Split text by symbol: Difference between revisions
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==== Approach 1: parse data ==== | ==== Approach 1: parse data ==== | ||
[https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/214261 parse data] ([https://support.microsoft.com/zh-tw/kb/214261 資料剖析]) | [https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/214261 parse data] ([https://support.microsoft.com/zh-tw/kb/214261 資料剖析]) | ||
* instruction with | * instruction with screenshots: [https://support.office.com/en-za/Article/split-text-into-different-cells-30b14928-5550-41f5-97ca-7a3e9c363ed7 Split text into different cells - Excel] | ||
==== Approach 2: SUBSTRING_INDEX ==== | ==== Approach 2: SUBSTRING_INDEX ==== | ||
Revision as of 06:44, 15 November 2017
Split text by symbol (another string, also called delimiter or separator)
Approaches
list of equivalent approaches to split text by symbol
- MySQL: MySQL SUBSTRING_INDEX() function - w3resource
- Excel: (1) parse data (資料剖析)
only allowed one character used as separator! (2) LEFT, RIGHT, FIND, LEN (3) MOD, FIND, LEN - PHP: explode or preg_split function
Example
Task: Split the position e.g. 25.040215, 121.512532 by the comma ( , ) to obtain the latitude (1st string) and longitude (2nd string).
Expected output:
- 25.040215
- 121.512532
MySQL Approach
Only one symbol was allowed. The following query will get the last element if there are more than two symbols.
- to get the first string ( 25.040215 ):
SELECT TRIM(SUBSTRING_INDEX('25.040215, 121.512532' ,',', 1)) - to get the second string ( 121.512532 ):
SELECT TRIM(SUBSTRING_INDEX('25.040215, 121.512532' ,',', -1))
CREATE TABLE tbl(str varchar(50));
INSERT INTO tbl VALUES('25.040215, 121.512532');
INSERT INTO tbl VALUES('25.040215, 121.512532, 999.999'); /*bad data: 2 or more symbols*/
INSERT INTO tbl VALUES('123.456'); /*bad data: no symbol exists*/
SELECT TRIM(SUBSTRING_INDEX(str ,',', 1)), TRIM(SUBSTRING_INDEX(str ,',', -1)) FROM tbl WHERE str LIKE '%,%';
Excel Approach
Approach 1: parse data
- instruction with screenshots: Split text into different cells - Excel
Approach 2: SUBSTRING_INDEX
| A | B | C | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 25.040215, 121.512532 | 25.040215 |
121.512532 |
If the data set is perfect
- to get the first string ( 25.040215 ): B1 =
MID( A1, 1, FIND(",", A1)-1) - to get the second string ( 121.512532 ): C1 =
MID( A1, FIND(",", A1)+1, LEN(A1))
if the data set was mixed with empty values. Return empty if the value is empty.
- to get the first string ( 25.040215 ): B1 =
IF(ISERROR(MID(A1, 1, FIND(",", A1)-1)), "", MID(A1, 1, FIND(",", A1)-1)) - to get the second string ( 121.512532 ): C1 =
IF(ISERROR(TRIM(MID(A1, FIND(",", A1)+1, LEN(A1)))), "", TRIM(MID(A1, FIND(",", A1)+1, LEN(A1)))
online demo (allow to edit)
PHP Approach
PHP script
$input_string = "25.040215, 121.512532";
$list1 = explode(",", $input_string);
$trimmed_list1 = array_map('trim', $list1);
$list2 = preg_split("/[\s,]+/", $input_string);
print_r($trimmed_list1);
print_r($list2);
output
Array ( [0] => 25.040215 [1] => 121.512532 )