string ------ String operations. :: string(REGEX MATCH [...]) string(REGEX MATCHALL [...]) string(REGEX REPLACE [...]) string(REPLACE [...]) string( ) string(COMPARE EQUAL ) string(COMPARE NOTEQUAL ) string(COMPARE LESS ) string(COMPARE GREATER ) string(ASCII [ ...] ) string(CONFIGURE [@ONLY] [ESCAPE_QUOTES]) string(TOUPPER ) string(TOLOWER ) string(LENGTH ) string(SUBSTRING ) string(STRIP ) string(RANDOM [LENGTH ] [ALPHABET ] [RANDOM_SEED ] ) string(FIND [REVERSE]) string(TIMESTAMP [] [UTC]) string(MAKE_C_IDENTIFIER ) REGEX MATCH will match the regular expression once and store the match in the output variable. REGEX MATCHALL will match the regular expression as many times as possible and store the matches in the output variable as a list. REGEX REPLACE will match the regular expression as many times as possible and substitute the replacement expression for the match in the output. The replace expression may refer to paren-delimited subexpressions of the match using \1, \2, ..., \9. Note that two backslashes (\\1) are required in CMake code to get a backslash through argument parsing. REPLACE will replace all occurrences of match_string in the input with replace_string and store the result in the output. MD5, SHA1, SHA224, SHA256, SHA384, and SHA512 will compute a cryptographic hash of the input string. COMPARE EQUAL/NOTEQUAL/LESS/GREATER will compare the strings and store true or false in the output variable. ASCII will convert all numbers into corresponding ASCII characters. CONFIGURE will transform a string like CONFIGURE_FILE transforms a file. TOUPPER/TOLOWER will convert string to upper/lower characters. LENGTH will return a given string's length. SUBSTRING will return a substring of a given string. If length is -1 the remainder of the string starting at begin will be returned. STRIP will return a substring of a given string with leading and trailing spaces removed. RANDOM will return a random string of given length consisting of characters from the given alphabet. Default length is 5 characters and default alphabet is all numbers and upper and lower case letters. If an integer RANDOM_SEED is given, its value will be used to seed the random number generator. FIND will return the position where the given substring was found in the supplied string. If the REVERSE flag was used, the command will search for the position of the last occurrence of the specified substring. The following characters have special meaning in regular expressions: :: ^ Matches at beginning of input $ Matches at end of input . Matches any single character [ ] Matches any character(s) inside the brackets [^ ] Matches any character(s) not inside the brackets - Inside brackets, specifies an inclusive range between characters on either side e.g. [a-f] is [abcdef] To match a literal - using brackets, make it the first or the last character e.g. [+*/-] matches basic mathematical operators. * Matches preceding pattern zero or more times + Matches preceding pattern one or more times ? Matches preceding pattern zero or once only | Matches a pattern on either side of the | () Saves a matched subexpression, which can be referenced in the REGEX REPLACE operation. Additionally it is saved by all regular expression-related commands, including e.g. if( MATCHES ), in the variables CMAKE_MATCH_(0..9). ``*``, ``+`` and ``?`` have higher precedence than concatenation. | has lower precedence than concatenation. This means that the regular expression "^ab+d$" matches "abbd" but not "ababd", and the regular expression "^(ab|cd)$" matches "ab" but not "abd". TIMESTAMP will write a string representation of the current date and/or time to the output variable. Should the command be unable to obtain a timestamp the output variable will be set to the empty string "". The optional UTC flag requests the current date/time representation to be in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) rather than local time. The optional may contain the following format specifiers: :: %d The day of the current month (01-31). %H The hour on a 24-hour clock (00-23). %I The hour on a 12-hour clock (01-12). %j The day of the current year (001-366). %m The month of the current year (01-12). %M The minute of the current hour (00-59). %S The second of the current minute. 60 represents a leap second. (00-60) %U The week number of the current year (00-53). %w The day of the current week. 0 is Sunday. (0-6) %y The last two digits of the current year (00-99) %Y The current year. Unknown format specifiers will be ignored and copied to the output as-is. If no explicit is given it will default to: :: %Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S for local time. %Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ for UTC. MAKE_C_IDENTIFIER will write a string which can be used as an identifier in C.