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Go Regex RE2

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A performance improvement to the builtin RE2 module.

This method adds a cache, and some better functions, and uses RE2 for compatability.

If you need more speed, checkout my other PCRE based module go-regex.

Installation

  go get github.com/AspieSoft/go-regex-re2/v2

Usage

import (
  "github.com/AspieSoft/go-regex-re2/v2"

  // or for verbose function names
  "github.com/AspieSoft/go-regex-re2/v2/verbose"
)

// this example will use verbose mode to make function names more clear

// pre compile a regex into the cache
// this method also returns the compiled pcre.Regexp struct
regex.Compile(`re`)

// compile a regex and safely escape user input
regex.Compile(`re %1`, `this will be escaped .*`); // output: this will be escaped \.\*
regex.Compile(`re %1`, `hello \n world`); // output: hello \\n world (note: the \ was escaped, and the n is literal)
tree/v4.0.0
// use %n to reference a param
// use %{n} for param indexes with more than 1 digit
regex.Compile(`re %1 and %2 ... %{12}`, `param 1`, `param 2` ..., `param 12`);

// manually escape a string
// note: the compile methods params are automatically escaped
regex.Escape(`(.*)? \$ \\$ \\\$ regex hack blocked`)

// determine if a regex is valid, and can be compiled by this module
regex.IsValid(`re`)

// determine if a regex is valid, and can be compiled by the builtin RE2 module
regex.IsValidRE2(`re`)

// run a replace function (most advanced feature)
regex.Compile(`(?flags)re(capture group)`).ReplaceFunc(myByteArray, func(data func(int) []byte) []byte {
  data(0) // get the string
  data(1) // get the first capture group

  return []byte("")

  // if the last option is true, returning nil will stop the loop early
  return nil
}, true /* optional: if true, will not process a return output */)

// run a replace function
regex.Compile(`re (capture)`).ReplaceString(myByteArray, []byte("test $1"))

// run a simple light replace function
regex.Compile(`re`).ReplaceStringLiteral(myByteArray, []byte("all capture groups ignored (ie: $1)"))

// return a bool if a regex matches a byte array
regex.Compile(`re`).Match(myByteArray)

// split a byte array in a similar way to JavaScript
regex.Compile(`re|(keep this and split like in JavaScript)`).Split(myByteArray)

// a regex string is modified before compiling, to add a few other features
`use \' in place of ` + "`" + ` to make things easier`
`(?#This is a comment in regex)`

// an alias of *regexp.Regexp
regex.RE2

// direct access to compiled *regexp.Regexp
regex.Compile("re").RE


// another helpful function
// this method makes it easier to return results to a regex function
regex.JoinBytes("string", []byte("byte array"), 10, 'c', data(2))

// the above method can be used in place of this one
append(append(append(append([]byte("string"), []byte("byte array")...), []byte(strconv.Itoa(10))...), 'c'), data(2)...)