Detecting if an NSString contains…?

空扰寡人 提交于 2019-12-02 14:20:09

Here's how I would do it:

NSString *someString = @"Here is my string";
NSRange isRange = [someString rangeOfString:@"is " options:NSCaseInsensitiveSearch];
if(isRange.location == 0) {
   //found it...
} else {
   NSRange isSpacedRange = [someString rangeOfString:@" is " options:NSCaseInsensitiveSearch];
   if(isSpacedRange.location != NSNotFound) {
      //found it...
   }
}

You can easily add this as a category onto NSString:

@interface NSString (JRStringAdditions) 

- (BOOL)containsString:(NSString *)string;
- (BOOL)containsString:(NSString *)string
               options:(NSStringCompareOptions)options;

@end

@implementation NSString (JRStringAdditions) 

- (BOOL)containsString:(NSString *)string
               options:(NSStringCompareOptions)options {
   NSRange rng = [self rangeOfString:string options:options];
   return rng.location != NSNotFound;
}

- (BOOL)containsString:(NSString *)string {
   return [self containsString:string options:0];
}

@end

Use the following code to scan the word in sentence.

NSString *sentence = @"The quick brown fox";
NSString *word = @"quack";
if ([sentence rangeOfString:word].location != NSNotFound) {
    NSLog(@"Yes it does contain that word");
}

In iOS8 you can now use:

BOOL containsString = [@"Here is my string." containsString:@"is"];

There's an interesting post on how to "retrofit" it to iOS7 here: http://petersteinberger.com/blog/2014/retrofitting-containsstring-on-ios-7/

I recommend using NSLinguisticTagger. We can use it to search Here is my string. His isn't a mississippi isthmus. It is?

NSLinguisticTagger *linguisticTagger = [[NSLinguisticTagger alloc] initWithTagSchemes:@[
                                        NSLinguisticTagSchemeTokenType,
                                        ]
                                                                              options:
                                        NSLinguisticTaggerOmitPunctuation |
                                        NSLinguisticTaggerOmitWhitespace |
                                        NSLinguisticTaggerOmitOther ];
[linguisticTagger setString:@"Here is my string. His isn't a mississippi isthmus. It is?"];
[linguisticTagger enumerateTagsInRange:NSMakeRange(0,
                                                   [[linguisticTagger string] length])
                                scheme:NSLinguisticTagSchemeTokenType
                               options:
 NSLinguisticTaggerOmitPunctuation |
 NSLinguisticTaggerOmitWhitespace |
 NSLinguisticTaggerOmitOther |
 NSLinguisticTaggerJoinNames
                            usingBlock:^(NSString *tag, NSRange tokenRange, NSRange sentenceRange, BOOL *stop) {
                                NSLog(@"tag: %@, tokenRange: %@, sentenceRange: %@, token: %@",
                                      tag,
                                      NSStringFromRange(tokenRange),
                                      NSStringFromRange(sentenceRange),
                                      [[linguisticTagger string] substringWithRange:tokenRange]);
                            }];

This outputs:

tag: Word, tokenRange: {0, 4}, sentenceRange: {0, 19}, token: Here
tag: Word, tokenRange: {5, 2}, sentenceRange: {0, 19}, token: is
tag: Word, tokenRange: {8, 2}, sentenceRange: {0, 19}, token: my
tag: Word, tokenRange: {11, 6}, sentenceRange: {0, 19}, token: string
tag: Word, tokenRange: {19, 3}, sentenceRange: {19, 33}, token: His
tag: Word, tokenRange: {23, 2}, sentenceRange: {19, 33}, token: is
tag: Word, tokenRange: {25, 3}, sentenceRange: {19, 33}, token: n't
tag: Word, tokenRange: {29, 1}, sentenceRange: {19, 33}, token: a
tag: Word, tokenRange: {31, 11}, sentenceRange: {19, 33}, token: mississippi
tag: Word, tokenRange: {43, 7}, sentenceRange: {19, 33}, token: isthmus
tag: Word, tokenRange: {52, 2}, sentenceRange: {52, 6}, token: It
tag: Word, tokenRange: {55, 2}, sentenceRange: {52, 6}, token: is

It ignores His mississippi and isthmus and even identifies is inside of isn't.

I hope this helps you,.. add this line at .m file or create a separate class and integrate this code.

@implementation NSString (Contains)

- (BOOL) containsString: (NSString*) substring
{
NSRange range = [self rangeOfString : substring];
BOOL found = ( range.location != NSNotFound );
return found;
}    
@end

With iOS 8 and Swift, we can use localizedCaseInsensitiveContainsString method

 let string: NSString = "Café"
 let substring: NSString = "É"

 string.localizedCaseInsensitiveContainsString(substring) // true

A complete solution would first scan for the string (without added blanks), then check if the immediately prior character is either blank or beginning of line. Similarly check if the immediately following character is either blank or end of line. If both tests pass then you have a match. Depending on your needs you might also check for ,, ., (), etc.

An alternative approach, of course, is to parse the string into words and check each word individually.

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