At this point, I'm not terribly worried about it being cross-browser
compatible - this is stricly a lesson in syntax.  I am using the
string as an array but I don't have a good algorithim to handle it.  I
know you would have to account for a few different scenarios:

1) any characters before the first occurrence
2) any characters after the first occurrence and in between the next
occurrence
3) any characters after the last occurrence.

I thought I would do this by first looping through the string and
creating an array that would capture every position that the substring
occurred.  I would then loop through the array and invoke a function
that would take the current position that I'm in in that string and
loop until I reached the next occurrence of the substring.  And so on
and so forth.

This seems too needlessly complex and I'm sure there is a much easier
way to handle this function.



On May 7, 7:05 am, Balázs Galambosi <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Sat, May 7, 2011 at 12:56 PM, Jose Antonio Perez <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
>
>
>
> >> This isn't part of the spec, and isn't cross-browser.
>
> > Specified in ES5:http://es5.github.com/#x15.5.5.2
>
> Thanks, I wasn't sure if this was included in ES5.
>
>  - Balázs

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