ProB supports the STRING data type also provided by Atelier-B. However, ProB provides considerable additional features described below.
"astring" a specific (single-line) string value
'''astring''' an alternate way of writing (multi-line) strings, no need to escape "
```tstring``` template strings, where ${Expr} or $«Expr» parts are evaluated and converted to string,
you can provide options separated by commas in square brackets like $[2f]{Expr}.
Valid options are: Nf (for floats/reals), Nd (for integer), Np (padding),
ascii (can be abbreviated to a), unicode (can be abbreviated to u).
ProB supports the following escape sequences within strings:
\n newline (ASCII character 13) \r carriage return (ASCII 10) \t tab (ASCII 9) \" the double quote symbol " \' the single quote symbol ' \\ the backslash symbol
Within single-line string literals, you do not need to escape '. Within multi-line string literals, you do not need to escape " and you can use tabs and newlines.
ProB assumes that all B machines and strings use the UTF-8 encoding.
Atelier-B does not support any operations on strings, apart from equality and disequality. In ProB, however, some of the sequence operators work also on strings:
size(s) the length of a string s rev(s) the reverse of a string s s ^ t the concatenation of two strings conc(ss) the concatenation of a sequence of strings
You can turn this support off using the STRING_AS_SEQUENCE preference.
ProB provides various external functions to manipulate strings.
You can obtain the definitions of this library by putting the following into your DEFINITIONS clause:
`DEFINITIONS "LibraryStrings.def"`
The file LibraryStrings.def is bundled with ProB and can be found in the stdlib<\tt> folder. You can also include the machine LibraryStrings.mch<\tt> instead of the definition file; the machine defines some of the functions below as proper B functions (i.e., functions for which you can compute the domain and use constructs such as relational image).
Below are a few of the provided external functions along with some example uses:
STRING_APPEND("abc","abc")
"abcabc"
STRING_LENGTH("abc")
3
STRING_SPLIT("usr/local/lib","/")
{(1↦"usr"),(2↦"local"),(3↦"lib")}
and joins the strings together inserting the separators as often as needed.
It is the inverse of the STRING_SPLIT function.
STRING_JOIN(["usr","local","lib"],"/") "usr/local/lib"
CODES_TO_STRING([65,66,67]) "ABC"
LibraryRegex.def: providing access to regular expression operators on strings (REGEX_MATCH, REGEX_REPLACE, REGEX_SEARCH,...)