Am 12.07.2011 um 21:42 schrieb Fritz Anderson:
> On 12 Jul 2011, at 2:23 PM, Eric E. Dolecki wrote:
>
>> What would be the easiest way to strip out parens and everything between
>> them from an NSString?
>>
>> Into The Fire (Live)
>> becomes
>> Into The Fire
>
> NSRegularExpression will do, bu
On Jul 12, 2011, at 12:42 PM, Fritz Anderson wrote:
> It should be easy to walk the string with NSScanner.
I always end up taking the ghetto route and just using -rangeOfSubstring: and
substringWithRange: for stuff like this. It would probably be cleaner to use
NSScanner though, at least until
On 12 Jul 2011, at 12:42 PM, Fritz Anderson wrote:
> On 12 Jul 2011, at 2:23 PM, Eric E. Dolecki wrote:
>> What would be the easiest way to strip out parens and everything between
>> them from an NSString?
>>
>> Into The Fire (Live)
>> becomes
>> Into The Fire
>
> NSRegularExpression will do, bu
On 12 Jul 2011, at 20:23, Eric E. Dolecki wrote:
> What would be the easiest way to strip out parens and everything between
> them from an NSString?
It's slightly overkill for the situation, but CoreParse
(http://www.github.org/beelsebob) will deal with nested parens quite
happily.
On 12 Jul 2011, at 2:23 PM, Eric E. Dolecki wrote:
> What would be the easiest way to strip out parens and everything between
> them from an NSString?
>
> Into The Fire (Live)
> becomes
> Into The Fire
NSRegularExpression will do, but it is iOS-only (so far) and doesn't help you
with nesting.