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So I was making this program that would write every number between 0 and 9999, but I need it to be 4 characters long no matter what the digit count is - the only way to do that, I think, is to have the program count the digits and then put it into a variable, subtracting that variable from 4 and adding that number of zeros before the number itself.

How can AppleScript count the digits? Is there even a way to do it at all?

2 Answers 2

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Here is a simple handler that, pads based on your question.

Example AppleScript code:

set theNumber to 1

set theNumber to padNumberAsString(theNumber)

on padNumberAsString(n)
    set theLength to (get length of (n as string))
    if theLength is equal to 1 then
        set n to "000" & n
    else if theLength is equal to 2 then
        set n to "00" & n
    else if theLength is equal to 3 then
        set n to "0" & n
    end if
    return n
end padNumberAsString

Result: "0001"


As a demo, this creates and displays a list of the padded numbers between 0 and 1000 to show the padding is taking place.

set thePaddedList to {}
repeat with i from 0 to 1000
    set end of thePaddedList to padNumberAsString(i)
end repeat
choose from list thePaddedList

on padNumberAsString(n)
    set theLength to (get length of (n as string))
    if theLength is equal to 1 then
        set n to "000" & n
    else if theLength is equal to 2 then
        set n to "00" & n
    else if theLength is equal to 3 then
        set n to "0" & n
    end if
    return n
end padNumberAsString
5

Apple Developer > Mac Automation Scripting Guide contains an example how to add leading zeros to a number as AppleScript as well as JavaScript code:

Adding Leading Zeros to a Number

The handlers in Listing 20-11 and Listing 20-12 convert a number to a string and prepends it with leading zeros until it reaches a certain length. They accept two parameters—the number to add leading zeros to and the maximum number of leading zeros to add. For example, if the maximum number of leading zeros is set to 2, the results range from 001 to 999. If the maximum number of leading zeros is 3, the results range from 0001 to 9999, and so on.

AppleScript listing:

on addLeadingZerosToNumber(theNumber, theMaxLeadingZeroCount)
    -- Determine if the number is negative
    set isNegative to theNumber is less than 0

    -- Determine when the maximum number of digits will be reached
    set theThreshold to (10 ^ theMaxLeadingZeroCount) as integer

    -- If the number is shorter than the maximum number of digits
    if theNumber is less than theThreshold then
        -- If the number is negative, convert it to positive
        if isNegative = true then set theNumber to -theNumber

        -- Add the zeros to the number
        set theLeadingZeros to ""
        set theDigitCount to length of ((theNumber div 1) as string)
        set theCharacterCount to (theMaxLeadingZeroCount + 1) - theDigitCount
        repeat theCharacterCount times
            set theLeadingZeros to (theLeadingZeros & "0") as string
        end repeat

        -- Make the number negative, if it was previously negative
        if isNegative = true then set theLeadingZeros to "-" & theLeadingZeros

        -- Return the prefixed number
        return (theLeadingZeros & (theNumber as text)) as string

      -- If the number is greater than or equal to the maximum number of digits
    else
        -- Return the original number
        return theNumber as text
    end if
end addLeadingZerosToNumber

If you prefer JavaScript check the link.

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  • 1
    I like how this answer works for any number of zeros, as opposed to a simple if/else statement.
    – SilverWolf
    Commented Sep 24, 2017 at 22:16

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