I got some function:
private fun selectHometown() = File("data/towns.txt")
.readText()
.split("\n")
.shuffled()
.first()
And if I try to get or print some string with the 2 values obtained from this function, the first value disappears. For example:
println("${selectHometown() ${selectHometown() }")
Will only print one city name, while I expect two. I guess the problem is related to string concatenation in Kotlin. Of course, I can get the desired result in a different way, but I'm wondering why this one doesn't work.
Windows way of terminating a line is to use "\r\n" so use it as delimiter :
private fun selectHometown() = File("data/towns.txt")
.readText()
.split("\r\n")
.shuffled()
.first()
println("${selectHometown()} ${selectHometown()}")
Related
I have this list:
service_name_status=[a-service=INSTALL, b-service=UPGRADE, C-service=UPGRADE, D-service=INSTALL]
And I need to iterate through this list so the first element will be the value of a parameter called "SERVICE_NAME" and the second element will be the value of a parameter called "HELM_COMMAND",
after asserting those values to the parameters I will run my command that uses those parameters and then continue the next items on the list which should replace the values of the parameters with items 3 and 4 and so on.
So what I am looking for is something like that:
def service_name_status=[a-service=INSTALL, b-service=UPGRADE, C-service=UPGRADE, D-service=INSTALL]
def SERVICE_NAME
def HELM_COMMAND
for(x in service_name_status){
SERVICE_NAME=x(0,2,4,6,8...)
HELM_COMMAND=x(1,3,5,7,9...)
println SERVICE_NAME=$SERVICE_NAME
println HELM_COMMAND=$HELM_COMMAND
}
the output should be:
SERVICE_NAME=a-service
HELM_COMMAND=INSTALL
SERVICE_NAME=b-service
HELM_COMMAND=UPGRADE
SERVICE_NAME=c-service
HELM_COMMAND=UPGRADE
SERVICE_NAME=d-service
HELM_COMMAND=INSTALL
and so on...
I couldn't find anything that takes any other element in groovy, any help will be appreciated.
The collection you want is a Map, not a List.
Take note of the quotes in the map, the values are strings so you need the quotes or it won't work. You may have to change that at the source where your data comes from.
I kept your all caps variable names so you will feel at home, but they are not the convention.
Note the list iteration with .each(key, value)
This will work:
Map service_name_status = ['a-service':'INSTALL', 'b-service':'UPGRADE', 'C-service':'UPGRADE', 'D-service':'INSTALL']
service_name_status.each {SERVICE_NAME, HELM_COMMAND ->
println "SERVICE_NAME=${SERVICE_NAME}"
println "HELM_COMMAND=${HELM_COMMAND}"
}
EDIT:
The following can be used to convert that to a map. Be careful, the replaceAll part is fragile and depends on the data to always look the same.
//assuming you can have it in a string like this
String st = "[a-service=INSTALL, b-service=UPGRADE, C-service=UPGRADE, D-service=INSTALL]"
//this part is dependent on format
String mpStr = st.replaceAll(/\[/, "['")
.replaceAll(/=/, "':'")
.replaceAll(/]/, "']")
.replaceAll(/, /, "', '")
println mpStr
//convert the properly formatted string to a map
Map mp = evaluate(mpStr)
assert mp instanceof java.util.LinkedHashMap
I'm trying to compare to strings in a function to be able to do stuff if it's true. However, for some reason the two strings I'm comparing are never equal to eachother.
I am creating a new string in a function, getting data from a Json and then comparing that string with another string in another class. This doesn't work for some reason. The Debug shows that both strings are equal, but the if-statement returns false.
I created two other string variables (hello & hello2) with the same value ("Hello") and this time it's comparing correctly.
Check the images below. What am I doing wrong?
As you can see in the console, both strings have the same value:
Image 1. Here's where I create the string (zoneId).
Image 2. Further down in the same function, same for-loop.
Here's where I'm trying to compare the string created in this function with another string from another class.
Image 3. As you can see in the console it's looping through the jsonArray. But it's returning false even though it's clear that both strings have the same value.
Image 4 and 5. Here I am testing with two other strings inside the function and they are working fine.
Does it has something to do calling a string from another class?
Here's how my other string in userInfo is set up:
public string userID { get; private set; }
In Image 3, is there an additional space before the second 2?
How are you processing Main.Instance.userInfo.zoneID?
You need to use string.Equals for string comparison instead of operator == or !=.
Are string.Equals() and == operator really same?
I have a list of strings I get as a result of splitting a string. I need to remove the surrounding quotes from the strings in the list. Using method chaining how can I achieve this? I tried the below, but doesn't work.Says type interference failed.
val splitCountries: List<String> = countries.split(",").forEach{it -> it.removeSurrounding("\"")}
forEach doesn't return the value you generate in it, it's really just a replacement for a for loop that performs the given action. What you need here is map:
val splitCountries: List<String> = countries.split(",").map { it.removeSurrounding("\"") }
Also, a single parameter in a lambda is implicitly named it, you only have to name it explicitly if you wish to change that.
I have a string similar to below
"OPR_NAME:CODE=value,:DESC=value,:NUMBER=value,:INITIATOR=value,:RESP"
I am using StringTokenizer to split the string into tokens based on the delimiter(,:),I need the values of
CODE,DESC and NUMBER.
Can someone pls tell how to achieve this ? The values may come in random order in my string
For eg my string may be like below as well :
"OPR_NAME:DESC=value,:NUMBER=value,:CODE=value,:INITIATOR=value,:RESP" and still it should be able to fetch the values.
I did below to split the string into tokens
StringTokenizer st = new StringTokenizer(str,",:");
while (st.hasMoreTokens()) {
System.out.println(st.nextToken());
}
But not sure how to store these tokens to just get the value of 3 fields as mentioned above.
Thanks !!
Okay so what I meant is, detect where is the "=" and then apply a substring to get the value you want.
rough example
System.out.println(st.nextToken().substring(st.nextToken().indexOf('=')+1,st.nextToken().length()));
Use split instead :
String[] parts = X.split(",:");
for (String x:parts) {
System.out.println(x.substring(x.indexOf('=')+1));
}
OK, So I'm having a string and want to split it and return its parts in a string array.
This is my code :
// import std.algorithm;
string include = "one,two,three";
string[] paths = splitter(include,",");
This throws an error : Error: cannot cast from Result to string[]
Even if I try adding a cast(string[]) in front of the function call.
Any ideas?
splitter returns a range which splits lazily.
To split eagerly, use split from std.array.
Alternatively, you can save the range to an array by using std.array.array, like this:
string[] paths = include.splitter(",").array();
Using split() from std.array might be more conventional in this case since it already deals with arrays and you wouldn't need to convert the type or anything, compared to splitter.
Requires:
import std.array;
Usage:
auto paths = split(include, ",");