Документ взят из кэша поисковой машины. Адрес оригинального документа : http://www.stsci.edu/~sontag/spicedocs/req/scanning.html
Дата изменения: Sat Dec 17 06:08:21 2005
Дата индексирования: Sun Apr 10 20:21:45 2016
Кодировка:

Поисковые слова: magnetic north
Note on FORTRAN and C Versions

Note on FORTRAN and C Versions





This document covers the FORTRAN version of the interfaces of this subsystem. CSPICE provides f2c translated equivalents for all, and native C wrappers for some of them. If you wish to use the C versions of the interfaces described in this document, refer to the CSPICE Required Reading, cspice.req, for more information on naming conventions, locations, and usage of the f2c'ed routines and native C wrappers.



Scanning Routines in SPICELIB





Fortran offers a single intrinsic function for locating substrings within a string: INDEX. Given an arbitrary character string and a target string,

   LOC = INDEX ( STRING, TARGET )
returns the smallest value such that the condition

   ( STRING(LOC : LOC+LEN(TARGET)-1)  .EQ.  TARGET )
is true. For example, the value returned by

   INDEX ( 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ', 'GHI' )
is seven. If the target string is contained nowhere in the original string, INDEX returns zero. Note that INDEX is not case sensitive, nor does it ignore leading or trailing blanks. Thus, all of the following references return zero.

   INDEX ( 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ', '123'  )
   INDEX ( 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ', 'ghi'  )
   INDEX ( 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ', 'GHI ' )
   INDEX ( 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ', ' GHI' )
In contrast, the True BASIC language (a dialect of BASIC) offers several similar, but more powerful, functions. Unlike the Fortran INDEX function, these extended functions allow you to

Using these functions to develop True BASIC programs convinced us that they should be available to Fortran programmers as well; so SPICELIB contains six integer functions, which are exactly equivalent to their True BASIC counterparts. The calling sequences are shown below.

   POS    ( STR, SUBSTR, START )
   CPOS   ( STR, CHARS,  START )
   NCPOS  ( STR, CHARS,  START )
   POSR   ( STR, SUBSTR, START )
   CPOSR  ( STR, CHARS,  START )
   NCPOSR ( STR, CHARS,  START )


Substring searches




POS is just like INDEX, but takes a third argument: the location in the string at which the search is to begin. Beginning the search at location 1 makes the two functions identical. The extra argument becomes important when you need to search a single string for several occurrences of a substring.

Compare the following code fragments, which locate successive occurrences of the substring `//' within a string, first using INDEX:

   LOC = INDEX ( STRING, '//' )
 
   DO WHILE ( LOC .NE. 0 )
       .
       .
 
      IF ( LEN ( STRING )  .LE.  LOC + 2 ) THEN
         LOC = 0
      ELSE
         LOC = LOC + 2 + INDEX ( STRING(LOC+2: ), '//' )
      END IF
   END DO
and then using POS:

   LOC = POS ( STRING, '//', 1 )
 
   DO WHILE ( LOC .NE. 0 )
       .
       .
 
      LOC = POS ( STRING, '//', LOC + 2 )
   END DO


Character searches




CPOS is different. Instead of looking for the complete target string, it looks for any one of the individual characters that make up the target string. For example,

   POS ( '(a (b c) (d e) () (f (g (h))))', '()', 1 )
                         ^
returns location 16 (as indicated by the caret), because it is the first occurrence of the complete substring `()' within the string. However,

   CPOS ( '(a (b c) (d e) () (f (g (h))))', '()', 1 )
           ^
returns location 1, since it is the first location at which either of the characters ( `(' or `)' ) appear. Thus, POS treats the target string as an ordered sequence of characters, while CPOS treats the target string as an unordered collection of individual characters.

A third function, NCPOS, looks for characters that are NOT included in the collection. Thus,

   NCPOS ( '(a (b c) (d e) () (f (g (h))))', '()', 1 )
             ^
returns location 2, since it is the first location at which something other than one of the characters in the target string appears.

This is useful for finding unwanted characters. For example, suppose you wish to replace each character in a string that is not part of the Fortran standard character set,

   CHARACTER*(*)        LET
   PARAMETER          ( LET = 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ' )
 
   CHARACTER*(*)        DIG
   PARAMETER          ( DIG = '0123456789' )
 
   CHARACTER*(*)        SPEC
   PARAMETER          ( SPEC = ' =+-*/(),.$'':' )
with a space character, to prevent compilation problems. The following code fragment does the job.

   LOC = NCPOS ( STRING, LET // DIG // SPEC, 1 )
 
   DO WHILE ( LOC .GT. 0 )
      STRING(LOC:LOC) = ' '
 
      LOC = NCPOS ( STRING, LET // DIG // SPEC, LOC )
   END DO
Note that characters do not need to be in any special order, so all of the following are equivalent.

   NCPOS ( STR, 'ABC', BEGIN )
   NCPOS ( STR, 'ACB', BEGIN )
   NCPOS ( STR, 'BAC', BEGIN )
   NCPOS ( STR, 'BCA', BEGIN )
   NCPOS ( STR, 'CAB', BEGIN )
   NCPOS ( STR, 'CBA', BEGIN )


Searching in reverse




POS, CPOS, and NCPOS find the first occurrence of something at or after some position, searching forward (from left to right). Each of these routines has a counterpart, which searches in reverse (frome right to left). For example, where

   POS ( 'do re mi fa so la ti do', 'do', 10 )
                               ^
finds the second occurrence of the target string (at location 22),

   POSR ( 'do re mi fa so la ti do', 'do', 10 )
           ^
finds the first occurrence (at location 1).



Notes




Like INDEX, these functions

Furthermore, you are not required to begin the search within the actual bounds of the string.



Summary




The following table summarizes the scanning routines in SPICELIB.

POS Forward Substring.
CPOS Forward Character in collection.
NCPOS Forward Character NOT in collection.
POSR Reverse Substring.
CPOSR Reverse Character in collection.
NCPOSR