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Jenuel Oras Ganawed
Jenuel Oras Ganawed

Posted on • Originally published at jenuel.dev

Ways To Manipulate String

In JavaScript, there are various ways to manipulate strings. Here are some common methods along with examples:

  1. Concatenation (+ operator): This method is used to join two or more strings together.
let str1 = 'Hello';
let str2 = 'World';
let result = str1 + ' ' + str2; // Concatenating two strings with a space in between
console.log(result); // Output: Hello World
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  1. String methods: JavaScript provides several built-in methods for string manipulation, such as concat()slice()substr()substring()replace()toUpperCase()toLowerCase(), etc.
let str = 'Hello World';

// Using substring method to extract a part of the string
let extracted = str.substring(0, 5); // Extracting characters from index 0 to 4
console.log(extracted); // Output: Hello

// Using replace method to replace a part of the string
let replaced = str.replace('World', 'Universe');
console.log(replaced); // Output: Hello Universe

// Using toUpperCase method to convert the string to uppercase
let upperCaseStr = str.toUpperCase();
console.log(upperCaseStr); // Output: HELLO WORLD
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  1. Template literals: Template literals, introduced in ES6, allow for easier string interpolation and multiline strings.
let name = 'John';
let age = 30;
let sentence = `My name is ${name} and I am ${age} years old.`;
console.log(sentence); // Output: My name is John and I am 30 years old.
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  1. Regular expressions: Regular expressions provide powerful tools for string manipulation, including search, replace, and pattern matching.
let str = 'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog';
let pattern = /fox/g;
let replaced = str.replace(pattern, 'cat');
console.log(replaced); // Output: The quick brown cat jumps over the lazy dog
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  1. Splitting and joining: JavaScript allows splitting a string into an array of substrings based on a separator, and joining an array of strings into a single string using a separator.
let str = 'apple,banana,orange';
let arr = str.split(','); // Splitting the string by comma
console.log(arr); // Output: ['apple', 'banana', 'orange']

let joinedStr = arr.join('-'); // Joining the array elements with a hyphen
console.log(joinedStr); // Output: apple-banana-orange
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These are just a few examples of how strings can be manipulated in JavaScript. Depending on the specific task, you may need to combine these methods or use other techniques for more complex string operations.

Why manipulate string?

String manipulation is a foundational aspect of programming, serving a multitude of essential purposes across various domains. At its core, string manipulation facilitates the processing and transformation of textual data. Whether parsing data from files, extracting user inputs, or formatting text for display, manipulating strings is crucial for handling diverse data types efficiently. In web development, it's integral for user interaction, enabling validation, formatting, and responsive feedback to user actions. Moreover, string manipulation plays a pivotal role in data transformation tasks, facilitating the conversion between different formats and the extraction of specific information. It's also indispensable in algorithmic problem-solving, where tasks like pattern matching, string comparison, and permutation generation demand efficient string handling techniques. In fields like natural language processing and text mining, string manipulation is vital for tasks such as tokenization, sentiment analysis, and linguistic processing. Additionally, string manipulation contributes to security by enabling input sanitization, sensitive data encoding, and credential validation, thus safeguarding against security vulnerabilities like SQL injection and cross-site scripting attacks. Overall, string manipulation stands as a fundamental skill in programming, empowering developers to work effectively with textual data, interact with users, process information, and perform various computational tasks.

String Methods

charAt(index): Returns the character at the specified index within a string.

let str = 'Hello';
let char = str.charAt(0);
console.log(char); // Output: 'H'
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concat(string1, string2, ...): Concatenates one or more strings to the end of the original string.

let str1 = 'Hello';
let str2 = 'World';
let result = str1.concat(' ', str2);
console.log(result); // Output: 'Hello World'
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indexOf(searchValue, startIndex): Returns the index within the calling string of the first occurrence of the specified value, starting the search at the specified index.

let str = 'Hello World';
let index = str.indexOf('o');
console.log(index); // Output: 4
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lastIndexOf(searchValue, startIndex): Returns the index within the calling string of the last occurrence of the specified value, starting the search at the specified index.

let str = 'Hello World';
let lastIndex = str.lastIndexOf('o');
console.log(lastIndex); // Output: 7
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slice(startIndex, endIndex): Extracts a section of a string and returns it as a new string, without modifying the original string.

let str = 'Hello World';
let sliced = str.slice(6, 11);
console.log(sliced); // Output: 'World'
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substring(startIndex, endIndex): Similar to slice, but does not allow negative indices.

let str = 'Hello World';
let substring = str.substring(6, 11);
console.log(substring); // Output: 'World'
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substr(startIndex, length): Returns the characters in a string beginning at the specified location through the specified number of characters.

let str = 'Hello World';
let substr = str.substr(6, 5);
console.log(substr); // Output: 'World'
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replace(searchValue, replaceValue): Returns a new string with some or all matches of a pattern replaced by a replacement.

let str = 'Hello World';
let replaced = str.replace('World', 'Universe');
console.log(replaced); // Output: 'Hello Universe'
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These are just a few of the many string methods available in JavaScript. Each method serves a specific purpose and provides a powerful toolset for manipulating strings in various ways.


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