views:

256

answers:

5

I need to split a string let's say "asdf aA asdfget aa uoiu AA" split using "aa" ignoring the case. to

"asdf "
"asdfget "
"uoiu "
+2  A: 

In your algorithm, you can use the String.IndexOf method and pass in OrdinalIgnoreCase as the StringComparison parameter.

Smashery
So there is no way to take advantage of String.Split?
jdelator
+2  A: 

My answer isn't as good as Noldorin's, but I'll leave it so people can see the alternative method. This isn't as good for simple splits, but it is more flexible if you need to do more complex parsing.

using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

string data = "asdf aA asdfget aa uoiu AA";
string aaRegex = "(.+?)[aA]{2}";

MatchCollection mc = Regex.Matches(data, aaRegex);

foreach(Match m in mc)
{
    Console.WriteLine(m.Value);
}
Michael La Voie
+15  A: 

There's no easy way to accomplish this using string.Split. (Well, except for specifying all the permutations of the split string for each char lower/upper case in an array - not very elegant I think you'll agree.)

However, Regex.Split should do the job quite nicely.

Example:

var parts = Regex.Split(input, "aa", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
Noldorin
I hadn't heard of Regex.Split()...thanks!
Michael La Voie
No problem. And yeah, it's one of those little hidden gems in the framework.
Noldorin
+3  A: 

If you don't care about case, then the simplest thing to do is force the string to all uppercase or lowercase before using split.

stringbits = datastring.ToLower().Split("aa")

If you care about case for the interesting bits of the string but not the separators then I would use String.Replace to force all the separators to a specific case (upper or lower, doesn't matter) and then call String.Split using the matching case for the separator.

strinbits = datastring.Replace("aA", "aa").Replace("AA", "aa").Split("aa")
Corin
+1  A: 

It's not the pretties version but also works:

"asdf aA asdfget aa uoiu AA".Split(new[] { "aa", "AA", "aA", "Aa" }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries);
Vadim
Yeah, this is what I meant by permutations - it becomes quite cumbersome for longer split strings.
Noldorin