Difference between revisions of "AT()"

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==See Also==
 
==See Also==
[[ATNEXT()]], [[GETWORDCOUNT()]], [[GETWORDNUM()]], [[INLIST()]], [[LEFT()]], [[OCCURS()]], [[RAT()]], [[RIGHT()]], [[SET STRESCAPE]], [[STR()]], [[STREXTRACT()]], [[STRPOS()]], [[STRTRAN()]], [[STUFF()]], [[SUBSTR()]]
+
[[AT_C]], [[ATNEXT()]], [[GETWORDCOUNT()]], [[GETWORDNUM()]], [[INLIST()]], [[LEFT()]], [[OCCURS()]], [[RAT()]], [[RIGHT()]], [[SET STRESCAPE]], [[STR()]], [[STREXTRACT()]], [[STRPOS()]], [[STRTRAN()]], [[STUFF()]], [[SUBSTR()]]
  
 
==Description==
 
==Description==

Revision as of 06:01, 15 September 2014

Purpose

Function to search for a substring

Syntax

AT(<expC1>, <expC2> | <memofield> [,<expN>])

See Also

AT_C, ATNEXT(), GETWORDCOUNT(), GETWORDNUM(), INLIST(), LEFT(), OCCURS(), RAT(), RIGHT(), SET STRESCAPE, STR(), STREXTRACT(), STRPOS(), STRTRAN(), STUFF(), SUBSTR()

Description

AT() is the substring search function. It returns a number signifying the starting position of <expC1> in <expC2> or in the specified memo field. If the substring is not contained within <expC2> or <memofield>, then the function returns the value 0. The leftmost character of a string is in character position 1. The AT() function will return the starting position of the Nth occurrence of <expC1> when the optional numeric expression <expN> is specified. The AT() function is particularly useful in conjunction with the LEFT() or SUBSTR() functions for locating starting points for extracting text from a string.

Example

? at("is", "Lianja is good") 
         9
cString1 = "is"
cString2 = "Lianja is good" 
? at(cString1, cString2)
         9