MID$
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Navigation:
Main Page with Articles and Tutorials
Keyword Reference - Alphabetical
Keyword Reference - By usage
Report a broken link
The MID$ statement substitutes one or more new characters for existing characters of a previously defined STRING.
Syntax
- MID$(baseString$, startPosition%[, bytes%]) = replacementString$
Parameters
- The baseString$ variable must exist and be large enough to contain the replacementString$.
- startPosition% specifies the string character position to start the overwrite.
- bytes% or number of characters is optional. Excess byte lenghts are ignored.
- The replacementString$ should be as long as the byte length reserved.
- The length of the original string is not changed in any case. If replacementString$ is longer, it gets clipped.
Examples
- Example
- Using INSTR to locate the string positions and a MID$ statement to change the words.
text$ = "The cats and dogs were playing, even though dogs don't like cats." PRINT text$ start% = 1 ' start cannot be 0 when used in the INSTR function! DO position% = INSTR(start%, text$, "dog") IF position% THEN ' when position is a value greater than 0 MID$(text$, position%, 3) = "rat" ' changes "dog" to "rat" when found start% = position% + 1 ' advance one position to search rest of string END IF LOOP UNTIL position% = 0 ' no other matches found PRINT text$ |
The cats and dogs were playing, even though dogs don't like cats. The cats and rats were playing, even though rats don't like cats. |
See also
- MID$ (function)
- ASC, ASC (function)
- LEFT$, RIGHT$
- INSTR, ASCII, STR$, HEX$, Bitmaps
- MKI$, MKL$, MKS$, MKD$