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.
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
Thanks,
Eric
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