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Left Pad
Left pad a string.
Usage
var lpad = require( '@stdlib/string/left-pad' );
lpad( str, len[, pad] )
Left pads a string such that the padded string has a length of at least len.
var str = lpad( 'a', 5 );
// returns '    a'
By default, an input string is padded with spaces. To pad with a different character or sequence of characters, provide a pad string.
var str = lpad( 'beep', 10, 'b' );
// returns 'bbbbbbbeep'
str = lpad( 'boop', 12, 'beep' );
// returns 'beepbeepboop'
Notes
- 
An output stringis not guaranteed to have a length of exactlylen, but to have alengthof at leastlen. To generate a paddedstringhaving alengthequal tolenvar str = lpad( 'boop', 10, 'beep' ); // => length 12 // returns 'beepbeepboop' str = str.substring( str.length-10 ); // => length 10 // returns 'epbeepboop'
Examples
var round = require( '@stdlib/math/base/special/round' );
var randu = require( '@stdlib/random/base/randu' );
var lpad = require( '@stdlib/string/left-pad' );
var str = 'beep';
var n;
var i;
for ( i = 0; i < 100; i++ ) {
    n = round( randu()*10 ) + str.length;
    console.log( lpad( str, n, 'b' ) );
}
CLI
Usage
Usage: lpad [options] [<string>] --len=<length>
Options:
  -h,    --help                Print this message.
  -V,    --version             Print the package version.
         --len length          Minimum string length.
         --pad str             String used to pad. Default: ' '.
         --split sep           Delimiter for stdin data. Default: '/\\r?\\n/'.
Notes
- 
If the split separator is a regular expression, ensure that the splitoption is either properly escaped or enclosed in quotes.# Not escaped... $ echo -n $'beep\nboop' | lpad -len 8 --split /\r?\n/ # Escaped... $ echo -n $'beep\nboop' | lpad -len 8 --split /\\r?\\n/
- 
The implementation ignores trailing delimiters. 
Examples
$ lpad beep --len 10 --pad b
bbbbbbbeep
To use as a standard stream,
$ echo -n 'beep' | lpad --len 8
    beep
By default, when used as a standard stream, the implementation assumes newline-delimited data. To specify an alternative delimiter, set the split option.
$ echo -n 'boop\tbeep' |  lpad --len 8 --split '\t'
    boop
    beep
See Also
- @stdlib/string/pad: pad a string.
- @stdlib/string/right-pad: right pad a string.