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| Started by | Ben Last <ben@benlast.com> |
|---|---|
| First post | 2013-07-17 10:33 +0800 |
| Last post | 2013-07-18 11:51 +1200 |
| Articles | 3 — 3 participants |
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Re: grimace: a fluent regular expression generator in Python Ben Last <ben@benlast.com> - 2013-07-17 10:33 +0800
Re: grimace: a fluent regular expression generator in Python Johann Hibschman <jhibschman@gmail.com> - 2013-07-17 07:55 -0500
Re: grimace: a fluent regular expression generator in Python Gregory Ewing <greg.ewing@canterbury.ac.nz> - 2013-07-18 11:51 +1200
| From | Ben Last <ben@benlast.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-07-17 10:33 +0800 |
| Subject | Re: grimace: a fluent regular expression generator in Python |
| Message-ID | <mailman.4800.1374059632.3114.python-list@python.org> |
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On 16 July 2013 20:48, <python-list-request@python.org> wrote:
> From: "Anders J. Munch" <2013@jmunch.dk>
> Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2013 13:38:35 +0200
> Ben Last wrote:
>
>> north_american_number_re = (RE().start
>> .literal('(').followed_by.**exactly(3).digits.then.**literal(')')
>> .then.one.literal("-").then.**
>> exactly(3).digits
>> .then.one.dash.followed_by.**exactly(4).digits.then.end
>> .as_string())
>>
>
> Very cool. It's a bit verbose for my taste, and I'm not sure how well it
> will cope with nested structure.
>
I guess verbosity is the aim, in that *explicit is better than implicit* :)
And I suppose that's one of the attributes of a fluent system; they tend
to need more typing. It's not Perl...
> The problem with Perl-style regexp notation isn't so much that it's terse
> - it's that the syntax is irregular (sic) and doesn't follow modern
> principles for lexical structure in computer languages. You can get a long
> way just by ignoring whitespace, putting literals in quotes and allowing
> embedded comments.
>
Good points. I wanted to find a syntax that allows comments as well as
being fluent:
RE()
.any_number_of.digits # Recall that any_number_of includes zero
.followed_by.an_optional.dot.then.at_least_one.digit # The dot is
specifically optional
# but we must have one digit as a minimum
.as_string()
... and yes, I aso specifically wanted to have literals quoted.
Nested groups work, but I haven't tackled lookahead and backreferences :
essentially because if you're writing an RE that complex, you should
probably be working directly in RE strings.
Depending on what you mean by "nested", re-use of RE objects is easy
(example from the unit tests):
identifier_start_chars = RE().regex("[a-zA-Z_]")
identifier_chars = RE().regex("[a-zA-Z0-9_]")
self.assertEqual(RE().one_or_more.of(identifier_start_chars)
.followed_by.zero_or_more(identifier_chars)
.as_string(),
r"[a-zA-Z_]+[a-zA-Z0-9_]*")
Thanks for the comments!
ben
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| From | Johann Hibschman <jhibschman@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-07-17 07:55 -0500 |
| Message-ID | <xjrkgppuh73cm.fsf@gmail.com> |
| In reply to | #50786 |
Ben Last <ben@benlast.com> writes:
> Good points. I wanted to find a syntax that allows comments as well as
> being fluent:
> RE()
> .any_number_of.digits # Recall that any_number_of includes zero
> .followed_by.an_optional.dot.then.at_least_one.digit # The dot is
> specifically optional
> # but we must have one digit as a minimum
> .as_string()
Speaking of syntax, have you looked at pyparsing? I like their
pattern-matching syntax, and I can see it being applied to regexes.
They use an operator-heavy syntax, like:
'(' + digits * 3 + ')-' + digits * 3 + '-' + digits * 4
That seems easier for me to read than the foo.then.follow syntax.
That then makes me think of ometa, which is a fun read, but probably not
completely relevant.
Regards,
Johann
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| From | Gregory Ewing <greg.ewing@canterbury.ac.nz> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-07-18 11:51 +1200 |
| Message-ID | <b4op08FehpU1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #50786 |
Ben Last wrote:
> north_american_number_re = (RE().start
> .literal('(').followed_by.__exactly(3).digits.then.__literal(')')
> .then.one.literal("-").then.__exactly(3).digits
> .then.one.dash.followed_by.__exactly(4).digits.then.end
> .as_string())
Is 'dash' the same as 'literal("-")'?
Is there any difference between 'then' and 'followed_by'?
Why do some things have __ in front of them? Is there a
difference between 'literal' and '__literal'?
--
Greg
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