
Also, consider stealing the regex susbt code from: http://shootout.alioth.debian.org/u64q/benchmark.php?test=regexdna&lang=ghc&id=4 tphyahoo:
So, I tweaked Text.Regex to have the behavior I need.
http://patch-tag.com/repo/haskell-learning/browse/regexStuff/pcreReplace.hs
FWIW, the problem I was trying to solve was deleting single newlines but not strings of newlines in a document. Dead simple for pcre-regex with lookaround. But, I think, impossible with posix regex.
-- replace single newlines, but not strings of newlines (requires pcre look-around (lookaround, lookahead, lookbehind, for googlebot))
http://perldoc.perl.org/perlre.html
testPcre = ( subRegex (mkRegex "(?
Can I lobby for this to make its way into the Regex distribution? Really, I would argue that every regex flavor should have all the functions that Text.Regex get, not just posix. (subRegex is just the most important, to my mind)
Otherwise I'll make my own RegexHelpers hackage package or something.
Hard for me to see how to do this in an elegant way since the pcre packages are so polymorphic-manic. I'm sure there is a way though.
Or if you point me to the darcs head of regex I'll patch that directly.
2009/3/14 Thomas Hartman
: Right, I'm just saying that a "subRegex" that worked on pcre regex matches would be great for people used to perl regexen and unused to posix -- even it only allowed a string replacement, and didn't have all the bells and whistles of =~ s../../../ in perl.
2009/3/12 ChrisK
Thomas Hartman wrote:
Is there something like subRegex... something like =~ s/.../.../ in perl... for haskell pcre Regexen?
I mean, subRegex from Text.Regex of course: http://hackage.haskell.org/cgi-bin/hackage-scripts/package/regex-compat
Thanks for any advice,
thomas.
Short answer: No.
This is a FAQ. The usual answer to your follow up "Why not?" is that the design space is rather huge. Rather than justify this statement, I will point at the complicated module:
http://hackage.haskell.org/packages/archive/split/0.1.1/doc/html/Data-List-S...
The above module is "a wide range of strategies for splitting lists", which is a much simpler problem than your subRegex request, and only works on lists. A subRegex library should also work on bytestrings (and Seq).
At the cost of writing your own routine you get exactly what you want in a screen or less of code, see http://hackage.haskell.org/packages/archive/regex-compat/0.92/doc/html/src/T... for "subRegex" which is 30 lines of code.
Cheers, Chris