Functions and CALL Routines

ANYLOWER Function



Searches a character string for a lowercase letter and returns the first position at which it is found
Category: Character

Syntax
Arguments
Details
Comparisons
Examples
See Also

Syntax

ANYLOWER(string <,start>)


Arguments

string

is the character constant, variable, or expression to search.

start

is an optional integer that specifies the position at which the search should start and the direction in which to search.


Details

The results of the ANYLOWER function depend directly on the translation table that is in effect (see TRANTAB= System Option) and indirectly on the ENCODING and LOCALE system options.

The ANYLOWER function searches a string for the first occurrence of a lowercase letter. If such a character is found, ANYLOWER returns the position in the string of that character. If no such character is found, ANYLOWER returns a value of 0.

If you use only one argument, ANYLOWER begins the search at the beginning of the string. If you use two arguments, the absolute value of the second argument, start, specifies the position at which to begin the search. The direction in which to search is determined in the following way:

ANYLOWER returns a value of zero when


Comparisons

The ANYLOWER function searches a character string for a lowercase letter. The NOTLOWER function searches a character string for a character that is not a lowercase letter.


Examples

The following example uses the ANYLOWER function to search a string for any character that is a lowercase letter.

data _null_;    
   string='Next = _n_ + 12E3;';  
   j=0;  
   do until(j=0);  
      j=anylower(string,j+1);  
      if j=0 then put +3 "That's all";  
      else do;          
         c=substr(string,j,1);  
         put +3 j= c=;  
      end; 
   end;
run;

The following lines are written to the SAS log:

   j=2 c=e
   j=3 c=x
   j=4 c=t
   j=9 c=n
   That's all


See Also

Function:

NOTLOWER Function

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