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Elixir Cookbook

Elixir Cookbook

By : Paulo Pereira
4.5 (2)
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Elixir Cookbook

Elixir Cookbook

4.5 (2)
By: Paulo Pereira

Overview of this book

This book is intended for users with some knowledge of the Elixir language syntax and basic data types/structures. Although this is a cookbook and no sequential reading is required, the book’s structure will allow less advanced users who follow it to be gradually exposed to some of Elixir’s features and concepts specific to functional programming. To get the most out of this book, you need to be well versed with Erlang.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
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10
Index

Splitting strings

Functions to work on strings are defined under the String module. In the next few recipes, we will be using some of these functions.

In this recipe, we will be focusing on how to split strings using String.split/1, String.split/3 and String.split_at/2.

Getting ready

Start a new IEx session by typing iex in your command line.

How to do it…

To demonstrate the use of the split functions in the String module, we will follow these steps:

  1. Define a string to work with:
    iex(1)> my_string = "Elixir, testing 1,2,3! Testing!"
    "Elixir, testing 1,2,3! Testing!"
    
  2. Split a string at the whitespaces:
    iex(2)> String.split(my_string)
    ["Elixir,", "testing", "1,2,3!", "Testing!"]
    
  3. Split a string at a given character, in this case at ,:
    iex(3)> String.split(my_string, ",")
    ["Elixir", " testing 1", "2", "3! Testing!"]
    
  4. Split a string at a given character and limit the number of splits...
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