There is no one built-in function in C++ to do this. If you'd like to replace all instances of one substring with another, you can do so by intermixing calls to string::find
and string::replace
. For example:
size_t index = 0;
while (true) {
/* Locate the substring to replace. */
index = str.find("abc", index);
if (index == std::string::npos) break;
/* Make the replacement. */
str.replace(index, 3, "def");
/* Advance index forward so the next iteration doesn't pick it up as well. */
index += 3;
}
In the last line of this code, I've incremented index
by the length of the string that's been inserted into the string. In this particular example - replacing "abc"
with "def"
- this is not actually necessary. However, in a more general setting, it is important to skip over the string that's just been replaced. For example, if you want to replace "abc"
with "abcabc"
, without skipping over the newly-replaced string segment, this code would continuously replace parts of the newly-replaced strings until memory was exhausted. Independently, it might be slightly faster to skip past those new characters anyway, since doing so saves some time and effort by the string::find
function.
Hope this helps!
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