< Pascal Programming
String is just an array of ASCII characters.
Definition
string type is defined like this:
type string = packed array [0..255] of char;
Consider this code:
program string_sample;
uses crt;
var s: string;
i: longint;
begin
s:='This is an example of string';
writeln(s[1]);
writeln(ord(s[0]));
readln;
end.
The output:
T 27
We can see that:
- Because strings are just an ASCII array, we can access to any character in string just like array (s[1] in the example above will return the character T)
- What is the purpose of s[0]? s[0] stores the length of the string s but the length is not stored as a number, it is stored as the ASCII character of the length. For example, if string s has the length of 65, s[0] will return the character A, because the ASCII number of A is 65. And the first character of the string is stored in s[1]. So a string can only store up to 255 characters. But don't use this method to retrieve the length of a string because there is a function that can do that (see below)
Declare
Just like longint or integer:
var s: string;
In the above example, string s can store up to 255 characters.
But what if you want the string s to store up to 10 characters?
var s: string[10]; {OK, so now s can only store up to 10 chars}
This article is issued from Wikibooks. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.