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stringi (version 1.4.3)

stri_count_boundaries: Count the Number of Text Boundaries

Description

These functions determine the number of text boundaries (like character, word, line, or sentence boundaries) in a string.

Usage

stri_count_boundaries(str, ..., opts_brkiter = NULL)

stri_count_words(str, locale = NULL)

Arguments

str

character vector or an object coercible to

...

additional settings for opts_brkiter

opts_brkiter

a named list with ICU BreakIterator's settings, see stri_opts_brkiter; NULL for the default break iterator, i.e., line_break

locale

NULL or "" for text boundary analysis following the conventions of the default locale, or a single string with locale identifier, see stringi-locale

Value

Both functions return an integer vector.

Details

Vectorized over str.

For more information on text boundary analysis performed by ICU's BreakIterator, see stringi-search-boundaries.

In case of stri_count_words, just like in stri_extract_all_words and stri_locate_all_words, ICU's word BreakIterator iterator is used to locate the word boundaries, and all non-word characters (UBRK_WORD_NONE rule status) are ignored. This function is equivalent to a call to stri_count_boundaries(str, type="word", skip_word_none=TRUE, locale=locale).

Note that a BreakIterator of type character may be used to count the number of Unicode characters in a string. The stri_length function, which aims to count the number of Unicode code points, might report different results.

Moreover, a BreakIterator of type sentence may be used to count the number of sentences in a text piece.

See Also

Other search_count: stri_count, stringi-search

Other locale_sensitive: %s<%, stri_compare, stri_duplicated, stri_enc_detect2, stri_extract_all_boundaries, stri_locate_all_boundaries, stri_opts_collator, stri_order, stri_sort, stri_split_boundaries, stri_trans_tolower, stri_unique, stri_wrap, stringi-locale, stringi-search-boundaries, stringi-search-coll

Other text_boundaries: stri_extract_all_boundaries, stri_locate_all_boundaries, stri_opts_brkiter, stri_split_boundaries, stri_split_lines, stri_trans_tolower, stri_wrap, stringi-search-boundaries, stringi-search

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
test <- "The\u00a0above-mentioned    features are very useful. Kudos to their developers."
stri_count_boundaries(test, type="word")
stri_count_boundaries(test, type="sentence")
stri_count_boundaries(test, type="character")
stri_count_words(test)

test2 <- stri_trans_nfkd("\u03c0\u0153\u0119\u00a9\u00df\u2190\u2193\u2192")
stri_count_boundaries(test2, type="character")
stri_length(test2)
stri_numbytes(test2)

# }

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