inefficient when it comes to using plus to |
| 1201 | * concat strings. Be careful when using null and undefined here since |
| 1202 | * these will not be included in the result. If you need to represent these |
| 1203 | * be sure to cast the argument to a String first. |
| 1204 | * For example: |
| 1205 | * <pre>buildString('a', 'b', 'c', 'd') -> 'abcd' |
| 1206 | * buildString(null, undefined) -> '' |
| 1207 | * </pre> |
| 1208 | * @param {...*} var_args A list of strings to concatenate. If not a string, |
| 1209 | * it will be casted to one. |
| 1210 | * @return {string} The concatenation of {@code var_args}. |
| 1211 | */ |
| 1212 | goog.string.buildString = function(var_args) { |
| 1213 | return Array.prototype.join.call(arguments, ''); |
| 1214 | }; |
| 1215 | |
| 1216 | |
| 1217 | /** |
| 1218 | * Returns a string with at least 64-bits of randomness. |
| 1219 | * |
| 1220 | * Doesn't trust Javascript's random function entirely. Uses a combination of |
| 1221 | * random and current timestamp, and then encodes the string in base-36 to |
| 1222 | * make it shorter. |
| 1223 | * |
| 1224 | * @return {string} A random string, e.g. sn1s7vb4gcic. |
| 1225 | */ |
| 1226 | goog.string.getRandomString = function() { |
| 1227 | var x = 2147483648; |
| 1228 | return Math.floor(Math.random() * x).toString(36) + |
| 1229 | Math.abs(Math.floor(Math.random() * x) ^ goog.now()).toString(36); |
| 1230 | }; |
| 1231 | |
| 1232 | |
| 1233 | /** |
| 1234 | * Compares two version numbers. |
| 1235 | * |
| 1236 | * @param {string|number} version1 Version of first item. |
| 1237 | * @param {string|number} version2 Version of second item. |
| 1238 | * |
| 1239 | * @return {number} 1 if {@code version1} is higher. |
| 1240 | * 0 if arguments are equal. |
| 1241 | * -1 if {@code version2} is higher. |
| 1242 | */ |
| 1243 | goog.string.compareVersions = function(version1, version2) { |
| 1244 | var order = 0; |
| 1245 | // Trim leading and trailing whitespace and split the versions into |
| 1246 | // subversions. |
| 1247 | var v1Subs = goog.string.trim(String(version1)).split('.'); |
| 1248 | var v2Subs = goog.string.trim(String(version2)).split('.'); |
| 1249 | var subCount = Math.max(v1Subs.length, v2Subs.length); |
| 1250 | |
| 1251 | // Iterate over the subversions, as long as they appear to be equivalent. |
| 1252 | for (var subIdx = 0; order == 0 && subIdx < subCount; subIdx++) { |
| 1253 | var v1Sub = v1Subs[subIdx] || ''; |
| 1254 | var v2Sub = v2Subs[subIdx] || ''; |
| 1255 | |
| 1256 | // Split the subversions into pairs of numbers and qualifiers (like 'b'). |
| 1257 | // Two different RegExp objects are needed because they are both using |
| 1258 | // the 'g' flag. |
| 1259 | var v1CompParser = new RegExp('(\\d*)(\\D*)', 'g'); |
| 1260 | var v2CompParser = new RegExp('(\\d*)(\\D*)', 'g'); |
| 1261 | do { |
| 1262 | var v1Comp = v1CompParser.exec(v1Sub) || ['', '', '']; |
| 1263 | var v2Comp = v2CompParser.exec(v2Sub) || ['', '', '']; |
| 1264 | // Break if there are no more matches. |
| 1265 | if (v1Comp[0].length == 0 && v2Comp[0].length == 0) { |
| 1266 | break; |
| 1267 | } |
| 1268 | |
| 1269 | // Parse the numeric part of the subversion. A missing number is |
| 1270 | // equivalent to 0. |
| 1271 | var v1CompNum = v1Comp[1].length == 0 ? 0 : parseInt(v1Comp[1], 10); |
| 1272 | var v2CompNum = v2Comp[1].length == 0 ? 0 : parseInt(v2Comp[1], 10); |
| 1273 | |
| 1274 | // Compare the subversion components. The number has the highest |
| 1275 | // precedence. Next, if the numbers are equal, a subversion without any |
| 1276 | // qualifier is always higher than a subversion with any qualifier. Next, |
| 1277 | // the qualifiers are compared as strings. |
| 1278 | order = goog.string.compareElements_(v1CompNum, v2CompNum) || |
| 1279 | goog.string.compareElements_(v1Comp[2].length == 0, |
| 1280 | v2Comp[2].length == 0) || |
| 1281 | goog.string.compareElements_(v1Comp[2], v2Comp[2]); |
| 1282 | // Stop as soon as an inequality is discovered. |
| 1283 | } while (order == 0); |
| 1284 | } |
| 1285 | |
| 1286 | return order; |
| 1287 | }; |
| 1288 | |
| 1289 | |
| 1290 | /** |
| 1291 | * Compares elements of a version number. |
| 1292 | * |
| 1293 | * @param {string|number|boolean} left An element from a version number. |
| 1294 | * @param {string|number|boolean} right An element from a version number. |
| 1295 | * |
| 1296 | * @return {number} 1 if {@code left} is higher. |
| 1297 | * 0 if arguments are equal. |
| 1298 | * -1 if {@code right} is higher. |
| 1299 | * @private |
| 1300 | */ |
| 1301 | goog.string.compareElements_ = function(left, right) { |
| 1302 | if (left < right) { |
| 1303 | return -1; |
| 1304 | } else if (left > right) { |
| 1305 | return 1; |
| 1306 | } |
| 1307 | return 0; |
| 1308 | }; |
| 1309 | |
| 1310 | |
| 1311 | /** |
| 1312 | * String hash function similar to java.lang.String.hashCode(). |
| 1313 | * The hash code for a string is computed as |
| 1314 | * s[0] * 31 ^ (n - 1) + s[1] * 31 ^ (n - 2) + ... + s[n - 1], |
| 1315 | * where s[i] is the ith character of the string and n is the length of |
| 1316 | * the string. We mod the result to make it between 0 (inclusive) and 2^32 |
| 1317 | * (exclusive). |
| 1318 | * @param {string} str A string. |
| 1319 | * @return {number} Hash value for {@code str}, between 0 (inclusive) and 2^32 |
| 1320 | * (exclusive). The empty string returns 0. |
| 1321 | */ |
| 1322 | goog.string.hashCode = function(str) { |
| 1323 | var result = 0; |
| 1324 | for (var i = 0; i < str.length; ++i) { |
| 1325 | // Normalize to 4 byte range, 0 ... 2^32. |
| 1326 | result = (31 * result + str.charCodeAt(i)) >>> 0; |
| 1327 | } |
| 1328 | return result; |
| 1329 | }; |
| 1330 | |
| 1331 | |
| 1332 | /** |
| 1333 | * The most recent unique ID. |0 is equivalent to Math.floor in this case. |
| 1334 | * @type {number} |
| 1335 | * @private |
| 1336 | */ |
| 1337 | goog.string.uniqueStringCounter_ = Math.random() * 0x80000000 | 0; |
| 1338 | |
| 1339 | |
| 1340 | /** |
| 1341 | * Generates and returns a string which is unique in the current document. |
| 1342 | * This is useful, for example, to create unique IDs for DOM elements. |
| 1343 | * @return {string} A unique id. |
| 1344 | */ |
| 1345 | goog.string.createUniqueString = function() { |
| 1346 | return 'goog_' + goog.string.uniqueStringCounter_++; |
| 1347 | }; |
| 1348 | |
| 1349 | |
| 1350 | /** |
| 1351 | * Converts the supplied string to a number, which may be Infinity or NaN. |
| 1352 | * This function strips whitespace: (toNumber(' 123') === 123) |
| 1353 | * This function accepts scientific notation: (toNumber('1e1') === 10) |
| 1354 | * |
| 1355 | * This is better than Javascript's built-in conversions because, sadly: |
| 1356 | * (Number(' ') === 0) and (parseFloat('123a') === 123) |
| 1357 | * |
| 1358 | * @param {string} str The string to convert. |
| 1359 | * @return {number} The number the supplied string represents, or NaN. |
| 1360 | */ |
| 1361 | goog.string.toNumber = function(str) { |
| 1362 | var num = Number(str); |
| 1363 | if (num == 0 && goog.string.isEmptyOrWhitespace(str)) { |
| 1364 | return NaN; |
| 1365 | } |
| 1366 | return num; |
| 1367 | }; |
| 1368 | |
| 1369 | |
| 1370 | /** |
| 1371 | * Returns whether the given string is lower camel case (e.g. "isFooBar"). |
| 1372 | * |
| 1373 | * Note that this assumes the string is entirely letters. |
| 1374 | * @see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CamelCase#Variations_and_synonyms |
| 1375 | * |
| 1376 | * @param {string} str String to test. |
| 1377 | * @return {boolean} Whether the string is lower camel case. |
| 1378 | */ |
| 1379 | goog.string.isLowerCamelCase = function(str) { |
| 1380 | return /^[a-z]+([A-Z][a-z]*)*$/.test(str); |
| 1381 | }; |
| 1382 | |
| 1383 | |
| 1384 | /** |
| 1385 | * Returns whether the given string is upper camel case (e.g. "FooBarBaz"). |
| 1386 | * |
| 1387 | * Note that this assumes the string is entirely letters. |
| 1388 | * @see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CamelCase#Variations_and_synonyms |
| 1389 | * |
| 1390 | * @param {string} str String to test. |
| 1391 | * @return {boolean} Whether the string is upper camel case. |
| 1392 | */ |
| 1393 | goog.string.isUpperCamelCase = function(str) { |
| 1394 | return /^([A-Z][a-z]*)+$/.test(str); |
| 1395 | }; |
| 1396 | |
| 1397 | |
| 1398 | /** |
| 1399 | * Converts a string from selector-case to camelCase (e.g. from |
| 1400 | * "multi-part-string" to "multiPartString"), useful for converting |
| 1401 | * CSS selectors and HTML dataset keys to their equivalent JS properties. |
| 1402 | * @param {string} str The string in selector-case form. |
| 1403 | * @return {string} The string in camelCase form. |
| 1404 | */ |
| 1405 | goog.string.toCamelCase = function(str) { |
| 1406 | return String(str).replace(/\-([a-z])/g, function(all, match) { |
| 1407 | return match.toUpperCase(); |
| 1408 | }); |
| 1409 | }; |
| 1410 | |
| 1411 | |
| 1412 | /** |
| 1413 | * Converts a string from camelCase to selector-case (e.g. from |
| 1414 | * "multiPartString" to "multi-part-string"), useful for converting JS |
| 1415 | * style and dataset properties to equivalent CSS selectors and HTML keys. |
| 1416 | * @param {string} str The string in camelCase form. |
| 1417 | * @return {string} The string in selector-case form. |
| 1418 | */ |
| 1419 | goog.string.toSelectorCase = function(str) { |
| 1420 | return String(str).replace(/([A-Z])/g, '-$1').toLowerCase(); |
| 1421 | }; |
| 1422 | |
| 1423 | |
| 1424 | /** |
| 1425 | * Converts a string into TitleCase. First character of the string is always |
| 1426 | * capitalized in addition to the first letter of every subsequent word. |
| 1427 | * Words are delimited by one or more whitespaces by default. Custom delimiters |
| 1428 | * can optionally be specified to replace the default, which doesn't preserve |
| 1429 | * whitespace delimiters and instead must be explicitly included if needed. |
| 1430 | * |
| 1431 | * Default delimiter => " ": |
| 1432 | * goog.string.toTitleCase('oneTwoThree') => 'OneTwoThree' |
| 1433 | * goog.string.toTitleCase('one two three') => 'One Two Three' |
| 1434 | * goog.string.toTitleCase(' one two ') => ' One Two ' |
| 1435 | * goog.string.toTitleCase('one_two_three') => 'One_two_three' |
| 1436 | * goog.string.toTitleCase('one-two-three') => 'One-two-three' |
| 1437 | * |
| 1438 | * Custom delimiter => "_-.": |
| 1439 | * goog.string.toTitleCase('oneTwoThree', '_-.') => 'OneTwoThree' |
| 1440 | * goog.string.toTitleCase('one two three', '_-.') => 'One two three' |
| 1441 | * goog.string.toTitleCase(' one two ', '_-.') => ' one two ' |
| 1442 | * goog.string.toTitleCase('one_two_three', '_-.') => 'One_Two_Three' |
| 1443 | * goog.string.toTitleCase('one-two-three', '_-.') => 'One-Two-Three' |
| 1444 | * goog.string.toTitleCase('one...two...three', '_-.') => 'One...Two...Three' |
| 1445 | * goog.string.toTitleCase('one. two. three', '_-.') => 'One. two. three' |
| 1446 | * goog.string.toTitleCase('one-two.three', '_-.') => 'One-Two.Three' |
| 1447 | * |
| 1448 | * @param {string} str String value in camelCase form. |
| 1449 | * @param {string=} opt_delimiters Custom delimiter character set used to |
| 1450 | * distinguish words in the string value. Each character represents a |
| 1451 | * single delimiter. When provided, default whitespace delimiter is |
| 1452 | * overridden and must be explicitly included if needed. |
| 1453 | * @return {string} String value in TitleCase form. |
| 1454 | */ |
| 1455 | goog.string.toTitleCase = function(str, opt_delimiters) { |
| 1456 | var delimiters = goog.isString(opt_delimiters) ? |
| 1457 | goog.string.regExpEscape(opt_delimiters) : '\\s'; |
| 1458 | |
| 1459 | // For IE8, we need to prevent using an empty character set. Otherwise, |
| 1460 | // incorrect matching will occur. |
| 1461 | delimiters = delimiters ? '|[' + delimiters + ']+' : ''; |
| 1462 | |
| 1463 | var regexp = new RegExp('(^' + delimiters + ')([a-z])', 'g'); |
| 1464 | return str.replace(regexp, function(all, p1, p2) { |
| 1465 | return p1 + p2.toUpperCase(); |
| 1466 | }); |
| 1467 | }; |
| 1468 | |
| 1469 | |
| 1470 | /** |
| 1471 | * Capitalizes a string, i.e. converts the first letter to uppercase |
| 1472 | * and all other letters to lowercase, e.g.: |
| 1473 | * |
| 1474 | * goog.string.capitalize('one') => 'One' |
| 1475 | * goog.string.capitalize('ONE') => 'One' |
| 1476 | * goog.string.capitalize('one two') => 'One two' |
| 1477 | * |
| 1478 | * Note that this function does not trim initial whitespace. |
| 1479 | * |
| 1480 | * @param {string} str String value to capitalize. |
| 1481 | * @return {string} String value with first letter in uppercase. |
| 1482 | */ |
| 1483 | goog.string.capitalize = function(str) { |
| 1484 | return String(str.charAt(0)).toUpperCase() + |
| 1485 | String(str.substr(1)).toLowerCase(); |
| 1486 | }; |
| 1487 | |
| 1488 | |
| 1489 | /** |
| 1490 | * Parse a string in decimal or hexidecimal ('0xFFFF') form. |
| 1491 | * |
| 1492 | * To parse a particular radix, please use parseInt(string, radix) directly. See |
| 1493 | * https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/parseInt |
| 1494 | * |
| 1495 | * This is a wrapper for the built-in parseInt function that will only parse |
| 1496 | * numbers as base 10 or base 16. Some JS implementations assume strings |
| 1497 | * starting with "0" are intended to be octal. ES3 allowed but discouraged |
| 1498 | * this behavior. ES5 forbids it. This function emulates the ES5 behavior. |
| 1499 | * |
| 1500 | * For more information, see Mozilla JS Reference: http://goo.gl/8RiFj |
| 1501 | * |
| 1502 | * @param {string|number|null|undefined} value The value to be parsed. |
| 1503 | * @return {number} The number, parsed. If the string failed to parse, this |
| 1504 | * will be NaN. |
| 1505 | */ |
| 1506 | goog.string.parseInt = function(value) { |
| 1507 | // Force finite numbers to strings. |
| 1508 | if (isFinite(value)) { |
| 1509 | value = String(value); |
| 1510 | } |
| 1511 | |
| 1512 | if (goog.isString(value)) { |
| 1513 | // If the string starts with '0x' or '-0x', parse as hex. |
| 1514 | return /^\s*-?0x/i.test(value) ? |
| 1515 | parseInt(value, 16) : parseInt(value, 10); |
| 1516 | } |
| 1517 | |
| 1518 | return NaN; |
| 1519 | }; |
| 1520 | |
| 1521 | |
| 1522 | /** |
| 1523 | * Splits a string on a separator a limited number of times. |
| 1524 | * |
| 1525 | * This implementation is more similar to Python or Java, where the limit |
| 1526 | * parameter specifies the maximum number of splits rather than truncating |
| 1527 | * the number of results. |
| 1528 | * |
| 1529 | * See http://docs.python.org/2/library/stdtypes.html#str.split |
| 1530 | * See JavaDoc: http://goo.gl/F2AsY |
| 1531 | * See Mozilla reference: http://goo.gl/dZdZs |
| 1532 | * |
| 1533 | * @param {string} str String to split. |
| 1534 | * @param {string} separator The separator. |
| 1535 | * @param {number} limit The limit to the number of splits. The resulting array |
| 1536 | * will have a maximum length of limit+1. Negative numbers are the same |
| 1537 | * as zero. |
| 1538 | * @return {!Array<string>} The string, split. |
| 1539 | */ |
| 1540 | |
| 1541 | goog.string.splitLimit = function(str, separator, limit) { |
| 1542 | var parts = str.split(separator); |
| 1543 | var returnVal = []; |
| 1544 | |
| 1545 | // Only continue doing this while we haven't hit the limit and we have |
| 1546 | // parts left. |
| 1547 | while (limit > 0 && parts.length) { |
| 1548 | returnVal.push(parts.shift()); |
| 1549 | limit--; |
| 1550 | } |
| 1551 | |
| 1552 | // If there are remaining parts, append them to the end. |
| 1553 | if (parts.length) { |
| 1554 | returnVal.push(parts.join(separator)); |
| 1555 | } |
| 1556 | |
| 1557 | return returnVal; |
| 1558 | }; |
| 1559 | |
| 1560 | |
| 1561 | /** |
| 1562 | * Computes the Levenshtein edit distance between two strings. |
| 1563 | * @param {string} a |
| 1564 | * @param {string} b |
| 1565 | * @return {number} The edit distance between the two strings. |
| 1566 | */ |
| 1567 | goog.string.editDistance = function(a, b) { |
| 1568 | var v0 = []; |
| 1569 | var v1 = []; |
| 1570 | |
| 1571 | if (a == b) { |
| 1572 | return 0; |
| 1573 | } |
| 1574 | |
| 1575 | if (!a.length || !b.length) { |
| 1576 | return Math.max(a.length, b.length); |
| 1577 | } |
| 1578 | |
| 1579 | for (var i = 0; i < b.length + 1; i++) { |
| 1580 | v0[i] = i; |
| 1581 | } |
| 1582 | |
| 1583 | for (var i = 0; i < a.length; i++) { |
| 1584 | v1[0] = i + 1; |
| 1585 | |
| 1586 | for (var j = 0; j < b.length; j++) { |
| 1587 | var cost = a[i] != b[j]; |
| 1588 | // Cost for the substring is the minimum of adding one character, removing |
| 1589 | // one character, or a swap. |
| 1590 | v1[j + 1] = Math.min(v1[j] + 1, v0[j + 1] + 1, v0[j] + cost); |
| 1591 | } |
| 1592 | |
| 1593 | for (var j = 0; j < v0.length; j++) { |
| 1594 | v0[j] = v1[j]; |
| 1595 | } |
| 1596 | } |
| 1597 | |
| 1598 | return v1[b.length]; |
| 1599 | }; |