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Native Node bindings to the Oniguruma regular expressions library.
Read all about Oniguruma regular expressions here.
Version 2.0 of this library added an asynchronous API, the old synchronous
methods have been renamed to have a Sync
suffix.
npm install oniguruma
npm install
npm test
to run the specs{OnigRegExp, OnigScanner} = require 'oniguruma'
Create a new scanner with the given patterns.
patterns
- An array of string patterns.
Find the next match from a given position.
string
- The string to search.
startPosition
- The optional position to start at, defaults to 0
.
callback
- The (error, match)
function to call when done, match
will
null when there is no match.
scanner = new OnigScanner(['c', 'a(b)?'])
scanner.findNextMatch 'abc', (error, match) ->
console.log match
{
index: 1, # Index of the best pattern match
captureIndices: [
{index: 0, start: 0, end: 2, length: 2}, # Entire match
{index: 1, start: 1, end: 2, length: 1} # Match of first capture group
]
}
Synchronously find the next match from a given position.
string
- The string to search.
startPosition
- The optional position to start at, defaults to 0
.
Returns an object containing details about the match or null
if no match.
scanner = new OnigScanner(['c', 'a(b)?'])
match = scanner.findNextMatchSync('abc')
console.log match
{
index: 1, # Index of the best pattern match
captureIndices: [
{index: 0, start: 0, end: 2, length: 2}, # Entire match
{index: 1, start: 1, end: 2, length: 1} # Match of first capture group
]
}
Create a new regex with the given pattern.
pattern
- A string pattern.
Search the string for a match starting at the given position.
string
- The string to search.
startPosition
- The optional position to start the search at, defaults to 0
.
callback
- The (error, match)
function to call when done, match
will be
null if no matches were found. match
will be an array of objects for each
matched group on a successful search.
regex = new OnigRegExp('a([b-d])c')
regex.search '!abcdef', (error, match) ->
console.log match
[
{index: 0, start: 1, end: 4, match: 'abc', length: 3}, # Entire match
{index: 1, start: 2, end: 3, match: 'b', length: 1} # Match of first capture group
]
Synchronously search the string for a match starting at the given position.
string
- The string to search.
startPosition
- The optional position to start the search at, defaults to 0
.
Returns an array of objects for each matched group or null
if no match was
found.
regex = new OnigRegExp('a([b-d])c')
match = regex.searchSync('!abcdef')
console.log match
[
{index: 0, start: 1, end: 4, match: 'abc', length: 3}, # Entire match
{index: 1, start: 2, end: 3, match: 'b', length: 1} # Match of first capture group
]
Test if this regular expression matches the given string.
string
- The string to test against.
callback
- The (error, matches)
function to call when done, matches
will
be true
if at least one match is found, false
otherwise.
regex = new OnigRegExp('a([b-d])c')
regex.test 'abcdef', (error, matches) ->
console.log matches # true
Synchronously test if this regular expression matches the given string.
string
- The string to test against.
Returns true
if at least one match, false
otherwise.
regex = new OnigRegExp('a([b-d])c')
matches = regex.testSync('abcdef')
console.log matches # true
FAQs
oniguruma regular expression library
The npm package oniguruma receives a total of 2,353 weekly downloads. As such, oniguruma popularity was classified as popular.
We found that oniguruma demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 8 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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