YAPE::Regex.3pm

Langue: en

Version: 2009-11-30 (fedora - 01/12/10)

Section: 3 (Bibliothèques de fonctions)

NAME

YAPE::Regex - Yet Another Parser/Extractor for Regular Expressions

SYNOPSIS

   use YAPE::Regex;
   use strict;
   
   my $regex = qr/reg(ular\s+)?exp?(ression)?/i;
   my $parser = YAPE::Regex->new($regex);
   
   # here is the tokenizing part
   while (my $chunk = $parser->next) {
     # ...
   }
 
 

YAPE MODULES

The "YAPE" hierarchy of modules is an attempt at a unified means of parsing and extracting content. It attempts to maintain a generic interface, to promote simplicity and reusability. The API is powerful, yet simple. The modules do tokenization (which can be intercepted) and build trees, so that extraction of specific nodes is doable.

DESCRIPTION

This module is yet another (?) parser and tree-builder for Perl regular expressions. It builds a tree out of a regex, but at the moment, the extent of the extraction tool for the tree is quite limited (see ``Extracting Sections''). However, the tree can be useful to extension modules.

USAGE

In addition to the base class, "YAPE::Regex", there is the auxiliary class "YAPE::Regex::Element" (common to all "YAPE" base classes) that holds the individual nodes' classes. There is documentation for the node classes in that module's documentation.

Methods for YAPE::Regex

*
"use YAPE::Regex;"
*
"use YAPE::Regex qw( MyExt::Mod );"

If supplied no arguments, the module is loaded normally, and the node classes are given the proper inheritence (from "YAPE::Regex::Element"). If you supply a module (or list of modules), "import" will automatically include them (if needed) and set up their node classes with the proper inheritence --- that is, it will append "YAPE::Regex" to @MyExt::Mod::ISA, and "YAPE::Regex::xxx" to each node class's @ISA (where "xxx" is the name of the specific node class).

   package MyExt::Mod;
   use YAPE::Regex 'MyExt::Mod';
   
   # does the work of:
   # @MyExt::Mod::ISA = 'YAPE::Regex'
   # @MyExt::Mod::text::ISA = 'YAPE::Regex::text'
   # ...
 
 
*
"my $p = YAPE::Regex->new($REx);"

Creates a "YAPE::Regex" object, using the contents of $REx as a regular expression. The "new" method will attempt to convert $REx to a compiled regex (using "qr//") if $REx isn't already one. If there is an error in the regex, this will fail, but the parser will pretend it was ok. It will then report the bad token when it gets to it, in the course of parsing.

*
"my $text = $p->chunk($len);"

Returns the next $len characters in the input string; $len defaults to 30 characters. This is useful for figuring out why a parsing error occurs.

*
"my $done = $p->done;"

Returns true if the parser is done with the input string, and false otherwise.

*
"my $errstr = $p->error;"

Returns the parser error message.

*
"my $backref = $p->extract;"

Returns a code reference that returns the next back-reference in the regex. For more information on enhancements in upcoming versions of this module, check ``Extracting Sections''.

*
"my $node = $p->display(...);"

Returns a string representation of the entire content. It calls the "parse" method in case there is more data that has not yet been parsed. This calls the "fullstring" method on the root nodes. Check the "YAPE::Regex::Element" docs on the arguments to "fullstring".

*
"my $node = $p->next;"

Returns the next token, or "undef" if there is no valid token. There will be an error message (accessible with the "error" method) if there was a problem in the parsing.

*
"my $node = $p->parse;"

Calls "next" until all the data has been parsed.

*
"my $node = $p->root;"

Returns the root node of the tree structure.

*
"my $state = $p->state;"

Returns the current state of the parser. It is one of the following values: "alt", "anchor", "any", "backref", capture(N), "Cchar", "class", "close", "code", "comment", "cond(TYPE)", "ctrl", "cut", "done", "error", "flags", "group", "hex", "later", "lookahead(neg|pos)", "lookbehind(neg|pos)", "macro", "named", "oct", "slash", "text", and "utf8hex".

For capture(N), N will be the number the captured pattern represents.

For "cond(TYPE)", TYPE will either be a number representing the back-reference that the conditional depends on, or the string "assert".

For "lookahead" and "lookbehind", one of "neg" and "pos" will be there, depending on the type of assertion.

*
"my $node = $p->top;"

Synonymous to "root".

Extracting Sections

While extraction of nodes is the goal of the "YAPE" modules, the author is at a loss for words as to what needs to be extracted from a regex. At the current time, all the "extract" method does is allow you access to the regex's set of back-references:
   my $extor = $parser->extract;
   while (my $backref = $extor->()) {
     # ...
   }
 
 

"japhy" is very open to suggestions as to the approach to node extraction (in how the API should look, in addition to what should be proffered). Preliminary ideas include extraction keywords like the output of -Dr (or the "re" module's "debug" option).

EXTENSIONS

*
"YAPE::Regex::Explain" 3.011

Presents an explanation of a regular expression, node by node.

*
"YAPE::Regex::Reverse" (Not released)

Reverses the nodes of a regular expression.

TO DO

This is a listing of things to add to future versions of this module.

API

*
Create a robust "extract" method

Open to suggestions.

BUGS

Following is a list of known or reported bugs.

Pending

*
"use charnames ':full'"

To understand "\N{...}" properly, you must be using 5.6.0 or higher. However, the parser only knows how to resolve full names (those made using "use charnames ':full'"). There might be an option in the future to specify a class name.

SEE ALSO

The "YAPE::Regex::Element" documentation, for information on the node classes. Also, "Text::Balanced", Damian Conway's excellent module, used for the matching of "(?{ ... })" and "(??{ ... })" blocks.

AUTHOR

   Jeff "japhy" Pinyan
   CPAN ID: PINYAN
   PINYAN@cpan.org