You're confusing substring() and substr(): substring() expects two indices and not offset and length. In your case, the indices are 5 and 2, ie characters 2..4 will be returned as the higher index is excluded.
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You're confusing substring() and substr(): substring() expects two indices and not offset and length. In your case, the indices are 5 and 2, ie characters 2..4 will be returned as the higher index is excluded.
You have three options in Javascript:
//slice
//syntax: string.slice(start [, stop])
"Good news, everyone!".slice(5,9); // extracts 'news'
//substring
//syntax: string.substring(start [, stop])
"Good news, everyone!".substring(5,9); // extracts 'news'
//substr
//syntax: string.substr(start [, length])
"Good news, everyone!".substr(5,4); // extracts 'news'
ECMAScript 6 introduced String.prototype.includes:
const string = "foo";
const substring = "oo";
console.log(string.includes(substring)); // true
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String.prototype.includes is case-sensitive and is not supported by Internet Explorer without a polyfill.
In ECMAScript 5 or older environments, use String.prototype.indexOf, which returns -1 when a substring cannot be found:
var string = "foo";
var substring = "oo";
console.log(string.indexOf(substring) !== -1); // true
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There is a String.prototype.includes in ES6:
"potato".includes("to");
> true
Note that this does not work in Internet Explorer or some other old browsers with no or incomplete ES6 support. To make it work in old browsers, you may wish to use a transpiler like Babel, a shim library like es6-shim, or this polyfill from MDN:
if (!String.prototype.includes) {
String.prototype.includes = function(search, start) {
'use strict';
if (typeof start !== 'number') {
start = 0;
}
if (start + search.length > this.length) {
return false;
} else {
return this.indexOf(search, start) !== -1;
}
};
}