Hi Colleen,
I would suggest using the stringtochar function, which places each
individual letter/number/etc into an array. Then grab the specific
character (=integer) you want, and pass it back thru chartostring and
stringtointeger:
ts = "Testing 1-2"
a = stringtochar(ts)
print(a)
val1 = stringtointeger(chartostring(a(8)))
val2 = stringtointeger(chartostring(a(10)))
This will work assuming that the locations of the integers doesn't
change from string to string if you are reading multiple strings.
Adam
Colleen Henry wrote:
> I have a string that contains two integers, and ultimately I want to be
> able to read them into separate variables or into a two-dimensional
> array. I've tried the "stringtointeger" function, but that only captures
> the first value. Are there any other options besides this function?
>
>
> ********************
> Colleen Henry
> Graduate Student
> Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
> 550 Stadium Mall Dr.
> Purdue University
> West Lafayette, IN 47906
> chenry@purdue.edu <mailto:chenry@purdue.edu>
>
>
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-- -------------------------------------------------------------- Adam Phillips asphilli@ucar.edu National Center for Atmospheric Research tel: (303) 497-1726 ESSL/CGD/CAS fax: (303) 497-1333 P.O. Box 3000 Boulder, CO 80307-3000 http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/cas/asphilli _______________________________________________ ncl-talk mailing list ncl-talk@ucar.edu http://mailman.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/ncl-talk
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