ure
– simple regular expressions¶
This module implements a subset of the corresponding CPython
module,
as described below. For more information, refer to the original
CPython documentation: re
.
This module implements regular expression operations. Regular expression
syntax supported is a subset of CPython re
module (and actually is
a subset of POSIX extended regular expressions).
Supported operators are:
'.'
- Match any character.
'[...]'
- Match set of characters. Individual characters and ranges are supported,
including negated sets (e.g.
[^a-c]
).
'^'
'$'
'?'
'*'
'+'
'??'
'*?'
'+?'
'|'
'(...)'
- Grouping. Each group is capturing (a substring it captures can be accessed
with
match.group()
method).
NOT SUPPORTED: Counted repetitions ({m,n}
), more advanced assertions
(\b
, \B
), named groups ((?P<name>...)
), non-capturing groups
((?:...)
), etc.
Functions¶
-
ure.
match
(regex_str, string)¶ Compile regex_str and match against string. Match always happens from starting position in a string.
-
ure.
search
(regex_str, string)¶ Compile regex_str and search it in a string. Unlike
match
, this will search string for first position which matches regex (which still may be 0 if regex is anchored).
-
ure.
DEBUG
¶ Flag value, display debug information about compiled expression. (Availability depends on
MicroPython port
.)
Regex objects¶
Compiled regular expression. Instances of this class are created using
ure.compile()
.
-
regex.
match
(string)¶ -
regex.
search
(string)¶ Similar to the module-level functions
match()
andsearch()
. Using methods is (much) more efficient if the same regex is applied to multiple strings.
-
regex.
split
(string, max_split=-1)¶ Split a string using regex. If max_split is given, it specifies maximum number of splits to perform. Returns list of strings (there may be up to max_split+1 elements if it’s specified).