Can anyone give me complete example program how to work with GNU regex functions in gcc C or C++ (http://docs.freebsd.org/info/regex/regex.info.GNU_Regex_Functions.html), with
re_pattern_buffer
, re_compile_fastmap
?
For example, translate this small Python program:
import re
unlucky = re.compile('1\d*?3')
nums = ("13", "31", "777", "10003")
for n in nums:
if unlucky.search(n) is None:
print "lucky"
else:
pri开发者_运维知识库nt "unlucky"
Thanks!
Okay, before delving into the code, I should mention that you may want to use a higher-level library. You did say C++, so that opens you up to Boost.Regex and the like. Even if you want to stay with C, there are better options. I find the POSIX functions somewhat cleaner, not to mention more portable.
// Tell GNU to define the non-standard APIs
#define _GNU_SOURCE
// This is actually the same header used for the POSIX API.
// Except then you obviously don't need _GNU_SOURCE
#include <regex.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
int main()
{
struct re_pattern_buffer pat_buff; // Put a re_pattern_buffer on the stack
// The next 4 fields must be set.
// If non-zero, applies a translation function to characters before
// attempting match (http://www.delorie.com/gnu/docs/regex/regex_51.html)
pat_buff.translate = 0;
// If non-zero, optimization technique. Don't know details.
// See http://www.delorie.com/gnu/docs/regex/regex_45.html
pat_buff.fastmap = 0;
// Next two must be set to 0 to request library allocate memory
pat_buff.buffer = 0;
pat_buff.allocated = 0;
char pat_str[] = "1[^3]*3";
// This is a global (!) used to set the regex type (note POSIX APIs don't use global for this)
re_syntax_options = RE_SYNTAX_EGREP;
// Compile the pattern into our buffer
re_compile_pattern(pat_str, sizeof(pat_str) - 1, &pat_buff);
char* nums[] = {"13", "31", "777", "10003"}; // Array of char-strings
for(int i = 0; i < sizeof(nums) / sizeof(char*); i++)
{
int match_ret;
// Returns number of characters matches (may be 0, but if so there's still a match)
if((match_ret = re_match(&pat_buff, nums[i], strlen(nums[i]), 0, NULL)) >= 0)
{
printf("unlucky\n");
}
else if(match_ret == -1) // No match
{
printf("lucky\n");
}
// Anything else (though docs say -2) is internal library error
else
{
perror("re_match");
}
}
regfree(&pat_buff);
}
EDIT: I added more explanation of the required fields, and the regfree. I had the lucky/unlucky backwards before, which explains part of the discrepancy. The other part is that I don't think any of the regex syntaxes available here support lazy operators (*?). In this case, there's a simple fix, using "1[^3]*3"
.
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