delims question
Moderator: DosItHelp
delims question
I'd like to use delims to have my tokens separated by strings instead of a single character.
For instance, in the string below foo and bar would be my delims
thisfooisbarmyString
So token 1 would be this, 2 is, 3 myString
However this would only work if I can get delims to use multi-character strings for each delimiter.
Possible?
Thanks in advance
For instance, in the string below foo and bar would be my delims
thisfooisbarmyString
So token 1 would be this, 2 is, 3 myString
However this would only work if I can get delims to use multi-character strings for each delimiter.
Possible?
Thanks in advance
Re: delims question
This is a workaround:
You can't use a string in delims= and make it work, unless the characters in the string are unique and are all removed from the source text.
Code: Select all
set "str=thisfooisbarmyString"
set "str=%str:foo= %"
set "str=%str:bar= %"
echo "%str%"
You can't use a string in delims= and make it work, unless the characters in the string are unique and are all removed from the source text.
Re: delims question
Figured it out, sort of.
I can do this and have it split on xyz
tokens=1,2,3 delims=(xyz)
so this myxyzfilexyzhere
can become my file here
and that's a big improvement, but I still haven't gotten it to work on two multi-character delims
or more properly, "tokens=1,2,3 delims=(foo)" just to show I'm ending the delims set there.
I can do this and have it split on xyz
tokens=1,2,3 delims=(xyz)
so this myxyzfilexyzhere
can become my file here
and that's a big improvement, but I still haven't gotten it to work on two multi-character delims
or more properly, "tokens=1,2,3 delims=(foo)" just to show I'm ending the delims set there.
Re: delims question
Can you do delims=(xyz)(abc)?
for /f "tokens=2 delims=(jk)(lm)" %a in ("onejktwolmthree") do echo %a
for /f "tokens=3 delims=(jk)(lm)" %a in ("onejktwolmthree") do echo %a
at the command prompt gaves the results "two" and "three"
I'm not sure if it's actually working, or working coincidentally.
Edit - It was working coincidentally; it's a red herring. I'd never even considered trying to work multi-char delims in for.
foxidrive's suggestion is your solution; preprocess the string with string substitutions so you have proper delimiters, then you can pass it through a for statement.
Queue
for /f "tokens=2 delims=(jk)(lm)" %a in ("onejktwolmthree") do echo %a
for /f "tokens=3 delims=(jk)(lm)" %a in ("onejktwolmthree") do echo %a
at the command prompt gaves the results "two" and "three"
I'm not sure if it's actually working, or working coincidentally.
Edit - It was working coincidentally; it's a red herring. I'd never even considered trying to work multi-char delims in for.
foxidrive's suggestion is your solution; preprocess the string with string substitutions so you have proper delimiters, then you can pass it through a for statement.
Queue
Re: delims question
My "solution" was also a red herring. Using the delims I showed above;
thisxismyxyxyzfilexxyzxyeah
returns
this ism file
Edit: I don't think foxidrive's solution will work for me because of the nature of what I'm trying to do. I'm attempting to read directories and substitute parts of filenames with replacement strings. It may be possible to do in a for loop but my DOS skills are very rusty. Now if I was doing this on a UNIX box I'd just use Perl and be done with it posthaste. I haven't done much with DOS since '94
thisxismyxyxyzfilexxyzxyeah
returns
this ism file
Edit: I don't think foxidrive's solution will work for me because of the nature of what I'm trying to do. I'm attempting to read directories and substitute parts of filenames with replacement strings. It may be possible to do in a for loop but my DOS skills are very rusty. Now if I was doing this on a UNIX box I'd just use Perl and be done with it posthaste. I haven't done much with DOS since '94
Re: delims question
Got it!
rem Starting string is thisxismyxyxyzfilexxyzxyeah
setlocal enabledelayedexpansion
for /f "tokens=*" %%a in (filesToRen.txt) do (
echo Moving %%a
set newString=%%a
set "newString=!newString:xyz=.!"
echo "!newString!"
)
Returns:
Moving thisxismyxyxyzfilexxyzxyeah
thisxismyxy.filex.xyeah
Thank you for pointing me in the right direction folks. My first exposure to programming was batch files and I do still enjoy them.
rem Starting string is thisxismyxyxyzfilexxyzxyeah
setlocal enabledelayedexpansion
for /f "tokens=*" %%a in (filesToRen.txt) do (
echo Moving %%a
set newString=%%a
set "newString=!newString:xyz=.!"
echo "!newString!"
)
Returns:
Moving thisxismyxyxyzfilexxyzxyeah
thisxismyxy.filex.xyeah
Thank you for pointing me in the right direction folks. My first exposure to programming was batch files and I do still enjoy them.
Re: delims question
dossod wrote: Now if I was doing this on a UNIX box I'd just use Perl and be done with it posthaste.
So install Perl on your computer. It's not for Unix only.
Re: delims question
Queue wrote:Can you do delims=(xyz)(abc)?
for /f "tokens=2 delims=(jk)(lm)" %a in ("onejktwolmthree") do echo %a
for /f "tokens=3 delims=(jk)(lm)" %a in ("onejktwolmthree") do echo %a
at the command prompt gaves the results "two" and "three"
I'm not sure if it's actually working, or working coincidentally.
Edit - It was working coincidentally; it's a red herring. I'd never even considered trying to work multi-char delims in for.
foxidrive's suggestion is your solution; preprocess the string with string substitutions so you have proper delimiters, then you can pass it through a for statement.
Queue
It works because JK and LM are not part of any of the output you need and consecutive delimiters are treated as one.
Re: delims question
The for loop with the reassignment of %%a worked fine. It doesn't give me the option of using multiple multi-character strings, but using one long one multiple times is nearly as good.
Yes Perl can be installed on a PC, and I have done so in the past. But while I play on my PC I don't do enough on it to require Perl. Probably better anyway so that my DOS skills don't totally leave me.
Thanks again for the help!
Yes Perl can be installed on a PC, and I have done so in the past. But while I play on my PC I don't do enough on it to require Perl. Probably better anyway so that my DOS skills don't totally leave me.
Thanks again for the help!