Here’s how to use string() function.
Description:
Convert the data type of an object to string type.
Syntax:
string(expression{, format}:loc)
Note:
The function converts the data type of an object to the string type and formats the string. Parameter loc defines a language, which applies to only the datetime data; use the system language if loc is absent.
The format string format must match the data type of the result of expression, or the result of string(expression{, format}:loc) will be incorrect.
Parameter:
expression |
The constant object or the expression to be converted to a string |
format |
A format string used to format the result of expression |
loc |
Language name, which is case insensitive. The most commonly used languages are Chinese (zh) and English (en); see A.sort() to know other languages supported in esProc |
Option:
@q |
Enclose string expression in double quotes and ignore parameter format |
@e |
Escape the undisplayable character; represent the tab, carriage return, line break in string expression with the escape characters; if there are single quotes, double quotes or an escape character in the string, add an escape character before them; ignore parameter format when the option is present |
@u |
With @e option, if there is a character using large character set in string expression, convert the character to a Unicode one |
Return value:
String type
Example:
|
A |
|
1 |
=string(123) |
123 |
2 |
=string(date("2009-02-23")," MMM dd, yyyy") |
Feb 23, 2009 |
3 |
=string(3456.78,"$#,##0.00") |
$3,456.78 |
4 |
=string(5/6,"0.00%") |
83.33% |
5 |
a b |
Separate a and b with tab. |
6 |
=string@q(A5) |
"a b"; double quoted the given character string a b, and display the escape character. |
7 |
=string@e(A6) |
\"a\tb\"; do not display the character tab after the string is escaped and add escape character to the double quotes. |
8 |
中国 |
|
9 |
=string@u(A8) |
\u4E2D\u56FD |
10 |
=string(date("2009-02-23")," MMM dd, yyyy":"en") |
Feb 23, 2009 |
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