strs is an R package that provides a comprehensive set of string
manipulation functions, mirroring the functionality and naming
conventions of Python’s str methods. It aims to make string operations
in R more accessible for users familiar with Python. Under the hood,
every function uses the stringi package to ensure the results are
consistent.
You can install the strs package directly from GitHub.
# Install devtools if you haven't already
install.packages("devtools")
# Install strs package from GitHub
devtools::install_github("pythonicr/strs")
# Using pacman
pacman::p_load_gh("pythonicr/strs")Here are some examples demonstrating how to use the functions provided by the strs package.
The strs_capitalize function capitalizes the first character of each
string in a character vector.
library(strs)
# Capitalize the first character of each sentence
capitalized <- strs_capitalize("hello world")
print(capitalized)
#> [1] "Hello world"The strs_casefold function performs case folding on each element of a
character vector, useful for case-insensitive matching.
# Perform case folding
folded <- strs_casefold("HELLO World")
print(folded)
#> [1] "hello world"The strs_center function centers each element of a character vector in
a field of a specified width, padding with a specified character.
# Center a string with padding
centered <- strs_center("hello", 10)
print(centered)
#> [1] " hello "The strs_contains function checks whether each element of a character
vector contains a specified substring.
# Check if strings contain a substring
contains <- strs_contains("hello world", "world")
print(contains)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_count function counts the number of times a specified
substring occurs in each element of a character vector.
# Count occurrences of a substring
count <- strs_count("hello world", "o")
print(count)
#> [1] 2The strs_endswith function determines whether each element of a
character vector ends with a specified suffix.
# Check if strings end with a suffix
endswith <- strs_endswith("hello world", "world")
print(endswith)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_expandtabs function replaces each tab character (\t) in a
string with a specified number of spaces.
# Expand tabs to spaces
expanded <- strs_expandtabs("hello\tworld", 4)
print(expanded)
#> [1] "hello world"The strs_find function locates the first occurrence of a specified
substring within each element of a character vector.
# Find the first occurrence of a substring
first_occurrence <- strs_find("hello world", "world")
print(first_occurrence)
#> [1] 7The strs_isalnum function checks whether each element of a character
vector is alphanumeric.
# Check if strings are alphanumeric
isalnum <- strs_isalnum("hello123")
print(isalnum)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_isalpha function checks whether each element of a character
vector contains only alphabetical characters.
# Check if strings are alphabetical
isalpha <- strs_isalpha("hello")
print(isalpha)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_isascii function determines whether each element of a
character vector contains only ASCII characters.
# Check if strings are ASCII
isascii <- strs_isascii("hello")
print(isascii)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_isdecimal function checks whether each element of a character
vector contains only decimal characters.
# Check if strings are decimal
isdecimal <- strs_isdecimal("12345")
print(isdecimal)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_isdigit function checks whether each element of a character
vector contains only digits.
# Check if strings are digits
isdigit <- strs_isdigit("12345")
print(isdigit)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_islower function checks whether each element of a character
vector is in lowercase.
# Check if strings are lowercase
islower <- strs_islower("hello")
print(islower)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_isnumeric function checks whether each element of a character
vector contains only numeric characters.
# Check if strings are numeric
isnumeric <- strs_isnumeric("12345")
print(isnumeric)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_isspace function checks whether each element of a character
vector contains only whitespace characters.
# Check if strings are whitespace
isspace <- strs_isspace(" ")
print(isspace)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_istitle function checks whether each element of a character
vector is title case.
# Check if strings are title case
istitle <- strs_istitle("This Is Title Case")
print(istitle)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_isupper function checks whether each element of a character
vector is in uppercase.
# Check if strings are uppercase
isupper <- strs_isupper("HELLO")
print(isupper)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_join function concatenates elements of an iterable using a
separator.
# Join elements with a separator
joined <- strs_join("-", c("hello", "world"))
print(joined)
#> [1] "hello-world"The strs_ljust function left-justifies each element of a character
vector in a field of a specified width.
# Left-justify a string
ljust <- strs_ljust("hello", 10)
print(ljust)
#> [1] " hello"The strs_lower function converts each element of a character vector to
lowercase, based on the specified locale.
# Convert strings to lowercase
lower <- strs_lower("HELLO WORLD")
print(lower)
#> [1] "hello world"The strs_lstrip function removes leading characters (spaces by
default) from each element of a character vector.
# Left-strip characters
lstrip <- strs_lstrip(" hello world")
print(lstrip)
#> [1] "hello world"The strs_normalize_whitespace function normalizes the whitespace in
each element of a character vector.
# Normalize whitespace
normalized <- strs_normalize_whitespace(" hello world ")
print(normalized)
#> [1] "hello world"The strs_removeprefix function removes a specified prefix from the
start of each element of a character vector.
# Remove a prefix
removed_prefix <- strs_removeprefix("testString", "test")
print(removed_prefix)
#> [1] "String"The strs_removesuffix function removes a specified suffix from the end
of each element of a character vector.
# Remove a suffix
removed_suffix <- strs_removesuffix("StringTest", "Test")
print(removed_suffix)
#> [1] "String"The strs_replace function replaces all occurrences of a specified
substring in each element of a character vector.
# Replace a substring
replaced <- strs_replace("hello world", "world", "there")
print(replaced)
#> [1] "hello there"The strs_rfind function locates the last occurrence of a specified
substring within each element of a character vector.
# Find the last occurrence of a substring
last_occurrence <- strs_rfind("hello world", "o")
print(last_occurrence)
#> [1] 8
# 8The strs_rjust function right-justifies each element of a character
vector in a field of a specified width.
# Right-justify a string
rjust <- strs_rjust("hello", 10)
print(rjust)
#> [1] "hello "The strs_rstrip function removes trailing characters (spaces by
default) from each element of a character vector.
# Right-strip characters
rstrip <- strs_rstrip("hello world ")
print(rstrip)
#> [1] "hello world"The strs_slice function extracts substrings from each element of a
character vector, specified by start and stop positions.
# Slice substrings
sliced <- strs_slice("hello world", 1, 5)
print(sliced)
#> [1] "hello"The strs_split function splits each element of a character vector into
substrings based on a separator.
# Split strings into substrings
split <- strs_split("hello world", " ")
print(split) # list("hello", "world")
#> [[1]]
#> [1] "hello" "world"The strs_splitlines function splits each element of a character vector
into separate lines.
# Split strings into lines
split_lines <- strs_splitlines("hello\nworld\n")
print(split_lines) # list("hello", "world")
#> [[1]]
#> [1] "hello" "world"The strs_startswith function determines whether each element of a
character vector starts with a specified prefix.
# Check if strings start with a prefix
startswith <- strs_startswith("hello world", "hello")
print(startswith)
#> [1] TRUEThe strs_strip function removes leading and trailing characters
(spaces by default) from each element of a character vector.
# Strip characters from both ends
strip <- strs_strip(" hello world ")
print(strip)
#> [1] "hello world"The strs_title function converts each element of a character vector to
title case, based on the specified locale.
# Convert strings to title case
title <- strs_title("hello world")
print(title)
#> [1] "Hello World"The strs_upper function converts each element of a character vector to
uppercase, based on the specified locale.
# Convert strings to uppercase
upper <- strs_upper("hello world")
print(upper)
#> [1] "HELLO WORLD"We welcome contributions to the strs package. If you have suggestions, bug reports, or want to contribute code, please open an issue or submit a pull request on our GitHub repository.
- capitalize
- casefold
- center
- count
- encode
- endswith
- expandtabs
- find
- format
- format_map
- index
- isalnum
- isalpha
- isascii
- isdecimal
- isdigit
- isidentifier
- islower
- isnumeric
- isprintable
- isspace
- istitle
- isupper
- join
- ljust
- lower
- lstrip
- maketrans
- partition
- removeprefix
- removesuffix
- replace
- rfind
- rindex
- rjust
- rpartition
- rsplit
- rstrip
- split
- splitlines
- startswith
- strip
- swapcase
- title
- translate
- upper
- zfill
strs is released under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file in the package’s repository for more details.