This package contains the core functionality for the rebus package. It is primarily intended for other R package developers. For interactive use, try rebus instead.
Regular expressions are a very powerful tool, but the syntax is terse enough to be difficult to read. This makes bugs easy to introduce and hard to find. This package contains functions to make building regular expressions easier.
To install the stable version, type:
install.packages("rebus.base")
To install the development version, you first need the devtools package.
install.packages("devtools")
Then you can install the rebus.base package using
library(devtools)
install_github("richierocks/rebus.base")
Character classes to both constant and functional forms, the latter
allowing matching of repeated values. For example, ALPHA
represents an alphabetic character (equivalent to
[:alpha:]), whereas alpha(3, 6) matches
between 3 and 6 alphabetic characters (equivalent to
[[:alpha:]]{3,6}).
All the POSIX classes described on the ?regex page are
supported, along with generic shorthand classes, and some character
ranges. For example DIGIT is the R-specifc form of a number
(equivalent to [:digit:]), DGT represents the
shorthand class (equivalent to \\d), and
ASCII_DIGIT uses a number range (equivalent to
[0-9]). See rebus.unicode
for Unicode General Categories and Unicode Properties which are
preferred over POSIX classes for stringi and
stringr.
Custom character classes can be created using
char_class. For example, to match lower case letters and
punctuation, you can use char_class(LOWER %R% PUNCT)
(equivalent to [[:lower:][:punct:]]). Here,
%R% is a regular expression concatenation operator.
Pre-escaped constants are available for special characters. For
example DOT is \\., BACKSLASH is
\\\\.
Note the difference between the special character CARET
(\\^) and the anchor START
(^).
escape_special is a functional form for creating those
constants.
You can manually apply repetition using repeated. For
example, repeated(ALPHA, 2, 8) or
repeated(alpha(), 2, 8) (both equivalent to
[[:alpha:]]{2,8}). This makes most sense for custom
character classes.
group creates a group within the regular expression.
capture does the same, but captures it for
matching. For example, group("groupies")
(equivalent to (?:groupies)) and
capture("groupies") (equivalent to
(groupies)).
engroup takes a capture argument and calls
capture when it is TRUE and group
when it is FALSE.
You can match one string or another using or. For
example, or("dog", "cat", "hippopotamus") (equivalent to
(?:dog|cat|hippopotamus)).
or1 does the same as or, but takes a single
character vector as an input. For example,
or1(c("dog", "cat", "hippopotamus")) is the same as the
previous example.
The %|% operator does the same for the special case of
two inputs, without grouping. For example, "dog" %|% "cat"
(equivalent to dog|cat).
Zero-length assertions match characters then give up the match.
lookahead and negative_lookahead match
forwards, and lookbehind and
negative_lookbehind match backwards. Note that the last two
aren’t supported by R’s PCRE engine, only it’s Perl engine and
stringi/stringr’s ICU engine. For example,
q %R% lookahead("u") matches “q” followed by “u”, but only
includes “q” in the match.
REF1 to REF9 contain references to captured
groups of the form \\i, for reuse with replacement
functions and R’s PRCE and PErl engines. ICU_REF1 to
ICU_REF9 contain references of the form $i,
for use with the ICU engine.
case_insensitive makes the match not care about
case.
free_spacing allows whitespace between tokens.
single_line makes the dot match line breaks and makes
the caret and dollar match the start and end of the whole string.
multi_line makes the dot not match line breaks, and makes
the caret and dollar match character after/before line breaks as well as
the start and end of the whole string.
duplicate_group_names allows groups to have the same
names.
no_backslash_escaping turns off backslash escaping.
modify_mode allows multiple mode-modifiers to be set at
once.
exactly forces a match to occur exactly, by wrapping it
in start and end anchors.
literal treats its contents are literal characters
rather than special regular expression characters.