From a linter provider, I receive a Point compatible array(line, column) where the error occured. Now I would like to hightlight the word surrounding that point, basically the result one would get if that exact point was double-clicked in the editor. Something like
const range = textEditor.getWordAtPosition(point)
Is what I hoped for, but couldn't find in the documentation.
Thanks for your help!
After looking around for a while, there seems to be no API method for the given need. I ended up writing a small helper function based upon this answer:
function getWordAtPosition(line, pos) {
// Perform type conversions.
line = String(line);
pos = Number(pos) >>> 0;
// Search for the word's beginning and end.
const left = Math.max.apply(null, [/\((?=[^(]*$)/,/\)(?=[^)]*$)/, /\,(?=[^,]*$)/, /\[(?=[^[]*$)/, /\](?=[^]]*$)/, /\;(?=[^;]*$)/, /\.(?=[^.]*$)/, /\s(?=[^\s]*$)/].map(x => line.slice(0, pos).search(x))) + 1
let right = line.slice(pos).search(/\s|\(|\)|\,|\.|\[|\]|\;/)
// The last word in the string is a special case.
if (right < 0) {
right = line.length - 1
}
// Return the word, using the located bounds to extract it from the string.
return str.slice(left, right + pos)
}
Here, the beginning of the word is determined by the latest occurance of one of the characters (),.[]; or a blank.
The end of the word is determined by the same characters, however here the first occurance is taken as a delimeter.
Given the original context, the function can the be called using the API method ::lineTextForBufferRow and the desired postion (column) as follows:
const range = getWordAtPosition(textEditor.lineTextForBufferRow(bufferRow), 10)
Related
I want to get possible combinations of two sets of lists in google earth engine, but my code did not works.
var Per1= ee.Array([[0.1,0.5,0.8],[0.4,0.5,0.2]])
var pre = PercFin1.toList()
var CC=ee.List([1,2,3]);
var ZZ = pre.map(function(hh){
var Per11 = ee.List(pre).get(hh);
var out = CC.zip(Per11);
return out;
});
print (ZZ)
The error I get is:
List.get, argument 'index': Invalid type. Expected: Integer. Actual: List.
Thanks in advance
I don't know if this is what you want, but it looks like you've got the right idea but made an incidental mistake: hh is not an index into pre but an element of it.
I modified and simplified the last part of your code (along with changing PercFin1 to Per1, which I assume was a typo):
var ZZ = pre.map(function(hh){
return CC.zip(hh);
});
print(ZZ);
The result of this is
[
[[1,0.1],[2,0.5],[3,0.8]],
[[1,0.4],[2,0.5],[3,0.2]]
]
which is what I understand you want — each row in Per1 individually zipped with CC.
I'm trying to use SequenceReader<T> in .Net Core Preview 8 to parse Guacamole Protocol network traffic.
The traffic might look as follows:
5.error,14.some text here,1.0;
This is a single error instruction. There are 3 fields:
OpCode = error
Reason = some text here
Status = 0 (see Status Codes)
The fields are comma delimited (semi-colon terminated), but they also have the length prefixed on each field. I presume that's so that you could parse something like:
5.error,24.some, text, with, commas,1.0;
To produce Reason = some, text, with, commas.
Simple comma delimited parsing is simple enough to do (with or without SequenceReader). However, to utilise the length I've tried the following:
public static bool TryGetNextElement(this ref SerializationContext context, out ReadOnlySequence<byte> element)
{
element = default;
var start = context.Reader.Position;
if (!context.Reader.TryReadTo(out ReadOnlySequence<byte> lengthSlice, Utf8Bytes.Period, advancePastDelimiter: true))
return false;
if (!lengthSlice.TryGetInt(out var length))
return false;
context.Reader.Advance(length);
element = context.Reader.Sequence.Slice(start, context.Reader.Position);
return true;
}
Based on my understanding of the initial proposal, this should work, though also could be simplified I think because some of the methods in the proposal make life a bit easier than that which is available in .Net Core Preview 8.
However, the problem with this code is that the SequenceReader does not seem to Advance as I would expect. It's Position and Consumed properties remain unchanged when advancing, so the element I slice at the end is always an empty sequence.
What do I need to do in order to parse this protocol correctly?
I'm guessing that .Reader here is a property; this is important because SequenceReader<T> is a mutable struct, but every time you access .SomeProperty you are working with an isolated copy of the reader. It is fine to hide it behind a property, but you'd need to make sure you work with a local and then push back when complete, i.e.
var reader = context.Reader;
var start = reader.Position;
if (!reader.TryReadTo(out ReadOnlySequence<byte> lengthSlice,
Utf8Bytes.Period, advancePastDelimiter: true))
return false;
if (!lengthSlice.TryGetInt(out var length))
return false;
reader.Advance(length);
element = reader.Sequence.Slice(start, reader.Position);
context.Reader = reader; // update position
return true;
Note that a nice feature of this is that in the failure cases (return false), you won't have changed the state yet, because you've only been mutating your local standalone clone.
You could also consider a ref-return property for .Reader.
I have a weired issue, I can't believe such a common feature could be broken (the error is certainely on my side), but I can't find how to make it work. I want to use the cursor from datastore to get paginated results, I keep getting all of them whatever i do
FetchOptions fetchOptions = FetchOptions.Builder.withChunkSize(5).prefetchSize(6);
String datastoreCursor = filter.getDatastoreCursor();
if (datastoreCursor != null) {
fetchOptions = fetchOptions.startCursor(Cursor.fromWebSafeString(datastoreCursor));
}
QueryResultList<Entity> result = preparedQuery.asQueryResultList(fetchOptions);
ArrayList<Product> productList = new ArrayList<Product>();
// int count = 0;
for (Entity entity : result) {
// if (++count == PRODUCTS_PER_PAGE)
// break;
Key key = entity.getKey();
productList.add(populateProduct(key.getId(), true, entity));
}
toReturn.setDatastoreCursor(result.getCursor());
Also if I don't read the rows (uncomment the lines with counter) and get the cursor the resulting cursor is the same. I thought it might bring me back to the last read element under the datastabase cursor (thinking result.getCursor() reflects the state of the db cursor)
I'm getting a cursor with this value E-ABAOsB8gEQbW9kaWZpY2F0aW9uRGF0ZfoBCQiIjsfAmKm_AuwBggIhagljaGF0YW1vamVyFAsSB1Byb2R1Y3QYgICAgICosgsMFA that points to no more elements (I have 23 elements for my test that I all receive from the first query)
When you use a QueryResultList, the requested cursor will always point to the end of the list. As specified by the javadoc of QueryResultList#getCursor:
Gets a Cursor that points to the result immediately after the last one in this list.
Even though you provide a prefetch and chunk size, The entire result list will still have all of your results since you have not specified a limit. Thus, the expected cursor is the cursor after the final element.
If you only want a specific number of entities per page, you should set a limit on the FetchOptions using the limit method. Then when you call getCursor(), you'll get a cursor at the end of your page, as opposed to the end of your dataset.
Instead, you could also use a QueryResultIterator. Unlike the QueryResultList, calling getCursor on a QueryResultIterator will result in the cursor that points after the last entity retrieved by calling .next() (javadoc).
what is wrong with this code?
bool claimExists;
string currentClaimControlNo = "700209308399870";
List<string> claimControlNo = new List<string>();
claimControlNo.Add("700209308399870");
if (claimControlNo.Contains(currentClaimControlNo.Substring(0, 14)))
claimExists = true;
else
claimExists = false;
Why the claimControlNo above is coming into false?
Since I know the value exists, how can i tune the code?
It's reporting false because you aren't asking whether the list contains the currentClaimControlNo, you're asking whether it contains a string that is the first fourteen characters of the fifteen-character string currentClaimControlNo.
Try this instead:
claimExists = claimControlNo.Any(ccn => ccn.StartsWith(currentClaimControlNo.Substring(0,14)));
Your count is wrong. There are 15 characters. Your substring is cutting off the last 0 which fails the condition.
Because you're shaving off the last digit in your substring.
if you change the line
if (claimControlNo.Contains(currentClaimControlNo.Substring(0, 14)))
to
if (claimControlNo.Contains(currentClaimControlNo.Substring(0, 15)))
it works.
Because contains on a list looks for the whole item, not a substring:
currentClaimControlNo.Substring(0, 14)
"70020930839987"
Is not the same as
700209308399870
You're missing a digit, hence why your list search is failing.
I think you are trying to find something in the list that contains that substring. Don't use the lists contain method. If you are trying to find something in the list that has the subset do this
claimExists = claimControlNo.Any(item => item.Contains(currentClaimControlNo.Substring(0, 14)))
This goes through each item in claimControlNo and each item can then check if it contains the substring.
Why do it this way? The Contains method on a string
Returns a value indicating whether the specified System.String object occurs within this string.
Which is what you want.
Contains on a list, however
Determines whether an element is in the System.Collections.Generic.List.
They aren't the same, hence your confusion
Do you really need this explaining?
You are calling Substring for 14 characters when the string is of length 15. Then you are checking if your list (which only has one item of length 15) contains an item of length 14. It doesn;t event need to check the value, the length is enough to determine it is not a match.
The solution of course is to not do the Substring, it makes not sense.
Which would look like this:
if (claimControlNo.Contains(currentClaimControlNo))
claimExists = true;
else
claimExists = false;
Then again, perhaps you know you are trimming the search, and are in fact looking for anything that has a partial match within the list?
If this is the case, then you can simply loop the list and do a Contains on each item. Something like this:
bool claimExists = false;
string searchString = currentClaimControlNo.Substring(0, 14);
foreach(var s in claimControlNo)
{
if(s.Contains(searchString))
{
claimExists = true;
break;
}
}
Or use some slightly complex (certainly more complex then I can remember off the top of my head) LINQ query. Quick guess (it's probably right to be fair, I am pretty freaking awesome):
bool claimExists = claimControlNo.Any(x => x.Contains(searchString));
Check it:
// str will be equal to 70020930839987
var str = currentClaimControlNo.Substring(0, 14);
List<string> claimControlNo = new List<string>();
claimControlNo.Add("700209308399870");
The value str isn't contained in the list.
We'll soon be embarking on the development of a new mobile application. This particular app will be used for heavy searching of text based fields. Any suggestions from the group at large for what sort of database engine is best suited to allowing these types of searches on a mobile platform?
Specifics include Windows Mobile 6 and we'll be using the .Net CF. Also some of the text based fields will be anywhere between 35 and 500 characters. The device will operate in two different methods, batch and WiFi. Of course for WiFi we can just submit requests to a full blown DB engine and just fetch results back. This question centres around the "batch" version which will house a database loaded with information on the devices flash/removable storage card.
At any rate, I know SQLCE has some basic indexing but you don't get into the real fancy "full text" style indexes until you've got the full blown version which of course isn't available on a mobile platform.
An example of what the data would look like:
"apron carpenter adjustable leather container pocket waist hardware belt" etc. etc.
I haven't gotten into the evaluation of any other specific options yet as I figure I'd leverage the experience of this group in order to first point me down some specific avenues.
Any suggestions/tips?
Just recently I had the same issue. Here is what I did:
I created a class to hold just an id and the text for each object (in my case I called it a sku (item number) and a description). This creates a smaller object that uses less memory since it is only used for searching. I'll still grab the full-blown objects from the database after I find matches.
public class SmallItem
{
private int _sku;
public int Sku
{
get { return _sku; }
set { _sku = value; }
}
// Size of max description size + 1 for null terminator.
private char[] _description = new char[36];
public char[] Description
{
get { return _description; }
set { _description = value; }
}
public SmallItem()
{
}
}
After this class is created, you can then create an array (I actually used a List in my case) of these objects and use it for searching throughout your application. The initialization of this list takes a bit of time, but you only need to worry about this at start up. Basically just run a query on your database and grab the data you need to create this list.
Once you have a list, you can quickly go through it searching for any words you want. Since it's a contains, it must also find words within words (e.g. drill would return drill, drillbit, drills etc.). To do this, we wrote a home-grown, unmanaged c# contains function. It takes in a string array of words (so you can search for more than one word... we use it for "AND" searches... the description must contain all words passed in... "OR" is not currently supported in this example). As it searches through the list of words it builds a list of IDs, which are then passed back to the calling function. Once you have a list of IDs, you can easily run a fast query in your database to return the full-blown objects based on a fast indexed ID number. I should mention that we also limit the maximum number of results returned. This could be taken out. It's just handy if someone types in something like "e" as their search term. That's going to return a lot of results.
Here's the example of custom Contains function:
public static int[] Contains(string[] descriptionTerms, int maxResults, List<SmallItem> itemList)
{
// Don't allow more than the maximum allowable results constant.
int[] matchingSkus = new int[maxResults];
// Indexes and counters.
int matchNumber = 0;
int currentWord = 0;
int totalWords = descriptionTerms.Count() - 1; // - 1 because it will be used with 0 based array indexes
bool matchedWord;
try
{
/* Character array of character arrays. Each array is a word we want to match.
* We need the + 1 because totalWords had - 1 (We are setting a size/length here,
* so it is not 0 based... we used - 1 on totalWords because it is used for 0
* based index referencing.)
* */
char[][] allWordsToMatch = new char[totalWords + 1][];
// Character array to hold the current word to match.
char[] wordToMatch = new char[36]; // Max allowable word size + null terminator... I just picked 36 to be consistent with max description size.
// Loop through the original string array or words to match and create the character arrays.
for (currentWord = 0; currentWord <= totalWords; currentWord++)
{
char[] desc = new char[descriptionTerms[currentWord].Length + 1];
Array.Copy(descriptionTerms[currentWord].ToUpper().ToCharArray(), desc, descriptionTerms[currentWord].Length);
allWordsToMatch[currentWord] = desc;
}
// Offsets for description and filter(word to match) pointers.
int descriptionOffset = 0, filterOffset = 0;
// Loop through the list of items trying to find matching words.
foreach (SmallItem i in itemList)
{
// If we have reached our maximum allowable matches, we should stop searching and just return the results.
if (matchNumber == maxResults)
break;
// Loop through the "words to match" filter list.
for (currentWord = 0; currentWord <= totalWords; currentWord++)
{
// Reset our match flag and current word to match.
matchedWord = false;
wordToMatch = allWordsToMatch[currentWord];
// Delving into unmanaged code for SCREAMING performance ;)
unsafe
{
// Pointer to the description of the current item on the list (starting at first char).
fixed (char* pdesc = &i.Description[0])
{
// Pointer to the current word we are trying to match (starting at first char).
fixed (char* pfilter = &wordToMatch[0])
{
// Reset the description offset.
descriptionOffset = 0;
// Continue our search on the current word until we hit a null terminator for the char array.
while (*(pdesc + descriptionOffset) != '\0')
{
// We've matched the first character of the word we're trying to match.
if (*(pdesc + descriptionOffset) == *pfilter)
{
// Reset the filter offset.
filterOffset = 0;
/* Keep moving the offsets together while we have consecutive character matches. Once we hit a non-match
* or a null terminator, we need to jump out of this loop.
* */
while (*(pfilter + filterOffset) != '\0' && *(pfilter + filterOffset) == *(pdesc + descriptionOffset))
{
// Increase the offsets together to the next character.
++filterOffset;
++descriptionOffset;
}
// We hit matches all the way to the null terminator. The entire word was a match.
if (*(pfilter + filterOffset) == '\0')
{
// If our current word matched is the last word on the match list, we have matched all words.
if (currentWord == totalWords)
{
// Add the sku as a match.
matchingSkus[matchNumber] = i.Sku.ToString();
matchNumber++;
/* Break out of this item description. We have matched all needed words and can move to
* the next item.
* */
break;
}
/* We've matched a word, but still have more words left in our list of words to match.
* Set our match flag to true, which will mean we continue continue to search for the
* next word on the list.
* */
matchedWord = true;
}
}
// No match on the current character. Move to next one.
descriptionOffset++;
}
/* The current word had no match, so no sense in looking for the rest of the words. Break to the
* next item description.
* */
if (!matchedWord)
break;
}
}
}
}
};
// We have our list of matching skus. We'll resize the array and pass it back.
Array.Resize(ref matchingSkus, matchNumber);
return matchingSkus;
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
// Handle the exception
}
}
Once you have the list of matching skus, you can iterate through the array and build a query command that only returns the matching skus.
For an idea of performance, here's what we have found (doing the following steps):
Search ~171,000 items
Create list of all matching items
Query the database, returning only the matching items
Build full-blown items (similar to SmallItem class, but a lot more fields)
Populate a datagrid with the full-blow item objects.
On our mobile units, the entire process takes 2-4 seconds (takes 2 if we hit our match limit before we have searched all items... takes 4 seconds if we have to scan every item).
I've also tried doing this without unmanaged code and using String.IndexOf (and tried String.Contains... had same performance as IndexOf as it should). That way was much slower... about 25 seconds.
I've also tried using a StreamReader and a file containing lines of [Sku Number]|[Description]. The code was similar to the unmanaged code example. This way took about 15 seconds for an entire scan. Not too bad for speed, but not great. The file and StreamReader method has one advantage over the way I showed you though. The file can be created ahead of time. The way I showed you requires the memory and the initial time to load the List when the application starts up. For our 171,000 items, this takes about 2 minutes. If you can afford to wait for that initial load each time the app starts up (which can be done on a separate thread of course), then searching this way is the fastest way (that I've found at least).
Hope that helps.
PS - Thanks to Dolch for helping with some of the unmanaged code.
You could try Lucene.Net. I'm not sure how well it's suited to mobile devices, but it is billed as a "high-performance, full-featured text search engine library".
http://incubator.apache.org/lucene.net/
http://lucene.apache.org/java/docs/