PHP, Java, C++, C#, Visual Basic, and Python allow you to retrieve the individual characters of a string using substring notation. You can use index 0 to access the first character, index 1 to access the second character, and so on. The index of the last character is 1 less than the length of the string. The following program shows an example.
PHP
<?php
$a = "Hello World";
echo $a[0]; //it displays the first letter
echo $a[6]; //it displays the letter W
echo $a[10]; //it displays the last letter
?>
Notice: Please note that the space between the words “Hello” and “World” is considered a character as well. So, the letter W exists in position 6 and not in position 5.
Java
public static void main(String[] args) throws java.io.IOException {
String a;
a = "Hello World";
System.out.println(a.charAt(0)); //it displays the first letter
System.out.println(a.charAt(6)); //it displays the letter W
System.out.println(a.charAt(10)); //it displays the last letter
}
Notice: Please note that the space between the words “Hello” and “World” is considered a character as well. So, the letter W exists in position 6 and not in position 5.
C++
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main() {
string a;
a = "Hello World";
cout << a.at(0) << endl; //it displays the first letter
cout << a.at(6) << endl; //it displays the letter W
cout << a.at(10) << endl; //it displays the last letter
return 0;
}
Notice: Please note that the space between the words “Hello” and “World” is considered a character as well. So, the letter W exists in position 6 and not in position 5.
C#
static void Main() {
string a;
a = "Hello World";
Console.WriteLine(a[0]); //it displays the first letter
Console.WriteLine(a[6]); //it displays the letter W
Console.WriteLine(a[10]); //it displays the last letter
Console.ReadKey();
}
Notice: Please note that the space between the words “Hello” and “World” is considered a character as well. So, the letter W exists in position 6 and not in position 5.
Visual Basic
Sub Main()
Dim a As String
a = "Hello World"
Console.WriteLine(a(0)) 'it displays the first letter
Console.WriteLine(a(6)) 'it displays the letter W
Console.WriteLine(a(10)) 'it displays the last letter
Console.ReadKey()
End Sub
Notice: Please note that the space between the words “Hello” and “World” is considered a character as well. So, the letter W exists in position 6 and not in position 5.
Python
a = "Hello World"
print(a[0]) #it displays the first letter
print(a[6]) #it displays the letter W
print(a[10]) #it displays the last letter
Notice: Please note that the space between the words “Hello” and “World” is considered a character as well. So, the letter W exists in position 6 and not in position 5.
In Python, if you want to start counting from the end of the string (instead of the beginning) you can use negative indexes. For example, an index of –1 refers to the right-most character.
In the text «Hello World», the position (using negative indexes) of each character is shown here.
An example is shown here.
a = "Hello World"
print(a[-1]) #it displays the last letter
print(a[-3]) #it displays the letter r
Another way of extracting single characters from strings in Python is to unpack them into individual variables as shown here.
name = "Zeus"
a, b, c, d = name
print(a) #It displays the letter Z
print(b) #It displays the letter e
print(c) #It displays the letter u
print(d) #It displays the letter s
Notice: This last method requires you to know in advance how many characters are in the string. If the number of variables you supply does not match the number of characters in the string, Python displays an error.
In Python, if you wish to extract a portion of a string you can use the following formula:
subject[ [beginIndex] : [endIndex] [: step]]
This returns a portion of subject
. Specifically, it returns the substring starting from position beginIndex
and running up to, but not including, position endIndex
. Both arguments beginIndex
and endIndex
are optional. If beginIndex
is omitted, the substring starting from position 0 and running up to, but not including, position endIndex
is returned. If endIndex
is omitted, the substring starting from position beginIndex
until the end of subject
is returned.
Notice: “Slicing” in Python is a mechanism to select a range of elements (here characters) from a sequence (here a string).
The last argument step
is optional as well. If omitted, its default value is 1. If supplied, it defines the number of characters you want to move forward after each character is retrieved from the original string.
An example is shown here.
a = "Hello World"
print(a[7:9]) #It displays the letters o, and r
print(a[4:10:2]) #Step is set to 2. It displays the letters o, W, and r
print(a[7:]) #It displays the letters o, r, l and d
print(a[:3]) #It displays the letters H, e, and l
If you want to start counting from the end of the string (instead of the beginning) use negative indexes as shown here.
a = "Hello World"
print(a[3:-2]) #It displays "lo Wor"
print(a[-4:-2]) #It displays the letters o, and r
print(a[-3:]) #It displays "rld"
print(a[:-3]) #It displays "Hello Wo"