std::regex_search
Defined in header
<regex>
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template< class BidirIt,
class Alloc, class CharT, class Traits > |
(1) | (since C++11) |
template< class Alloc, class CharT, class Traits >
bool regex_search( const CharT* str, |
(2) | (since C++11) |
template< class STraits, class SAlloc,
class Alloc, class CharT, class Traits > |
(3) | (since C++11) |
template< class BidirIt,
class CharT, class Traits > |
(4) | (since C++11) |
template< class CharT, class Traits >
bool regex_search( const CharT* str, |
(5) | (since C++11) |
template< class STraits, class SAlloc,
class CharT, class Traits > |
(6) | (since C++11) |
template< class STraits, class SAlloc,
class Alloc, class CharT, class Traits > |
(7) | (since C++14) |
Determines if there is a match between the regular expression e
and some subsequence in the target character sequence.
[first,last)
. Match results are returned in m
.str
. Match results are returned in m
.s
. Match results are returned in m
.regex_search
will successfully match any subsequence of the given sequence, whereas std::regex_match will only return true if the regular expression matches the entire sequence.
Contents |
[edit] Parameters
first, last | - | a range identifying the target character sequence |
str | - | a pointer to a null-terminated target character sequence |
s | - | a string identifying target character sequence |
e | - | the std::regex that should be applied to the target character sequence |
m | - | the match results |
flags | - | std::regex_constants::match_flag_type governing search behavior |
Type requirements | ||
-
BidirIt must meet the requirements of BidirectionalIterator .
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||
-
Alloc must meet the requirements of Allocator .
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[edit] Return value
Returns true if a match exists, false otherwise. In either case, the object m
is updated, as follows:
If the match does not exist:
m.ready() == true | |
m.empty() == true | |
m.size() == 0 |
If the match exists:
m.ready() | true |
m.empty() | false |
m.size() | number of marked subexpressions plus 1, that is, 1+e.mark_count() |
m.prefix().first | first
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m.prefix().second | m[0].first |
m.prefix().matched | m.prefix().first != m.prefix().second |
m.suffix().first | m[0].second |
m.suffix().second | last
|
m.suffix().matched | m.suffix().first != m.suffix().second |
m[0].first | the start of the matching sequence |
m[0].second | the end of the matching sequence |
m[0].matched | true |
m[n].first | the start of the sequence that matched marked sub-expression n, or last if the subexpression did not participate in the match
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m[n].second | the end of the sequence that matched marked sub-expression n, or last if the subexpression did not participate in the match
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m[n].matched | true if sub-expression n participated in the match, false otherwise |
[edit] Example
#include <iostream> #include <string> #include <regex> int main() { std::string lines[] = {"Roses are #ff0000", "violets are #0000ff", "all of my base are belong to you"}; std::regex color_regex("#([a-f0-9]{2})" "([a-f0-9]{2})" "([a-f0-9]{2})"); for (const auto &line : lines) { std::cout << line << ": " << std::regex_search(line, color_regex) << '\n'; } std::smatch color_match; for (const auto &line : lines) { std::regex_search(line, color_match, color_regex); std::cout << "matches for '" << line << "'\n"; for (size_t i = 0; i < color_match.size(); ++i) std::cout << i << ": " << color_match[i] << '\n'; } }
Output:
Roses are #ff0000: 1 violets are #0000ff: 1 all of my base are belong to you: 0 matches for 'Roses are #ff0000' 0: #ff0000 1: ff 2: 00 3: 00 matches for 'violets are #0000ff' 0: #0000ff 1: 00 2: 00 3: ff matches for 'all of my base are belong to you'
[edit] See also
(C++11)
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regular expression object (class template) |
(C++11)
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identifies one regular expression match, including all sub-expression matches (class template) |
(C++11)
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attempts to match a regular expression to an entire character sequence (function template) |