The re
package is a small, portable, lightweight, and quick, regular expression library for Common Lisp. It is a non-recursive, backtracing VM. The syntax is similar to Lua-style pattern patching (found here), but has added support for additional regex features (see below). It's certainly not the fastest, but is very easy to understand and extend.
It makes heavy use of the monadic parse
combinator library for parsing the regular expressions. If you'd like to understand the parsing and compiling of regular expressions, I recommend reading up on that library as well.
To create a re
object, you can either use the compile-re
function or the #r
dispatch macro.
CL-USER > (compile-re "%d+")
#<RE "%d+">
CL-USER > #r/%d+/
#<RE "%d+">
Both work equally well, but the dispatch macro will compile the pattern at read-time. The re
class has a load form and so can be saved to a FASL file.
HINT: When using the read macro, use a backslash to escape the /
and other characters that might mess with syntax coloring.
Finally, the with-re
macro lets you use either strings or re
objects in a body of code. If a string is passed as the pattern, then it will be compiled before the body is evaluated.
CL-USER > (with-re (re "%d+") re)
#<RE "%d+">
NOTE: All pattern matching functions use the with-re
macro, and so the pattern argument can be either a string or a pre-compiled re
object.
The heart of all pattern matching is the match-re
function.
(match-re pattern string &key start end exact)
It will match string
against pattern
and return a re-match
object on success or nil
on failure. The start
and end
arguments limit the scope of the match and default to the entire string. If exact
is t
then the pattern has to consume the entire string (from start to end).
CL-USER > (match-re "%d+" "abc 123")
NIL
CL-USER > (match-re "%a+" "abc 123")
#<RE-MATCH "abc">
Once you have successfully matched and have a re-match
object, you can use the following reader functions to inspect it:
match-string
returns the entire matchmatch-groups
returns a list of groupsmatch-pos-start
returns the index where the match beganmatch-pos-end
returns the index where the match ended
Try peeking into a match...
CL-USER > (inspect (match-re "(a(b(c)))" "abc 123"))
MATCH "abc"
GROUPS ("abc" "bc" "c")
START-POS 0
END-POS 3
To find a pattern match anywhere in a string use the find-re
function.
(find-re pattern string &key start end all)
It will scan string
looking for matches to pattern
. If all
is non-nil
then a list of all matches found is returned, otherwise it will simply be the first match.
CL-USER > (find-re "%d+" "abc 123")
#<RE-MATCH "123">
CL-USER > (find-re "[^%s]+" "abc 123" :all t)
(#<RE-MATCH "abc">
#<RE-MATCH "123">)
Once patterns have been matched, splitting a string from the matches is trivial.
(split-re pattern string &key start end all coalesce-seps)
If all
is true, then a list of all sub-sequences in string
(delimited by pattern
) are returned, otherwise just the first and the rest of the string.
If coalesce-seps
is true the sub-sequences that are empty will be excluded from the results. This argument is ignored if all
is nil
.
CL-USER > (split-re "," "1,2,3")
"1"
"2,3"
CL-USER > (split-re "," "1,2,,,abc,3,," :all t :coalesce-seps t)
("1" "2" "abc" "3")
The replace-re
function scans the string looking for matching sub-sequences that will be replaced with another string.
(replace-re pattern with string &key start end all)
If with
is a function, then the function is called with the re-match
object, replacing the pattern with the return value. Otherwise the value is used as-is. As with find-re
and split-re
, if all
is true, then the pattern is globally replaced.
CL-USER > (replace-re "%d+" #\* "1 2 3")
"* 2 3"
CL-USER > (replace-re "%a+" #'(lambda (m) (length (match-string m))) "a bc def" :all t)
"1 2 3"
NOTE: The string returned by replace-re
is a completely new string. This is true even if pattern
isn't found in the string.
Using parentheses in a pattern will cause the matching text to be groups in the returned re-match
object. The match-groups
function will return a list of all the captured strings in the match.
CL-USER > (match-groups (match-re #r/(%d+)(%a+)/ "123abc"))
("123" "abc")
Captures can be nested, but are always returned in the order they are opened.
CL-USER > (match-groups (match-re #r/(a(b(c)))(d)/ "abcd"))
("abc" "bc" "c" "d")
HINT: You can always use the match-string
function to get at the full text that was matched and there's no need to capture the entire pattern.
Whe with-re-match
macro can be used to assist in extracting the matched patterns and groups.
(with-re-match ((var match-expr &key no-match) &body body)
If the result of match-expr
is nil
, then no-match
is returned and body
is not executed.
While in the body of the macro, $$
will be bound to the match-string
and the groups will be bound to $1
, $2
, ..., $9
. Any groups beyond the first 9 are bound in a list to $_
. The symbol $*
is bound to all the match groups.
CL-USER > (with-re-match (m (match-re "(%a+)(%s+)(%d+)" "abc 123"))
(string-append $3 $2 $1)))
"123 abc"
CL-USER > (flet ((initial (m)
(with-re-match (v m)
(format nil "~@(~a~)." $1))))
(replace-re #r/(%a)%a+%s*/ #'initial "lisp in small pieces" :all t))
"L.I.S.P."
In addition to supporting all of what Lua pattern matching has to offer, it also supports branching with |
and uncaptured groups: (?..)
. For example...
CL-USER > (match-re "(?a|b)+" "abbaaabbccc")
#<RE-MATCH "abbaaabb">
Also, to have slightly better support for Windows line endings, there is also the %r
character set that matches on return characters only (as opposed to %n
which matches on return and linefeed). This allows for patterns that match a single Windows or Linux/Mac line ending.
CL-USER > (match-re "%r?%n" (concatenate 'string '(#\return #\linefeed)))
#<RE-MATCH "^M
">
Finally, the re
package has one special feature: user-defined character set predicates! Using %:
, you can provide a predicate function for the regexp VM to test characters against.
CL-USER > (match-re #r"%:digit-char-p:+" "103")
#<RE-MATCH "103">
The predicate must take a single character and return non-nil
if the character matches the predicate function. Note: this is especially handy when parsing unicode strings!
If you get some good use out of this package, please let me know; it's nice to know your work is valued by others.
I'm always improving it; it's the foundation for many of the other packages I've created for XML parsing, HTTP header parsing, etc.
Should you find/fix a bug or add a nice feature, please feel free to send a pull request or let me know at massung@gmail.com.