DroidScript

JavaScript Reference

str.substring()

The substring() method returns a subset of a string between one index and another, or through the end of the string.

Syntax

str.substring(indexStart[, indexEnd])

Parameters

indexStart
An integer between 0 and the length of the string, specifying the offset into the string of the first character to include in the returned substring.
indexEnd
Optional. An integer between 0 and the length of the string, which specifies the offset into the string of the first character not to include in the returned substring.

Description

substring() extracts characters from indexStart up to but not including indexEnd. In particular:

If indexStart is greater than indexEnd, then the effect of substring() is as if the two arguments were swapped; for example, str.substring(1, 0) == str.substring(0, 1).

Examples

Using substring()

The following example uses substring() to display characters from the string 'Mozilla':

var anyString = 'Mozilla';

// Displays 'Moz'
console.log(anyString.substring(0, 3));
console.log(anyString.substring(3, 0));

// Displays 'lla'
console.log(anyString.substring(4, 7));
console.log(anyString.substring(7, 4));

// Displays 'Mozill'
console.log(anyString.substring(0, 6));

// Displays 'Mozilla'
console.log(anyString.substring(0, 7));
console.log(anyString.substring(0, 10));

Using substring() with length property

The following example uses the substring() method and length property to extract the last characters of a particular string. This method may be easier to remember, given that you don't need to know the starting and ending indices as you would in the above examples.

// Displays 'illa' the last 4 characters
var anyString = 'Mozilla';
var anyString4 = anyString.substring(anyString.length - 4);
console.log(anyString4);

// Displays 'zilla' the last 5 characters
var anyString = 'Mozilla';
var anyString5 = anyString.substring(anyString.length - 5);
console.log(anyString5);

Replacing a substring within a string

The following example replaces a substring within a string. It will replace both individual characters and substrings. The function call at the end of the example changes the string 'Brave New World' into 'Brave New Web'.

// Replaces oldS with newS in the string fullS
function replaceString(oldS, newS, fullS) {
  for (var i = 0; i < fullS.length; ++i) {
    if (fullS.substring(i, i + oldS.length) == oldS) {
      fullS = fullS.substring(0, i) + newS + fullS.substring(i + oldS.length, fullS.length);
    }
  }
  return fullS;
}

replaceString('World', 'Web', 'Brave New World');

Note that this can result in an infinite loop if oldS is itself a substring of newS — for example, if you attempted to replace 'World' with 'OtherWorld' here. A better method for replacing strings is as follows:

function replaceString(oldS, newS, fullS) {
  return fullS.split(oldS).join(newS);
}

The code above serves as an example for substring operations. If you need to replace substrings, most of the time you will want to use str.replace().


 Created by Mozilla Contributors and licensed under CC-BY-SA 2.5