Getting and removing the first character of a string

substring is definitely best, but here's one strsplit alternative, since I haven't seen one yet.

> x <- 'hello stackoverflow'
> strsplit(x, '')[[1]][1]
## [1] "h"

or equivalently

> unlist(strsplit(x, ''))[1]
## [1] "h"

And you can paste the rest of the string back together.

> paste0(strsplit(x, '')[[1]][-1], collapse = '')
## [1] "ello stackoverflow"

There is also str_sub from the stringr package

x <- 'hello stackoverflow'
str_sub(x, 2) # or
str_sub(x, 2, str_length(x))
[1] "ello stackoverflow"

See ?substring.

x <- 'hello stackoverflow'
substring(x, 1, 1)
## [1] "h"
substring(x, 2)
## [1] "ello stackoverflow"

The idea of having a pop method that both returns a value and has a side effect of updating the data stored in x is very much a concept from object-oriented programming. So rather than defining a pop function to operate on character vectors, we can make a reference class with a pop method.

PopStringFactory <- setRefClass(
  "PopString",
  fields = list(
    x = "character"  
  ),
  methods = list(
    initialize = function(x)
    {
      x <<- x
    },
    pop = function(n = 1)
    {
      if(nchar(x) == 0)
      {
        warning("Nothing to pop.")
        return("")
      }
      first <- substring(x, 1, n)
      x <<- substring(x, n + 1)
      first
    }
  )
)

x <- PopStringFactory$new("hello stackoverflow")
x
## Reference class object of class "PopString"
## Field "x":
## [1] "hello stackoverflow"
replicate(nchar(x$x), x$pop())
## [1] "h" "e" "l" "l" "o" " " "s" "t" "a" "c" "k" "o" "v" "e" "r" "f" "l" "o" "w"

Use this function from stringi package

> x <- 'hello stackoverflow'
> stri_sub(x,2)
[1] "ello stackoverflow"

Tags:

String

R