trusty (3) regexp.3tcl.gz

Provided by: tcl8.4-doc_8.4.20-7_all bug

NAME

       regexp - Match a regular expression against a string

SYNOPSIS

       regexp ?switches? exp string ?matchVar? ?subMatchVar subMatchVar ...?
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DESCRIPTION

       Determines  whether  the regular expression exp matches part or all of string and returns 1 if it does, 0
       if it doesn't, unless -inline is specified (see below).  (Regular expression matching is described in the
       re_syntax reference page.)

       If  additional  arguments  are  specified after string then they are treated as the names of variables in
       which to return information about which part(s) of string matched exp.  MatchVar will be set to the range
       of  string  that  matched  all  of exp.  The first subMatchVar will contain the characters in string that
       matched the leftmost parenthesized subexpression within  exp,  the  next  subMatchVar  will  contain  the
       characters that matched the next parenthesized subexpression to the right in exp, and so on.

       If  the  initial  arguments  to  regexp  start  with  - then they are treated as switches.  The following
       switches are currently supported:

       -about         Instead of  attempting  to  match  the  regular  expression,  returns  a  list  containing
                      information   about  the  regular  expression.   The  first  element  of  the  list  is  a
                      subexpression count.  The second element is a list of property names that describe various
                      attributes  of  the  regular  expression.  This switch is primarily intended for debugging
                      purposes.

       -expanded      Enables use of the expanded regular expression syntax where whitespace  and  comments  are
                      ignored.   This  is  the  same  as  specifying the (?x) embedded option (see the re_syntax
                      manual page).

       -indices       Changes what is stored in the subMatchVars.  Instead of storing  the  matching  characters
                      from  string,  each variable will contain a list of two decimal strings giving the indices
                      in string of the first and last characters in the matching range of characters.

       -line          Enables  newline-sensitive  matching.   By  default,  newline  is  a  completely  ordinary
                      character with no special meaning.  With this flag, `[^' bracket expressions and `.' never
                      match newline, `^' matches an empty string after any newline in  addition  to  its  normal
                      function,  and  `$'  matches  an empty string before any newline in addition to its normal
                      function.  This flag is equivalent to specifying both -linestop and  -lineanchor,  or  the
                      (?n) embedded option (see the re_syntax manual page).

       -linestop      Changes  the  behavior  of `[^' bracket expressions and `.' so that they stop at newlines.
                      This is the same as specifying the (?p) embedded option (see the re_syntax manual page).

       -lineanchor    Changes the behavior of `^' and `$' (the ``anchors'') so they match the beginning and  end
                      of  a line respectively.  This is the same as specifying the (?w) embedded option (see the
                      re_syntax manual page).

       -nocase        Causes upper-case characters in string to be treated as lower  case  during  the  matching
                      process.                                                                                   │

       -all                                                                                                      │
                      Causes  the  regular  expression  to  be  matched as many times as possible in the string, │
                      returning the total number of matches found.  If this is specified with  match  variables, │
                      they will contain information for the last match only.                                     │

       -inline                                                                                                   │
                      Causes  the command to return, as a list, the data that would otherwise be placed in match │
                      variables.  When using -inline, match variables may not be specified.  If used with  -all, │
                      the list will be concatenated at each iteration, such that a flat list is always returned. │
                      For each match iteration, the command will append the overall match data, plus one element │
                      for each subexpression in the regular expression.  Examples are:                           │
                          regexp -inline -- {\w(\w)} " inlined "                                                 │
                       => {in n}                                                                                 │
                          regexp -all -inline -- {\w(\w)} " inlined "                                            │
                       => {in n li i ne e}                                                                       │

       -start index                                                                                              │
                      Specifies  a  character  index  offset  into  the  string  to  start  matching the regular │
                      expression at.  When using this switch, `^' will not match the beginning of the line,  and │
                      \A  will  still  match  the  start  of the string at index.  If -indices is specified, the │
                      indices will be indexed starting from the absolute beginning of the input  string.   index │
                      will be constrained to the bounds of the input string.

       --             Marks the end of switches.  The argument following this one will be treated as exp even if
                      it starts with a -.

       If there are more subMatchVar's  than  parenthesized  subexpressions  within  exp,  or  if  a  particular
       subexpression  in  exp  doesn't match the string (e.g. because it was in a portion of the expression that
       wasn't matched), then the corresponding subMatchVar will be  set  to  ``-1  -1''  if  -indices  has  been
       specified or to an empty string otherwise.

EXAMPLES

       Find  the  first  occurrence  of a word starting with foo in a string that is not actually an instance of
       foobar, and get the letters following it up to the end of the word into a variable:
              regexp {\<foo(?!bar\>)(\w*)} $string -> restOfWord
       Note that the whole matched substring has been placed in the variable -> which is a name chosen  to  look
       nice given that we are not actually interested in its contents.

       Find the index of the word badger (in any case) within a string and store that in the variable location:
              regexp -indices {(?i)\<badger\>} $string location

       Count the number of octal digits in a string:
              regexp -all {[0-7]} $string

       List all words (consisting of all sequences of non-whitespace characters) in a string:
              regexp -all -inline {\S+} $string

SEE ALSO

       re_syntax(3tcl), regsub(3tcl)

KEYWORDS

       match, regular expression, string