Built-in string class.
This is the built-in string class (and the one used by GDScript). It supports Unicode and provides all necessary means for string handling. Strings are reference counted and use a copy-on-write approach, so passing them around is cheap in resources.
Constructs a new String from the given [bool].
Constructs a new String from the given [int].
Constructs a new String from the given [float].
Constructs a new String from the given [Vector2].
Constructs a new String from the given [Rect2].
Constructs a new String from the given [Vector3].
Constructs a new String from the given [Transform2D].
Constructs a new String from the given [Plane].
Constructs a new String from the given [Quat].
Constructs a new String from the given [AABB].
Constructs a new String from the given [Basis].
Constructs a new String from the given [Transform].
Constructs a new String from the given [Color].
Constructs a new String from the given [NodePath].
Constructs a new String from the given [RID].
Constructs a new String from the given [Dictionary].
Constructs a new String from the given [Array].
Constructs a new String from the given [PoolByteArray].
Constructs a new String from the given [PoolIntArray].
Constructs a new String from the given [PoolRealArray].
Constructs a new String from the given [PoolStringArray].
Constructs a new String from the given [PoolVector2Array].
Constructs a new String from the given [PoolVector3Array].
Constructs a new String from the given [PoolColorArray].
Returns [code]true[/code] if the string begins with the given string.
Returns the bigrams (pairs of consecutive letters) of this string.
Returns a copy of the string with special characters escaped using the C language standard.
Returns a copy of the string with escaped characters replaced by their meanings according to the C language standard.
Changes the case of some letters. Replaces underscores with spaces, converts all letters to lowercase, then capitalizes first and every letter following the space character. For [code]capitalize camelCase mixed_with_underscores[/code] it will return [code]Capitalize Camelcase Mixed With Underscores[/code].
Performs a case-sensitive comparison to another string. Returns [code]-1[/code] if less than, [code]+1[/code] if greater than, or [code]0[/code] if equal.
Removes indentation from string.
Returns [code]true[/code] if the string is empty.
Returns [code]true[/code] if the string ends with the given string.
Erases [code]chars[/code] characters from the string starting from [code]position[/code].
Finds the first occurrence of a substring. Returns the starting position of the substring or -1 if not found. Optionally, the initial search index can be passed.
Finds the last occurrence of a substring. Returns the starting position of the substring or -1 if not found.
Finds the first occurrence of a substring, ignoring case. Returns the starting position of the substring or -1 if not found. Optionally, the initial search index can be passed.
Formats the string by replacing all occurrences of [code]placeholder[/code] with [code]values[/code].
If the string is a valid file path, returns the base directory name.
If the string is a valid file path, returns the full file path without the extension.
If the string is a valid file path, returns the extension.
If the string is a valid file path, returns the filename.
Hashes the string and returns a 32-bit integer.
Converts a string containing a hexadecimal number into an integer.
Inserts a substring at a given position.
If the string is a path to a file or directory, returns [code]true[/code] if the path is absolute.
If the string is a path to a file or directory, returns [code]true[/code] if the path is relative.
Returns [code]true[/code] if this string is a subsequence of the given string.
Returns [code]true[/code] if this string is a subsequence of the given string, without considering case.
Returns [code]true[/code] if this string contains a valid float.
Returns [code]true[/code] if this string contains a valid color in HTML notation.
Returns [code]true[/code] if this string is a valid identifier. A valid identifier may contain only letters, digits and underscores (_) and the first character may not be a digit.
Returns [code]true[/code] if this string contains a valid integer.
Returns [code]true[/code] if this string contains a valid IP address.
Returns a copy of the string with special characters escaped using the JSON standard.
Returns a number of characters from the left of the string.
Returns the string's amount of characters.
Does a simple expression match, where '*' matches zero or more arbitrary characters and '?' matches any single character except '.'.
Does a simple case insensitive expression match, using ? and * wildcards (see [method match]).
Returns the MD5 hash of the string as an array of bytes.
Returns the MD5 hash of the string as a string.
Performs a case-insensitive comparison to another string. Returns [code]-1[/code] if less than, [code]+1[/code] if greater than, or [code]0[/code] if equal.
Returns the character code at position [code]at[/code].
Formats a number to have an exact number of [code]digits[/code] after the decimal point.
Formats a number to have an exact number of [code]digits[/code] before the decimal point.
Decode a percent-encoded string. See [method percent_encode].
Percent-encodes a string. Encodes parameters in a URL when sending a HTTP GET request (and bodies of form-urlencoded POST requests).
If the string is a path, this concatenates [code]file[/code] at the end of the string as a subpath. E.g. [code]"this/is".plus_file("path") == "this/is/path"[/code].
Replaces occurrences of a substring with the given one inside the string.
Replaces occurrences of a substring with the given one inside the string. Ignores case.
Performs a search for a substring, but starts from the end of the string instead of the beginning.
Performs a search for a substring, but starts from the end of the string instead of the beginning. Ignores case.
Returns the right side of the string from a given position.
Returns the SHA-256 hash of the string as an array of bytes.
Returns the SHA-256 hash of the string as a string.
Returns the similarity index of the text compared to this string. 1 means totally similar and 0 means totally dissimilar.
Splits the string by a divisor string and returns an array of the substrings. Example "One,Two,Three" will return ["One","Two","Three"] if split by ",".
If [code]maxsplit[/code] is given, at most maxsplit number of splits occur, and the remainder of the string is returned as the final element of the list (thus, the list will have at most maxsplit+1 elements)
Splits the string in floats by using a divisor string and returns an array of the substrings. Example "1,2.5,3" will return [1,2.5,3] if split by ",".
Returns a copy of the string stripped of any non-printable character at the beginning and the end. The optional arguments are used to toggle stripping on the left and right edges respectively.
Returns part of the string from the position [code]from[/code] with length [code]len[/code].
Converts the String (which is a character array) to [PoolByteArray] (which is an array of bytes). The conversion is sped up in comparison to to_utf8() with the assumption that all the characters the String contains are only ASCII characters.
Converts a string containing a decimal number into a [code]float[/code].
Converts a string containing an integer number into an [code]int[/code].
Returns the string converted to lowercase.
Returns the string converted to uppercase.
Converts the String (which is an array of characters) to [PoolByteArray] (which is an array of bytes). The conversion is a bit slower than to_ascii(), but supports all UTF-8 characters. Therefore, you should prefer this function over to_ascii().
Returns a copy of the string with special characters escaped using the XML standard.
Returns a copy of the string with escaped characters replaced by their meanings according to the XML standard.