4.1 KiB
Regular Expression Tokenizer
Tokenizes strings that represent a regular expressions.
Usage
var ret = require('ret');
var tokens = ret(/foo|bar/.source);tokens will contain the following object
{
"type": ret.types.ROOT
"options": [
[ { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 102 },
{ "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 111 },
{ "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 111 } ],
[ { "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 98 },
{ "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 97 },
{ "type": ret.types.CHAR, "value", 114 } ]
]
}Token Types
ret.types is a collection of the various token types
exported by ret.
ROOT
Only used in the root of the regexp. This is needed due to the
posibility of the root containing a pipe | character. In
that case, the token will have an options key that will be
an array of arrays of tokens. If not, it will contain a
stack key that is an array of tokens.
{
"type": ret.types.ROOT,
"stack": [token1, token2...],
}{
"type": ret.types.ROOT,
"options" [
[token1, token2...],
[othertoken1, othertoken2...]
...
],
}GROUP
Groups contain tokens that are inside of a parenthesis. If the group
begins with ? followed by another character, it’s a special
type of group. A ‘:’ tells the group not to be remembered when
exec is used. ‘=’ means the previous token matches only if
followed by this group, and ‘!’ means the previous token matches only if
NOT followed.
Like root, it can contain an options key instead of
stack if there is a pipe.
{
"type": ret.types.GROUP,
"remember" true,
"followedBy": false,
"notFollowedBy": false,
"stack": [token1, token2...],
}{
"type": ret.types.GROUP,
"remember" true,
"followedBy": false,
"notFollowedBy": false,
"options" [
[token1, token2...],
[othertoken1, othertoken2...]
...
],
}POSITION
\b, \B, ^, and $
specify positions in the regexp.
{
"type": ret.types.POSITION,
"value": "^",
}SET
Contains a key set specifying what tokens are allowed
and a key not specifying if the set should be negated. A
set can contain other sets, ranges, and characters.
{
"type": ret.types.SET,
"set": [token1, token2...],
"not": false,
}RANGE
Used in set tokens to specify a character range. from
and to are character codes.
{
"type": ret.types.RANGE,
"from": 97,
"to": 122,
}REPETITION
{
"type": ret.types.REPETITION,
"min": 0,
"max": Infinity,
"value": token,
}REFERENCE
References a group token. value is 1-9.
{
"type": ret.types.REFERENCE,
"value": 1,
}CHAR
Represents a single character token. value is the
character code. This might seem a bit cluttering instead of
concatenating characters together. But since repetition tokens only
repeat the last token and not the last clause like the pipe, it’s
simpler to do it this way.
{
"type": ret.types.CHAR,
"value": 123,
}Errors
ret.js will throw errors if given a string with an invalid regular expression. All possible errors are
- Invalid group. When a group with an immediate
?character is followed by an invalid character. It can only be followed by!,=, or:. Example:/(?_abc)/ - Nothing to repeat. Thrown when a repetitional token is used as the
first token in the current clause, as in right in the beginning of the
regexp or group, or right after a pipe. Example:
/foo|?bar/,/{1,3}foo|bar/,/foo(+bar)/ - Unmatched ). A group was not opened, but was closed. Example:
/hello)2u/ - Unterminated group. A group was not closed. Example:
/(1(23)4/ - Unterminated character class. A custom character set was not closed.
Example:
/[abc/
Install
npm install ret
Tests
Tests are written with vows
npm testLicense
MIT