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EReg

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Available on all platforms

The EReg class represents regular expressions.

While basic usage and patterns consistently work across platforms, some more complex operations may yield different results. This is a necessary trade- off to retain a certain level of performance.

EReg instances can be created by calling the constructor, or with the special syntax ~/pattern/modifier

EReg instances maintain an internal state, which is affected by several of its methods.

A detailed explanation of the supported operations is available at https://haxe.org/manual/std-regex.html

Constructor

new (r:String, opt:String)

Creates a new regular expression with pattern r and modifiers opt.

This is equivalent to the shorthand syntax ~/r/opt

If r or opt are null, the result is unspecified.

Methods

map (s:String, f:EReg ‑> String):String

Calls the function f for the substring of s which this EReg matches and replaces that substring with the result of f call.

The f function takes this EReg object as its first argument and should return a replacement string for the substring matched.

If this EReg does not match any substring, the result is s.

By default, this method replaces only the first matched substring. If the global g modifier is in place, all matched substrings are replaced.

If s or f are null, the result is unspecified.

match (s:String):Bool

Tells if this regular expression matches String s.

This method modifies the internal state.

If s is null, the result is unspecified.

matchSub (s:String, pos:Int, len:Int = -1):Bool

Tells if this regular expression matches a substring of String s.

This function expects pos and len to describe a valid substring of s, or else the result is unspecified. To get more robust behavior, this.match(s.substr(pos,len)) can be used instead.

This method modifies the internal state.

If s is null, the result is unspecified.

matched (n:Int):String

Returns the matched sub-group n of this EReg.

This method should only be called after this.match or this.matchSub, and then operates on the String of that operation.

The index n corresponds to the n-th set of parentheses in the pattern of this EReg. If no such sub-group exists, an exception is thrown.

If n equals 0, the whole matched substring is returned.

matchedLeft ():String

Returns the part to the left of the last matched substring.

If the most recent call to this.match or this.matchSub did not match anything, the result is unspecified.

If the global g modifier was in place for the matching, only the substring to the left of the leftmost match is returned.

The result does not include the matched part.

matchedPos ():{pos:Int, len:Int}

Returns the position and length of the last matched substring, within the String which was last used as argument to this.match or this.matchSub.

If the most recent call to this.match or this.matchSub did not match anything, the result is unspecified.

If the global g modifier was in place for the matching, the position and length of the leftmost substring is returned.

matchedRight ():String

Returns the part to the right of the last matched substring.

If the most recent call to this.match or this.matchSub did not match anything, the result is unspecified.

If the global g modifier was in place for the matching, only the substring to the right of the leftmost match is returned.

The result does not include the matched part.

replace (s:String, by:String):String

Replaces the first substring of s which this EReg matches with by.

If this EReg does not match any substring, the result is s.

By default, this method replaces only the first matched substring. If the global g modifier is in place, all matched substrings are replaced.

If by contains $1 to $9, the digit corresponds to number of a matched sub-group and its value is used instead. If no such sub-group exists, the replacement is unspecified. The string $$ becomes $.

If s or by are null, the result is unspecified.

split (s:String):Array<String>

Splits String s at all substrings this EReg matches.

If a match is found at the start of s, the result contains a leading empty String "" entry.

If a match is found at the end of s, the result contains a trailing empty String "" entry.

If two matching substrings appear next to each other, the result contains the empty String "" between them.

By default, this method splits s into two parts at the first matched substring. If the global g modifier is in place, s is split at each matched substring.

If s is null, the result is unspecified.

© 2005–2016 Haxe Foundation
Licensed under a MIT license.
http://api.haxe.org/EReg.html