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Home/ Questions/Q 8614809
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 12, 20262026-06-12T05:12:40+00:00 2026-06-12T05:12:40+00:00

Let’s say I have a string in an RTL language such as Arabic with

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Let’s say I have a string in an RTL language such as Arabic with some English chucked in:

string s = "Test:لطيفة;اليوم;a;b"

Notice there are semicolons in the string. When I use the Split command like string[] spl = s.Split(';');, then some of the strings are saved in reverse order. This is what happens:

‏‏‏‏‏spl[0] = “‏Test:لطيفة”
spl[1] = “‏”اليوم
spl[2] = ‏”a”
spl[3] = ‏”b”

The above is out of order compared to the original. Instead, I expect to get this:

‏‏spl[0] = ‏”Test:اليوم”
spl[1] = “‏لطيفة”
spl[2] = ‏”a”
spl[3] = ‏”b”

I’m prepared to write my own split function. However, the chars in the string also parse in reverse order, so I’m back to square one. I just want to go through each character as it’s shown on the screen.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-12T05:12:42+00:00Added an answer on June 12, 2026 at 5:12 am

    As your string currently stands, the word لطيفة is stored prior to the word اليوم; the fact that اليوم is displayed “first” (that is, further to the left), is just a (correct) result of the Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm in displaying the text.

    That is: the string you start with (“Test:لطيفة;اليوم;a;b”) is the result of the user entering “Test:”, then لطيفة, then “;”, then اليوم, and then “;a;b”. Thus, the way C# is splitting it does in fact mirror the way that the string is created. It’s just that the way it is created is not reflected in the display of the string, because the two consecutive Arabic words are treated as a single unit when they are displayed.

    If you’d like a string to display Arabic words in left-to-right order with semicolons in between, while also storing the words in that same order, then you should put a Left-to-Right mark (U+200E) after the semicolon. This will effectively section off each Arabic word as its own unit, and the Bidirectional Algorithm will then treat each word separately.

    For instance, the following code begins with a string identical to the one you use (with the addition of a single Left-to-Right mark), yet it will split it up according to the way that you are expecting it to (that is, spl[0] = ‏”Test:اليوم”, and spl[1] = “‏لطيفة”):

    static void Main(string[] args) {
        string s = "Test:اليوم;\u200Eلطيفة;a;b";
        string[] spl = s.Split(';');
    }
    
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