fleshing out readme
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readme.md
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readme.md
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@ -49,4 +49,114 @@ Lua patterns (like regexps) are not anchored by default, so this finds
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the first match and works from there. The 0 capture always exists
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(the full match) and here the 1 capture just picks up the first word.
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> There is an obvious limitation: "%a" refers specifically to a single byte
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> representing a letter according to the C locale. Lua people will often
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> look for 'sequence of non-spaces' ("%S+"), etc - that is, identify maybe-UTF-8
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> sequences using surronding punctionation or spaces.
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If you want your captures as strings, then there are several options. Grab them
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as a vector (it will be empty if the match fails.)
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```rust
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let v = m.captures(text);
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assert_eq!(v, &["hello one","hello"]);
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```
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This will create a vector - you can avoid excessive allocations with `capture_into`:
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```rust
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let mut v = Vec::new();
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if m.capture_into(text,&mut v) {
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assert_eq!(v, &["hello one","hello"]);
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}
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```
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Imagine that this is happening in a loop - the vector is only allocated the first
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time it is filled, and thereafter there are no allocations. It's a convenient
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method if you are checking text against several patterns, and is actually
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more ergonomic than using Lua's `string.match`. (Personally I prefer
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to use those marvelous things called "if statements" rather than elaborate
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regular expressions.)
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The `gmatch` method creates an interator over all matches.
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```rust
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let mut m = lp::LuaPattern::new("%S+");
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let split: Vec<_> = m.gmatch("dog cat leopard wolf ").collect();
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assert_eq!(split,&["dog","cat","leopard","wolf"]);
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```
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A single match is returned; if the pattern has no captures, you get the full match,
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otherwise you get the first match. So "(%S+)" would give you the same result.
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Text substitution is an old favourite of mine, so here's `gsub`:
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```rust
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let mut m = lp::LuaPattern::new("%$(%S+)");
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let res = m.gsub("hello $dolly you're so $fine",
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|cc| cc.get(1).to_uppercase()
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);
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assert_eq!(res,"hello DOLLY you're so FINE");
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```
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The closure is passed a `Closures` object and the captures are accessed
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using the `get` method; it returns a `String`.
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In Lua, `string.gsub` has three forms:
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- using a closure, like here
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- using a replacement string referencing closures, like "%1-%2"
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- using a table - i.e. a map
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The first is more general, and the other cases can be implemented in
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a straightforward way using it (although I am thinking of implementing
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the second case as a convenient shortcut.) For maps, you usually
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want to handle the 'not found' case in some special way:
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```rust
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let mut map = HashMap::new();
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// updating old lines for the 21st Century
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map.insert("dolly", "baby");
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map.insert("fine", "cool");
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map.insert("good-looking", "pretty");
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let mut m = LuaPattern::new("%$%((.-)%)");
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let res = m.gsub("hello $(dolly) you're so $(fine) and $(good-looking)",
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|cc| map.get(cc.get(1)).unwrap_or(&"?").to_string()
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);
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assert_eq!(res,"hello baby you're so cool and pretty");
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```
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(The ".-" pattern means 'match as little as possible' - often called 'lazy'
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matching.)
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For the replacement case, this is equivalent to a replace string "%1:'%2'":
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```rust
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let mut m = lp::LuaPattern::new("(%S+)%s*=%s*([^;]+);");
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let res = m.gsub("alpha=bonzo; beta=felix;",
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|cc| format!("{}:'{}',", cc.get(1), cc.get(2))
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);
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assert_eq!(res, "alpha:'bonzo', beta:'felix',");
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```
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Having a byte-oriented pattern matcher can be useful. For instance, this
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is basically the old `strings` utility - we read all of a 'binary' file into
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a vector of bytes, and then use `gmatch_bytes` to iterate over all `&[u8]`
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matches corresponding to two or more adjacent ASCII letters:
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```rust
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let mut words = LuaPattern::new("%a%a+");
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for w in words.gmatch_bytes(&buf) {
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println!("{}",std::str::from_utf8(w).unwrap());
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}
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```
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The pattern itself may be arbitrary bytes - Lua 'string' matching does
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not care about embedded nul bytes:
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```rust
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let patt = &[0xDE,0x00,b'+',0xBE];
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let bytes = &[0xFF,0xEE,0x0,0xDE,0x0,0x0,0xBE,0x0,0x0];
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let mut m = LuaPattern::from_bytes(patt);
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assert!(m.matches_bytes(bytes));
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assert_eq!(&bytes[m.capture(0)], &[0xDE,0x00,0x00,0xBE]);
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```
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