yi-0.12.1: The Haskell-Scriptable Editor

LicenseGPL-2
Maintaineryi-devel@googlegroups.com
Stabilityexperimental
Portabilityportable
Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell2010
Extensions
  • OverloadedStrings
  • NondecreasingIndentation

Yi.String

Description

String manipulation utilities

Synopsis

Documentation

chomp :: String -> String -> String Source

Remove any trailing strings matching irs (input record separator) from input string. Like perl's chomp(1).

dropSpace :: String -> String Source

Trim spaces at beginning and end

fillText :: Int -> YiString -> [YiString] Source

Fills lines up to the given length, splitting the text up if necessary.

mapLines :: (YiString -> YiString) -> YiString -> YiString Source

A helper function for creating functions suitable for modifySelectionB and modifyRegionB. To be used when the desired function should map across the lines of a region.

lines' :: Text -> [Text] Source

Split a Text in lines. Unlike lines, this does not remove any empty line at the end.

unlines' :: [Text] -> Text Source

Inverse of lines'. In contrast to unlines, this does not add an empty line at the end.

commonTPrefix :: [Text] -> Maybe Text Source

Works by resupplying the found prefix back into the list, eventually either finding the prefix or not matching.

commonTPrefix' :: [Text] -> Text Source

Like commonTPrefix but returns empty text on failure.

listify :: [YiString] -> YiString Source

This is kind of like the default Show instance for lists except over Text. It does not leave the elements in extra quotes and should not be attempted to be shown and read back.

showT :: Show a => a -> Text Source

Helper that shows then packs the Text, for all those cases where we use show.

overInit :: (YiString -> YiString) -> YiString -> YiString Source

overInit f runs f over the init of the input if possible, preserving the last element as-is. If given a string with length ≤ 1, it effectively does nothing.

Also see overTail.

overTail :: (YiString -> YiString) -> YiString -> YiString Source

overInit f runs f over the tail of the input if possible, preserving the head element as-is. If given a string with length ≤ 1, it effectively does nothing.

Also see overInit.