Consider the following string which is a C fragment in a file:
strcat(errbuf,errbuftemp);
I want to replace errbuf (but not errbuftemp) with the prefix G-> plus errbuf. To do that successfully, I check the character after and the character before errbuf to see if it's in a list of approved characters and then I perform the replace.
I created the following Ruby file:
line = " strcat(errbuf,errbuftemp);"
item = "errbuf"
puts line.gsub(/([ \t\n\r(),\[\]]{1})#{item}([ \t\n\r(),\[\]]{1})/, "#{$1}G\->#{item}#{$2}")
Expected result:
strcat(G->errbuf,errbuftemp);
Actual result
strcatG->errbuferrbuftemp);
Basically, the matched characters before and after errbuf are not reinserted back with the replace expression.
Anyone can point out what I'm doing wrong?开发者_开发技巧
Because you must use syntax gsub(/.../){"...#{$1}...#{$2}..."}
or gsub(/.../,'...\1...\2...')
.
Here was the same problem: werid, same expression yield different value when excuting two times in irb
The problem is that the variable $1 is interpolated into the argument string before gsub is run, meaning that the previous value of $1 is what the symbol gets replaced with. You can replace the second argument with '\1 ?' to get the intended effect. (Chuck)
I think part of the problem is the use of gsub() instead of sub().
Here's two alternates:
str = 'strcat(errbuf,errbuftemp);'
str.sub(/\w+,/) { |s| 'G->' + s } # => "strcat(G->errbuf,errbuftemp);"
str.sub(/\((\w+)\b/, '(G->\1') # => "strcat(G->errbuf,errbuftemp);"
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