Js.ReProvide bindings to Js regex expression
Provides bindings for JavaScript Regular Expressions
Melange provides a bit of syntax sugar for regex literals: [%re "/foo/g"] will evaluate to a t that can be passed around and used like usual.
Note: This is not an immutable API. A RegExp object with the global ("g") flag set will modify the lastIndex property when the RegExp object is used, and subsequent uses will ocntinue the search from the previous lastIndex.
let maybeMatches = "banana" |> Js.String.match_ [\[%re "/na+/g"\]]let captures: result => array(Js__.Js_internal.nullable(string));an array of the match and captures, the first is the full match and the remaining are the substring captures
let index: result => int;0-based index of the match in the input string
let input: result => string;the original input string
let fromString: string => t;Constructs a RegExp object (t) from a string
Regex literals ([%re "/.../"]) should generally be preferred, but fromString is very useful when you need to insert a string into a regex.
(* A function that extracts the content of the first element with the given tag *)
let contentOf tag xmlString =
Js.Re.fromString ("<" ^ tag ^ ">(.*?)<\\/" ^ tag ^">")
|> Js.Re.exec ~str:xmlString
|> function
| Some result -> Js.Nullable.toOption (Js.Re.captures result).(1)
| None -> Nonelet fromStringWithFlags: string => flags:string => t;Constructs a RegExp object (t) from a string with the given flags
See fromString
Valid flags:
| g | global | |
| i | ignore case | |
| m | multiline | |
| u | unicode | (es2015) |
| y | sticky | (es2015) |
let flags: t => string;returns the enabled flags as a string
let global: t => bool;returns a bool indicating whether the global flag is set
let ignoreCase: t => bool;returns a bool indicating whether the ignoreCase flag is set
let lastIndex: t => int;returns the index where the next match will start its search
This property will be modified when the RegExp object is used, if the global ("g") flag is set.
(* Finds and prints successive matches *)
let re = [%re "/ab*/g"] in
let str = "abbcdefabh" in
let break = ref false in
while not !break do
match re |> Js.Re.exec ~str with
| None -> break := true
| Some result ->
Js.Nullable.iter (Js.Re.captures result).(0) ((fun match_ ->
let next = string_of_int (Js.Re.lastIndex re) in
Js.log ("Found " ^ match_ ^ ". Next match starts at " ^ next)))
donelet setLastIndex: t => int => unit;sets the index at which the next match will start its search from
let multiline: t => bool;returns a bool indicating whether the multiline flag is set
let source: t => string;returns the pattern as a string
let sticky: t => bool;returns a bool indicating whether the sticky flag is set
let unicode: t => bool;returns a bool indicating whether the unicode flag is set
executes a search on a given string using the given RegExp object
returns Some result if a match is found, None otherwise
(* Match "quick brown" followed by "jumps", ignoring characters in between
* Remember "brown" and "jumps"
* Ignore case
*)
let re = [%re "/quick\s(brown).+?(jumps)/ig"] in
let result = re |. Js.Re.exec ~str:"The Quick Brown Fox Jumps Over The Lazy Dog"let test: str:string => t => bool;tests whether the given RegExp object will match a given string
returns true if a match is found, false otherwise
(* A simple implementation of Js.String.startsWith *)
let str = "hello world!"
let startsWith target substring =
Js.Re.fromString ("^" ^ substring)
|. Js.Re.test ~str:target
let () = Js.log (str |. startsWith "hello") (* prints "true" *)