Extract the nth number from a string, where decimals, scientific notation
and thousand separators are optionally allowed.
Usage
str_nth_number(
string,
n,
decimals = FALSE,
leading_decimals = decimals,
negs = FALSE,
sci = FALSE,
big_mark = "",
leave_as_string = FALSE,
commas = FALSE
)
str_first_number(
string,
decimals = FALSE,
leading_decimals = decimals,
negs = FALSE,
sci = FALSE,
big_mark = "",
leave_as_string = FALSE,
commas = FALSE
)
str_last_number(
string,
decimals = FALSE,
leading_decimals = decimals,
negs = FALSE,
sci = FALSE,
big_mark = "",
leave_as_string = FALSE,
commas = FALSE
)Arguments
- string
A string.
- n
A vector of integerish values. Must be either length 1 or have length equal to the length of
string. Negative indices count from the back: whilen = 1andn = 2correspond to first and second,n = -1andn = -2correspond to last and second-last.n = 0will returnNA.- decimals
Do you want to include the possibility of decimal numbers (
TRUE) or not (FALSE, the default).- leading_decimals
Do you want to allow a leading decimal point to be the start of a number?
- negs
Do you want to allow negative numbers? Note that double negatives are not handled here (see the examples).
- sci
Make the search aware of scientific notation e.g. 2e3 is the same as 2000.
- big_mark
A character. Allow this character to be used as a thousands separator. This character will be removed from between digits before they are converted to numeric. You may specify many at once by pasting them together e.g.
big_mark = ",_"will allow both commas and underscores. Internally, this will be used inside a[]regex block so e.g."a-z"will behave differently to"az-". Most common separators (commas, spaces, underscores) should work fine.- leave_as_string
Do you want to return the number as a string (
TRUE) or as numeric (FALSE, the default)?- commas
Deprecated. Use
big_markinstead.
Details
str_first_number(...)is juststr_nth_number(..., n = 1).str_last_number(...)is juststr_nth_number(..., n = -1).
For a detailed explanation of the number extraction, see
str_extract_numbers().
See also
Other numeric extractors:
str_extract_numbers(),
str_nth_number_after_mth(),
str_nth_number_before_mth()
Examples
strings <- c(
"abc123def456", "abc-0.12def.345", "abc.12e4def34.5e9",
"abc1,100def1,230.5", "abc1,100e3,215def4e1,000"
)
str_nth_number(strings, n = 2)
#> [1] 456 12 4 100 100
str_nth_number(strings, n = -2, decimals = TRUE)
#> [1] 123.00 0.12 34.50 1.00 1.00
str_first_number(strings, decimals = TRUE, leading_decimals = TRUE)
#> [1] 123.00 0.12 0.12 1.00 1.00
str_last_number(strings, big_mark = ",")
#> [1] 456 345 9 5 1000
str_nth_number(strings,
n = 1, decimals = TRUE, leading_decimals = TRUE,
sci = TRUE
)
#> [1] 123.00 0.12 1200.00 1.00 1.00
str_first_number(strings,
decimals = TRUE, leading_decimals = TRUE,
sci = TRUE, big_mark = ",", negs = TRUE
)
#> [1] 123.00 -0.12 1200.00 1100.00 Inf
str_last_number(strings,
decimals = TRUE, leading_decimals = FALSE,
sci = FALSE, big_mark = ",", negs = TRUE, leave_as_string = TRUE
)
#> [1] "456" "345" "9" "1,230.5" "1,000"
str_first_number(c("22", "1.2.3"), decimals = TRUE)
#> Warning: `NA`s introduced by ambiguity.
#> ℹ The first such ambiguity is in string number 2 which is '1.2.3'.
#> ✖ The offending part of that string is '.2.3'.
#> [1] 22 NA
