DCount function

Counts the number of occurrences of a substring in a string, returning 1 if the there are no occurrences of the substring in the string. (Introduced in OpenInsight 4.1.2.)

instances = DCount(source_string, search_string)

The DCount function has the following parameters.

ParameterDescription
source_stringIdentifies the string to search for in search_string. Can be a literal string, expression, constant, or variable.
search_stringIdentifies the string to search for in source_string. search_string may be a literal string, expression, constant, or variable.

If search_string does not appear in source_string, or if search_string is null, a 0 (zero) will be returned.




The Count() and DCount() functions are usually used to determine the size of a dynamic array. They actually have more general purpose use, because the search string can be any string used as a delimiter, even multiple character strings.

Note: To count the number of values in a dynamic array, you need to account for the possibility that the array has one value, with no delimiter. The count() function in this case will return 0 because there is no delimiter in the string. To return the correct answer (1), you need to add the boolean expression ( var #'' ), which returns 1 if the variable contains a value but 0 if it is null. See the example below.

Note: If you use dcount() to count the number of values in a dynamic array, you do not need to add the boolean expression because dcount() returns the proper result (1) if the array has one value with no delimiter.|

* count the number of items in an @fm-delimited list

declare function dcount
cnt = dcount(List, @fm)
  • guides/programming/programmers_reference_manual/dcount.txt
  • Last modified: 2024/06/19 20:20
  • by 127.0.0.1