adams.flow.transformer.StringRangeCut
Cuts out a parts of a string. The cut can be either specified as fixed character positions or as fields from delimited columns.
When cutting multiple ranges, a 'glue' for the sub-strings can be provided.
Flow input/output:
- input: java.lang.String, java.lang.String[]
- output: java.lang.String, java.lang.String[]
The logging level for outputting errors and debugging output.
command-line | -logging-level <OFF|SEVERE|WARNING|INFO|CONFIG|FINE|FINER|FINEST> |
default | WARNING |
min-user-mode | Expert |
The name of the actor.
command-line | -name <java.lang.String> |
default | StringRangeCut |
The annotations to attach to this actor.
command-line | -annotation <adams.core.base.BaseAnnotation> |
default |
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If set to true, transformation is skipped and the input token is just forwarded as it is.
command-line | -skip <boolean> |
default | false |
If set to true, the flow execution at this level gets stopped in case this actor encounters an error; the error gets propagated; useful for critical actors.
command-line | -stop-flow-on-error <boolean> |
default | false |
min-user-mode | Expert |
If enabled, then no errors are output in the console; Note: the enclosing actor handler must have this enabled as well.
command-line | -silent <boolean> |
default | false |
min-user-mode | Expert |
The type of cut operation to perform.
command-line | -type <CHARACTER_POSITIONS|DELIMITED_FIELDS> |
default | CHARACTER_POSITIONS |
The range of characters or fields to cut out.
command-line | -range <adams.core.Range> |
default | 1 |
example | A range is a comma-separated list of single 1-based indices or sub-ranges of indices ('start-end'); 'inv(...)' inverts the range '...'; the following placeholders can be used as well: first, second, third, last_2, last_1, last |
The delimiter to use in case of DELIMITED_FIELDS; \t gets automatically converted into its character counterpart.
command-line | -delimiter <java.lang.String> |
default | \\t |
The 'glue' string to use for joining the sub-strings from the ranges; e.g., \t gets automatically converted into its character counterpart.
command-line | -glue <java.lang.String> |
default |
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