String_extendedSourceExtensions to Core.Core_String.
collate s1 s2 sorts string in an order that's usually more suited for human consumption by treating ints specially, e.g. it will output: ["rfc1.txt";"rfc822.txt";"rfc2086.txt"].
It works by splitting the strings in numerical and non-numerical chunks and comparing chunks two by two from left to right (and starting on a non numerical chunk):
It is a total order.
unescaped_exn s is the inverse operation of escaped: it takes a string where all the special characters are escaped following the lexical convention of OCaml and returns an unescaped copy. The strict switch is on by default and makes the function treat illegal backslashes as errors. When strict is false every illegal backslash except escaped numeral greater than 255 is copied literally. The aforementioned numerals still raise errors. This mimics the behaviour of the ocaml lexer.
squeeze str reduces all sequences of spaces, newlines, tabs, and carriage returns to single spaces.
pad_left ~char s len Returns s padded to the length len by adding characters char to the left of the string. If s is already longer than len it is returned unchanged.
val word_wrap :
?trailing_nl:bool ->
?soft_limit:int ->
?hard_limit:int ->
?nl:string ->
string ->
stringword_wrap ~soft_limit s
Wraps the string so that it fits the length soft_limit. It doesn't break words unless we go over hard_limit.
if nl is passed it is inserted instead of the normal newline character.
Gives the Levenshtein distance between 2 strings, which is the number of insertions, deletions, and substitutions necessary to turn either string into the other. With the transpose argument, it also considers transpositions (Damerau-Levenshtein distance).