re (regex)
The regex extractor extracts fields from data by parsing a regular expression provided by the user. It accepts a "perl-style regular expression"/
Predicate
When used with ~
, the predicate passes if a valid regular expression is passed.
Extraction
If the predicate passes, the extractor returns the matched values from the target. Returns an error if the regex fails to match.
Example
drop match { "test": "http://example.com/", "footle": "bar" } of
case foo = %{ test ~= re|^http://.*/$|, footle == "bar" } => foo
default => "ko"
end
The extractor is called by using the ~=
operator and specifying re
as the extractor followed by regular expression after the pipe operator.
The following syntax is supported:
Matching one character
. any character except new line (includes new line with s flag)
\d digit (\p{Nd})
\D not digit
\pN One-letter name Unicode character class
\p{Greek} Unicode character class (general category or script)
\PN Negated one-letter name Unicode character class
\P{Greek} negated Unicode character class (general category or script)
Character classes
[xyz] A character class matching either x, y or z (union).
[^xyz] A character class matching any character except x, y and z.
[a-z] A character class matching any character in range a-z.
[[:alpha:]] ASCII character class ([A-Za-z])
[[:^alpha:]] Negated ASCII character class ([^A-Za-z])
[x[^xyz]] Nested/grouping character class (matching any character except y and z)
[a-y&&xyz] Intersection (matching x or y)
[0-9&&[^4]] Subtraction using intersection and negation (matching 0-9 except 4)
[0-9--4] Direct subtraction (matching 0-9 except 4)
[a-g~~b-h] Symmetric difference (matching `a` and `h` only)
[\[\]] Escaping in character classes (matching [ or ])
Any named character class may appear inside a bracketed [...]
character class. For example, [\p{Greek}[:digit:]]
matches any Greek or ASCII digit. [\p{Greek}&&\pL]
matches Greek letters.
Precedence in character classes, from most binding to least:
- Ranges:
a-cd
==[a-c]d
- Union:
ab&&bc
==[ab]&&[bc]
- Intersection:
^a-z&&b
==^[a-z&&b]
- Negation
Composites
xy concatenation (x followed by y)
x|y alternation (x or y, prefer x)
Repetitions
x* zero or more of x (greedy)
x+ one or more of x (greedy)
x? zero or one of x (greedy)
x*? zero or more of x (ungreedy/lazy)
x+? one or more of x (ungreedy/lazy)
x?? zero or one of x (ungreedy/lazy)
x{n,m} at least n x and at most m x (greedy)
x{n,} at least n x (greedy)
x{n} exactly n x
x{n,m}? at least n x and at most m x (ungreedy/lazy)
x{n,}? at least n x (ungreedy/lazy)
x{n}? exactly n x
Empty matches
^ the beginning of text (or start-of-line with multi-line mode)
$ the end of text (or end-of-line with multi-line mode)
\A only the beginning of text (even with multi-line mode enabled)
\z only the end of text (even with multi-line mode enabled)
\b a Unicode word boundary (\w on one side and \W, \A, or \z on other)
\B not a Unicode word boundary
Grouping and flags
(exp) numbered capture group (indexed by opening parenthesis)
(?P<name>exp) named (also numbered) capture group (allowed chars: [_0-9a-zA-Z])
(?:exp) non-capturing group
(?flags) set flags within current group
(?flags:exp) set flags for exp (non-capturing)
Flags are each a single character. For example, (?x)
sets the flag x
and (?-x)
clears the flag x
. Multiple flags can be set or cleared at the same time: (?xy)
sets both the x
and y
flags and (?x-y)
sets the x
flag and clears the y
flag.
All flags are by default set to off unless stated otherwise. They are:
i case-insensitive: letters match both upper and lower case
m multi-line mode: ^ and $ match begin/end of line
s allow . to match \n
U swap the meaning of x* and x*?
u Unicode support (enabled by default)
x ignore whitespace and allow line comments (starting with `#`)