std::basic_string::find
From cppreference.com
< cpp | string | basic string
size_type find( const basic_string& str, size_type pos = 0 ) const |
(1) | |
size_type find( const CharT* s, size_type pos, size_type count ) const; |
(2) | |
size_type find( const CharT* s, size_type pos = 0 ) const; |
(3) | |
size_type find( CharT ch, size_type pos = 0 ) const; |
(4) | |
size_type find( std::basic_string_view<CharT, Traits> sv, size_type pos = 0) const |
(5) | (since C++17) |
Finds the first substring equal to the given character sequence. Search begins at pos
, i.e. the found substring must not begin in a position preceding pos
.
1) Finds the first substring equal to
str
.2) Finds the first substring equal to the first
count
characters of the character string pointed to by s
. s
can include null characters.3) Finds the first substring equal to the character string pointed to by
s
. The length of the string is determined by the first null character. 4) Finds the first character
ch
(treated as a single-character substring by the formal rules below).5) Finds the first substring equal to the string view
sv
.Formally, a substring str
is said to be found at position xpos
if all of the following is true:
- xpos >= pos
- xpos + str.size() <= size()
- for all positions
n
instr
, Traits::eq(at(xpos+n), str.at(n))
In particular, this implies that
- a substring can be found only if pos <= size() - str.size()
- an empty substring is found at
pos
if and only if pos <= size() - for a non-empty substring, if pos >= size(), the function always returns npos.
Parameters
str | - | string to search for |
pos | - | position at which to start the search |
count | - | length of substring to search for |
s | - | pointer to a character string to search for |
ch | - | character to search for |
sv | - | std::basic_string_view to search for |
Return value
Position of the first character of the found substring or npos if no such substring is found.
Exceptions
1-4) (none)
|
(until C++11) |
1,4)
noexcept specification: noexcept 2,3) (none)
|
(since C++11) (until C++14) |
1)
noexcept specification: noexcept 2,3,4) (none)
|
(since C++14) |
5) noexcept specification:
noexcept |
(since C++17) |
Example
Run this code
#include <string> #include <iostream> void print(std::string::size_type n, std::string const &s) { if (n == std::string::npos) { std::cout << "not found\n"; } else { std::cout << "found: " << s.substr(n) << '\n'; } } int main() { std::string::size_type n; std::string const s = "This is a string"; // search from beginning of string n = s.find("is"); print(n, s); // search from position 5 n = s.find("is", 5); print(n, s); // find a single character n = s.find('a'); print(n, s); // find a single character n = s.find('q'); print(n, s); }
Output:
found: is is a string found: is a string found: a string not found
See also
finds the first occurrence of a substring of characters (function) | |
finds the first occurrence of a wide string within another wide string (function) | |
finds the first occurrence of a character (function) | |
finds the first occurrence of a wide character in a wide string (function) | |
find the last occurrence of a substring (public member function) | |
find first occurrence of characters (public member function) | |
find first absence of characters (public member function) | |
find last occurrence of characters (public member function) | |
find last absence of characters (public member function) | |
searches for a range of elements (function template) |