Difference between revisions of "Replace"
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| ''oldval'' || any || value or substring to replace | | ''oldval'' || any || value or substring to replace | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | ''newval'' || any || new value or substring to substitute where oldval | + | | ''newval'' || any || new value or substring to substitute where oldval is found |
− | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ''maxcount'' || number, optional || if given replace no more than this many. | | ''maxcount'' || number, optional || if given replace no more than this many. |
Revision as of 16:11, 18 March 2020
replace
Replace all matching elements of a list or map, or substrings of a string, with a new value.
Arguments
Parameter Name | Default Value | Meaning |
---|---|---|
self | list, map or string | object to replace elements of |
oldval | any | value or substring to replace |
newval | any | new value or substring to substitute where oldval is found |
maxcount | number, optional | if given replace no more than this many. |
Usage Notes
Lists and maps are mutated in place, and return themselves. Strings are immutable, so the original string is (of course) unchanged, but a new string with the replacement is returned. Note that with maps, it is the values that are searched for and replaced, not the keys.
Example
"Happy Pappy".replace("app", "ol") // returns "Holy Poly"
[1,2,3,2,5].replace(2, 42) // returns (and mutates to) [2, 42, 3, 42, 5]
d = {1: "one"}; d.replace("one", "ichi"). // returns (and mutates to) {1: "ichi"}