In JavaScript, the textual data is stored as strings. There is no separate type for a single character.
The internal format for strings is always UTF-16, it is not tied to the page encoding.
Quotes
Let’s recall the kinds of quotes.
Strings can be enclosed within either single quotes, double quotes or backticks:
let single = 'single-quoted';
let double = "double-quoted";
let backticks = `backticks`;
Single and double quotes are essentially the same. Backticks, however, allow us to embed any expression into the string, by wrapping it in ${…}
:
function sum(a, b) {
return a + b;
}
alert(`1 + 2 = ${sum(1, 2)}.`); // 1 + 2 = 3.
Another advantage of using backticks is that they allow a string to span multiple lines:
let guestList = `Guests:
* John
* Pete
* Mary
`;
alert(guestList); // a list of guests, multiple lines
Looks natural, right? But single or double quotes do not work this way.
If we use them and try to use multiple lines, there’ll be an error:
let guestList = "Guests: // Error: Unexpected token ILLEGAL
* John";
Single and double quotes come from ancient times of language creation, when the need for multiline strings was not taken into account. Backticks appeared much later and thus are more versatile.
Backticks also allow us to specify a “template function” before the first backtick. The syntax is: func`string`
. The function func
is called automatically, receives the string and embedded expressions and can process them. This feature is called “tagged templates”, it’s rarely seen, but you can read about it in the MDN: Template literals.
Special characters
It is still possible to create multiline strings with single and double quotes by using a so-called “newline character”, written as \n
, which denotes a line break:
let guestList = "Guests:\n * John\n * Pete\n * Mary";
alert(guestList); // a multiline list of guests, same as above
As a simpler example, these two lines are equal, just written differently:
let str1 = "Hello\nWorld"; // two lines using a "newline symbol"
// two lines using a normal newline and backticks
let str2 = `Hello
World`;
alert(str1 == str2); // true
There are other, less common special characters:
Character | Description |
---|---|
\n |
New line |
\r |
In Windows text files a combination of two characters \r\n represents a new break, while on non-Windows OS it’s just \n . That’s for historical reasons, most Windows software also understands \n . |
\' , \" , \` |
Quotes |
\\ |
Backslash |
\t |
Tab |
\b , \f , \v |
Backspace, Form Feed, Vertical Tab – mentioned for completeness, coming from old times, not used nowadays (you can forget them right now). |
As you can see, all special characters start with a backslash character \
. It is also called an “escape character”.
Because it’s so special, if we need to show an actual backslash \
within the string, we need to double it:
alert( `The backslash: \\` ); // The backslash: \
So-called “escaped” quotes \'
, \"
, \`
are used to insert a quote into the same-quoted string.
For instance:
alert( 'I\'m the Walrus!' ); // I'm the Walrus!
As you can see, we have to prepend the inner quote by the backslash \'
, because otherwise it would indicate the string end.
Of course, only the quotes that are the same as the enclosing ones need to be escaped. So, as a more elegant solution, we could switch to double quotes or backticks instead:
alert( "I'm the Walrus!" ); // I'm the Walrus!
Besides these special characters, there’s also a special notation for Unicode codes \u…
, it’s rarely used and is covered in the optional chapter about Unicode.
String length
The length
property has the string length:
alert( `My\n`.length ); // 3
Note that \n
is a single “special” character, so the length is indeed 3
.
length
is a propertyPeople with a background in some other languages sometimes mistype by calling str.length()
instead of just str.length
. That doesn’t work.
Please note that str.length
is a numeric property, not a function. There is no need to add parenthesis after it. Not .length()
, but .length
.
Accessing characters
To get a character at position pos
, use square brackets [pos]
or call the method str.at(pos). The first character starts from the zero position:
let str = `Hello`;
// the first character
alert( str[0] ); // H
alert( str.at(0) ); // H
// the last character
alert( str[str.length - 1] ); // o
alert( str.at(-1) );
As you can see, the .at(pos)
method has a benefit of allowing negative position. If pos
is negative, then it’s counted from the end of the string.
So .at(-1)
means the last character, and .at(-2)
is the one before it, etc.
The square brackets always return undefined
for negative indexes, for instance:
let str = `Hello`;
alert( str[-2] ); // undefined
alert( str.at(-2) ); // l
We can also iterate over characters using for..of
:
for (let char of "Hello") {
alert(char); // H,e,l,l,o (char becomes "H", then "e", then "l" etc)
}
Strings are immutable
Strings can’t be changed in JavaScript. It is impossible to change a character.
Let’s try it to show that it doesn’t work:
let str = 'Hi';
str[0] = 'h'; // error
alert( str[0] ); // doesn't work
The usual workaround is to create a whole new string and assign it to str
instead of the old one.
For instance:
let str = 'Hi';
str = 'h' + str[1]; // replace the string
alert( str ); // hi
In the following sections we’ll see more examples of this.
Changing the case
Methods toLowerCase() and toUpperCase() change the case:
alert( 'Interface'.toUpperCase() ); // INTERFACE
alert( 'Interface'.toLowerCase() ); // interface
Or, if we want a single character lowercased:
alert( 'Interface'[0].toLowerCase() ); // 'i'
Searching for a substring
There are multiple ways to look for a substring within a string.
str.indexOf
The first method is str.indexOf(substr, pos).
It looks for the substr
in str
, starting from the given position pos
, and returns the position where the match was found or -1
if nothing can be found.
For instance:
let str = 'Widget with id';
alert( str.indexOf('Widget') ); // 0, because 'Widget' is found at the beginning
alert( str.indexOf('widget') ); // -1, not found, the search is case-sensitive
alert( str.indexOf("id") ); // 1, "id" is found at the position 1 (..idget with id)
The optional second parameter allows us to start searching from a given position.
For instance, the first occurrence of "id"
is at position 1
. To look for the next occurrence, let’s start the search from position 2
:
let str = 'Widget with id';
alert( str.indexOf('id', 2) ) // 12
If we’re interested in all occurrences, we can run indexOf
in a loop. Every new call is made with the position after the previous match:
let str = 'As sly as a fox, as strong as an ox';
let target = 'as'; // let's look for it
let pos = 0;
while (true) {
let foundPos = str.indexOf(target, pos);
if (foundPos == -1) break;
alert( `Found at ${foundPos}` );
pos = foundPos + 1; // continue the search from the next position
}
The same algorithm can be layed out shorter:
let str = "As sly as a fox, as strong as an ox";
let target = "as";
let pos = -1;
while ((pos = str.indexOf(target, pos + 1)) != -1) {
alert( pos );
}
str.lastIndexOf(substr, position)
There is also a similar method str.lastIndexOf(substr, position) that searches from the end of a string to its beginning.
It would list the occurrences in the reverse order.
There is a slight inconvenience with indexOf
in the if
test. We can’t put it in the if
like this:
let str = "Widget with id";
if (str.indexOf("Widget")) {
alert("We found it"); // doesn't work!
}
The alert
in the example above doesn’t show because str.indexOf("Widget")
returns 0
(meaning that it found the match at the starting position). Right, but if
considers 0
to be false
.
So, we should actually check for -1
, like this:
let str = "Widget with id";
if (str.indexOf("Widget") != -1) {
alert("We found it"); // works now!
}
includes, startsWith, endsWith
The more modern method str.includes(substr, pos) returns true/false
depending on whether str
contains substr
within.
It’s the right choice if we need to test for the match, but don’t need its position:
alert( "Widget with id".includes("Widget") ); // true
alert( "Hello".includes("Bye") ); // false
The optional second argument of str.includes
is the position to start searching from:
alert( "Widget".includes("id") ); // true
alert( "Widget".includes("id", 3) ); // false, from position 3 there is no "id"
The methods str.startsWith and str.endsWith do exactly what they say:
alert( "Widget".startsWith("Wid") ); // true, "Widget" starts with "Wid"
alert( "Widget".endsWith("get") ); // true, "Widget" ends with "get"
Getting a substring
There are 3 methods in JavaScript to get a substring: substring
, substr
and slice
.
str.slice(start [, end])
-
Returns the part of the string from
start
to (but not including)end
.For instance:
let str = "stringify"; alert( str.slice(0, 5) ); // 'strin', the substring from 0 to 5 (not including 5) alert( str.slice(0, 1) ); // 's', from 0 to 1, but not including 1, so only character at 0
If there is no second argument, then
slice
goes till the end of the string:let str = "stringify"; alert( str.slice(2) ); // 'ringify', from the 2nd position till the end
Negative values for
start/end
are also possible. They mean the position is counted from the string end:let str = "stringify"; // start at the 4th position from the right, end at the 1st from the right alert( str.slice(-4, -1) ); // 'gif'
str.substring(start [, end])
-
Returns the part of the string between
start
andend
(not includingend
).This is almost the same as
slice
, but it allowsstart
to be greater thanend
(in this case it simply swapsstart
andend
values).For instance:
let str = "stringify"; // these are same for substring alert( str.substring(2, 6) ); // "ring" alert( str.substring(6, 2) ); // "ring" // ...but not for slice: alert( str.slice(2, 6) ); // "ring" (the same) alert( str.slice(6, 2) ); // "" (an empty string)
Negative arguments are (unlike slice) not supported, they are treated as
0
. str.substr(start [, length])
-
Returns the part of the string from
start
, with the givenlength
.In contrast with the previous methods, this one allows us to specify the
length
instead of the ending position:let str = "stringify"; alert( str.substr(2, 4) ); // 'ring', from the 2nd position get 4 characters
The first argument may be negative, to count from the end:
let str = "stringify"; alert( str.substr(-4, 2) ); // 'gi', from the 4th position get 2 characters
This method resides in the Annex B of the language specification. It means that only browser-hosted Javascript engines should support it, and it’s not recommended to use it. In practice, it’s supported everywhere.
Let’s recap these methods to avoid any confusion:
method | selects… | negatives |
---|---|---|
slice(start, end) |
from start to end (not including end ) |
allows negatives |
substring(start, end) |
between start and end (not including end ) |
negative values mean 0 |
substr(start, length) |
from start get length characters |
allows negative start |
All of them can do the job. Formally, substr
has a minor drawback: it is described not in the core JavaScript specification, but in Annex B, which covers browser-only features that exist mainly for historical reasons. So, non-browser environments may fail to support it. But in practice it works everywhere.
Of the other two variants, slice
is a little bit more flexible, it allows negative arguments and shorter to write.
So, for practical use it’s enough to remember only slice
.
Comparing strings
As we know from the chapter Comparisons, strings are compared character-by-character in alphabetical order.
Although, there are some oddities.
-
A lowercase letter is always greater than the uppercase:
alert( 'a' > 'Z' ); // true
-
Letters with diacritical marks are “out of order”:
alert( 'Österreich' > 'Zealand' ); // true
This may lead to strange results if we sort these country names. Usually people would expect
Zealand
to come afterÖsterreich
in the list.
To understand what happens, we should be aware that strings in Javascript are encoded using UTF-16. That is: each character has a corresponding numeric code.
There are special methods that allow to get the character for the code and back:
str.codePointAt(pos)
-
Returns a decimal number representing the code for the character at position
pos
:// different case letters have different codes alert( "Z".codePointAt(0) ); // 90 alert( "z".codePointAt(0) ); // 122 alert( "z".codePointAt(0).toString(16) ); // 7a (if we need a hexadecimal value)
String.fromCodePoint(code)
-
Creates a character by its numeric
code
alert( String.fromCodePoint(90) ); // Z alert( String.fromCodePoint(0x5a) ); // Z (we can also use a hex value as an argument)
Now let’s see the characters with codes 65..220
(the latin alphabet and a little bit extra) by making a string of them:
let str = '';
for (let i = 65; i <= 220; i++) {
str += String.fromCodePoint(i);
}
alert( str );
// Output:
// ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~
// ¡¢£¤¥¦§¨©ª«¬®¯°±²³´µ¶·¸¹º»¼½¾¿ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖ×ØÙÚÛÜ
See? Capital characters go first, then a few special ones, then lowercase characters, and Ö
near the end of the output.
Now it becomes obvious why a > Z
.
The characters are compared by their numeric code. The greater code means that the character is greater. The code for a
(97) is greater than the code for Z
(90).
- All lowercase letters go after uppercase letters because their codes are greater.
- Some letters like
Ö
stand apart from the main alphabet. Here, its code is greater than anything froma
toz
.
Correct comparisons
The “right” algorithm to do string comparisons is more complex than it may seem, because alphabets are different for different languages.
So, the browser needs to know the language to compare.
Luckily, modern browsers support the internationalization standard ECMA-402.
It provides a special method to compare strings in different languages, following their rules.
The call str.localeCompare(str2) returns an integer indicating whether str
is less, equal or greater than str2
according to the language rules:
- Returns a negative number if
str
is less thanstr2
. - Returns a positive number if
str
is greater thanstr2
. - Returns
0
if they are equivalent.
For instance:
alert( 'Österreich'.localeCompare('Zealand') ); // -1
This method actually has two additional arguments specified in the documentation, which allows it to specify the language (by default taken from the environment, letter order depends on the language) and setup additional rules like case sensitivity or should "a"
and "á"
be treated as the same etc.
Summary
- There are 3 types of quotes. Backticks allow a string to span multiple lines and embed expressions
${…}
. - We can use special characters, such as a line break
\n
. - To get a character, use:
[]
orat
method. - To get a substring, use:
slice
orsubstring
. - To lowercase/uppercase a string, use:
toLowerCase/toUpperCase
. - To look for a substring, use:
indexOf
, orincludes/startsWith/endsWith
for simple checks. - To compare strings according to the language, use:
localeCompare
, otherwise they are compared by character codes.
There are several other helpful methods in strings:
str.trim()
– removes (“trims”) spaces from the beginning and end of the string.str.repeat(n)
– repeats the stringn
times.- …and more to be found in the manual.
Strings also have methods for doing search/replace with regular expressions. But that’s big topic, so it’s explained in a separate tutorial section Regular expressions.
Also, as of now it’s important to know that strings are based on Unicode encoding, and hence there’re issues with comparisons. There’s more about Unicode in the chapter Unicode, String internals.