JavaScript String substr() Method
Example
Extract parts of a string:
var str = "Hello world!";
var res = str.substr(1, 4);
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More "Try it Yourself" examples below.
Definition and Usage
The substr() method extracts parts of a string, beginning at the character at the specified position, and returns the specified number of characters.
Tip: To extract characters from the end of the string, use a negative start number (This does not work in IE 8 and earlier).
Note: The substr() method does not change the original string.
Browser Support
Method | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
substr() | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Syntax
string.substr(start, length)
Parameter Values
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
start | Required. The position where to start the extraction. First character is at index 0. If start is positive and greater than, or equal, to the length of the string, substr() returns an empty string. If start is negative, substr() uses it as a character index from the end of the string. If start is negative or larger than the length of the string, start is set to 0 |
length | Optional. The number of characters to extract. If omitted, it extracts the rest of the string |
Technical Details
Return Value: | A new String, containing the extracted part of the text. If length is 0 or negative, an empty string is returned |
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JavaScript Version: | ECMAScript 1 |
More Examples
Example
Begin the extraction at position 2, and extract the rest of the string:
var str = "Hello world!";
var res = str.substr(2);
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Example
Extract only the first character:
var str = "Hello world!";
var res = str.substr(0, 1);
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Example
Extract only the last character:
var str = "Hello world!";
var res = str.substr(11, 1);
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