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The String
global object is a constructor for strings, or a sequence of characters.
Syntax
String literals take the forms:
'string text' "string text" "中文 español deutsch English हिन्दी العربية português বাংলা русский 日本語 ਪੰਜਾਬੀ 한국어 தமிழ் עברית"
Strings can also be created using the String
global object directly:
String(thing)
Parameters
thing
- Anything to be converted to a string.
Template literals
Starting with ECMAScript 2015, string literals can also be so-called Template literals:
`hello world` `hello! world!` `hello ${who}` escape `<a>${who}</a>`
Escape notation
Beside regular, printable characters, special characters can be encoded using escape notation:
Code | Output |
---|---|
\0 |
the NULL character |
\' |
single quote |
\" |
double quote |
\\ |
backslash |
\n |
new line |
\r |
carriage return |
\v |
vertical tab |
\t |
tab |
\b |
backspace |
\f |
form feed |
\uXXXX |
unicode codepoint |
\u{X} ... \u{XXXXXX} |
unicode codepoint |
\xXX |
the Latin-1 character |
Unlike some other languages, JavaScript makes no distinction between single-quoted strings and double-quoted strings; therefore, the escape sequences above work in strings created with either single or double quotes.
Long literal strings
Sometimes, your code will include strings which are very long. Rather than having lines that go on endlessly, or wrap at the whim of your editor, you may wish to specifically break the string into multiple lines in the source code without affecting the actual string contents. There are two ways you can do this.
You can use the + operator to append multiple strings together, like this:
let longString = "This is a very long string which needs " + "to wrap across multiple lines because " + "otherwise my code is unreadable.";
Or you can use the backslash character ("\") at the end of each line to indicate that the string will continue on the next line. Make sure there is no space or any other character after the backslash (except for a line break), or as an indent; otherwise it will not work. That form looks like this:
let longString = "This is a very long string which needs \ to wrap across multiple lines because \ otherwise my code is unreadable.";
Both of these result in identical strings being created.
Description
Strings are useful for holding data that can be represented in text form. Some of the most-used operations on strings are to check their length
, to build and concatenate them using the + and += string operators, checking for the existence or location of substrings with the indexOf()
method, or extracting substrings with the substring()
method.
Character access
There are two ways to access an individual character in a string. The first is the charAt()
method:
return 'cat'.charAt(1); // returns "a"
The other way (introduced in ECMAScript 5) is to treat the string as an array-like object, where individual characters correspond to a numerical index:
return 'cat'[1]; // returns "a"
For character access using bracket notation, attempting to delete or assign a value to these properties will not succeed. The properties involved are neither writable nor configurable. (See Object.defineProperty()
for more information.)
Comparing strings
C developers have the strcmp()
function for comparing strings. In JavaScript, you just use the less-than and greater-than operators:
var a = 'a'; var b = 'b'; if (a < b) { // true console.log(a + ' is less than ' + b); } else if (a > b) { console.log(a + ' is greater than ' + b); } else { console.log(a + ' and ' + b + ' are equal.'); }
A similar result can be achieved using the localeCompare()
method inherited by String
instances.
Distinction between string primitives and String
objects
Note that JavaScript distinguishes between String
objects and primitive string values. (The same is true of Boolean
and Numbers
.)
String literals (denoted by double or single quotes) and strings returned from String
calls in a non-constructor context (i.e., without using the new
keyword) are primitive strings. JavaScript automatically converts primitives to String
objects, so that it's possible to use String
object methods for primitive strings. In contexts where a method is to be invoked on a primitive string or a property lookup occurs, JavaScript will automatically wrap the string primitive and call the method or perform the property lookup.
var s_prim = 'foo'; var s_obj = new String(s_prim); console.log(typeof s_prim); // Logs "string" console.log(typeof s_obj); // Logs "object"
String primitives and String
objects also give different results when using eval()
. Primitives passed to eval
are treated as source code; String
objects are treated as all other objects are, by returning the object. For example:
var s1 = '2 + 2'; // creates a string primitive var s2 = new String('2 + 2'); // creates a String object console.log(eval(s1)); // returns the number 4 console.log(eval(s2)); // returns the string "2 + 2"
For these reasons, code may break when it encounters String
objects when it expects a primitive string instead, although generally authors need not worry about the distinction.
A String
object can always be converted to its primitive counterpart with the valueOf()
method.
console.log(eval(s2.valueOf())); // returns the number 4
StringView
— a C-like representation of strings based on typed arrays.Properties
String.prototype
- Allows the addition of properties to a
String
object.
Methods
String.fromCharCode()
- Returns a string created by using the specified sequence of Unicode values.
String.fromCodePoint()
- Returns a string created by using the specified sequence of code points.
String.raw()
- Returns a string created from a raw template string.
String
generic methods
String generics are non-standard, deprecated and will get removed near future. Note that you can not rely on them cross-browser without using the shim that is provided below.
The String
instance methods are also available in Firefox as of JavaScript 1.6 (not part of the ECMAScript standard) on the String
object for applying String
methods to any object:
var num = 15; console.log(String.replace(num, /5/, '2'));
Generics are also available on Array
methods.
The following is a shim to provide support to non-supporting browsers:
/*globals define*/ // Assumes all supplied String instance methods already present // (one may use shims for these if not available) (function() { 'use strict'; var i, // We could also build the array of methods with the following, but the // getOwnPropertyNames() method is non-shimable: // Object.getOwnPropertyNames(String).filter(function(methodName) { // return typeof String[methodName] === 'function'; // }); methods = [ 'quote', 'substring', 'toLowerCase', 'toUpperCase', 'charAt', 'charCodeAt', 'indexOf', 'lastIndexOf', 'startsWith', 'endsWith', 'trim', 'trimLeft', 'trimRight', 'toLocaleLowerCase', 'toLocaleUpperCase', 'localeCompare', 'match', 'search', 'replace', 'split', 'substr', 'concat', 'slice' ], methodCount = methods.length, assignStringGeneric = function(methodName) { var method = String.prototype[methodName]; String[methodName] = function(arg1) { return method.apply(arg1, Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 1)); }; }; for (i = 0; i < methodCount; i++) { assignStringGeneric(methods[i]); } }());
String
instances
Properties
String.prototype.constructor
- Specifies the function that creates an object's prototype.
String.prototype.length
- Reflects the length of the string.
N
- Used to access the character in the Nth position where N is a positive integer between 0 and one less than the value of
length
. These properties are read-only.
Methods
Methods unrelated to HTML
String.prototype.charAt()
- Returns the character at the specified index.
String.prototype.charCodeAt()
- Returns a number indicating the Unicode value of the character at the given index.
String.prototype.codePointAt()
- Returns a non-negative integer that is the UTF-16 encoded code point value at the given position.
String.prototype.concat()
- Combines the text of two strings and returns a new string.
String.prototype.includes()
- Determines whether one string may be found within another string.
String.prototype.endsWith()
- Determines whether a string ends with the characters of another string.
String.prototype.indexOf()
- Returns the index within the calling
String
object of the first occurrence of the specified value, or -1 if not found. String.prototype.lastIndexOf()
- Returns the index within the calling
String
object of the last occurrence of the specified value, or -1 if not found. String.prototype.localeCompare()
- Returns a number indicating whether a reference string comes before or after or is the same as the given string in sort order.
String.prototype.match()
- Used to match a regular expression against a string.
String.prototype.normalize()
- Returns the Unicode Normalization Form of the calling string value.
String.prototype.padEnd()
- Pads the current string from the end with a given string to create a new string from a given length.
String.prototype.padStart()
- Pads the current string from the start with a given string to create a new string from a given length.
String.prototype.quote()
Wraps the string in double quotes (""
").String.prototype.repeat()
- Returns a string consisting of the elements of the object repeated the given times.
String.prototype.replace()
- Used to find a match between a regular expression and a string, and to replace the matched substring with a new substring.
String.prototype.search()
- Executes the search for a match between a regular expression and a specified string.
String.prototype.slice()
- Extracts a section of a string and returns a new string.
String.prototype.split()
- Splits a
String
object into an array of strings by separating the string into substrings. String.prototype.startsWith()
- Determines whether a string begins with the characters of another string.
String.prototype.substr()
- Returns the characters in a string beginning at the specified location through the specified number of characters.
String.prototype.substring()
- Returns the characters in a string between two indexes into the string.
String.prototype.toLocaleLowerCase()
- The characters within a string are converted to lower case while respecting the current locale. For most languages, this will return the same as
toLowerCase()
. String.prototype.toLocaleUpperCase()
- The characters within a string are converted to upper case while respecting the current locale. For most languages, this will return the same as
toUpperCase()
. String.prototype.toLowerCase()
- Returns the calling string value converted to lower case.
String.prototype.toSource()
- Returns an object literal representing the specified object; you can use this value to create a new object. Overrides the
Object.prototype.toSource()
method. String.prototype.toString()
- Returns a string representing the specified object. Overrides the
Object.prototype.toString()
method. String.prototype.toUpperCase()
- Returns the calling string value converted to uppercase.
String.prototype.trim()
- Trims whitespace from the beginning and end of the string. Part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
String.prototype.trimLeft()
- Trims whitespace from the left side of the string.
String.prototype.trimRight()
- Trims whitespace from the right side of the string.
String.prototype.valueOf()
- Returns the primitive value of the specified object. Overrides the
Object.prototype.valueOf()
method. String.prototype[@@iterator]()
- Returns a new
Iterator
object that iterates over the code points of a String value, returning each code point as a String value.
HTML wrapper methods
These methods are of limited use, as they provide only a subset of the available HTML tags and attributes.
String.prototype.anchor()
<a name="name">
(hypertext target)String.prototype.big()
<big>
String.prototype.blink()
<blink>
String.prototype.bold()
<b>
String.prototype.fixed()
<tt>
String.prototype.fontcolor()
<font color="color">
String.prototype.fontsize()
<font size="size">
String.prototype.italics()
<i>
String.prototype.link()
<a href="url">
(link to URL)String.prototype.small()
<small>
String.prototype.strike()
<strike>
String.prototype.sub()
<sub>
String.prototype.sup()
<sup>
Examples
String conversion
It's possible to use String
as a "safer" toString()
alternative, as although it still normally calls the underlying toString()
, it also works for null
and undefined
. For example:
var outputStrings = []; for (var i = 0, n = inputValues.length; i < n; ++i) { outputStrings.push(String(inputValues[i])); }
Specifications
Specification | Status | Comment |
---|---|---|
ECMAScript 1st Edition (ECMA-262) | Standard | Initial definition. |
ECMAScript 5.1 (ECMA-262) The definition of 'String' in that specification. |
Standard | |
ECMAScript 2015 (6th Edition, ECMA-262) The definition of 'String' in that specification. |
Standard | |
ECMAScript 2017 Draft (ECMA-262) The definition of 'String' in that specification. |
Draft |
Browser compatibility
Feature | Chrome | Firefox (Gecko) | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Basic support | 1 | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) |
\u{XXXXXX} |
(Yes) | 40 (40) | ? | ? | (Yes) |
Feature | Android | Chrome for Android | Firefox Mobile (Gecko) | IE Mobile | Opera Mobile | Safari Mobile |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Basic support | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) |
\u{XXXXXX} |
? | ? | 40.0 (40) | ? | ? | ? |