-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 452
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Underscore in replacement string treated as backspace #69
Comments
Interesting. It seems that Definitely a bug. Not entirely sure what the right fix is. What is the simplest thing we can do? |
Define that the names of capture groups cannot start with numbers? (i.e. do something similar to Rust identifiers.) |
This commit introduces a new `regex-syntax` crate that provides a regular expression parser and an abstract syntax for regular expressions. As part of this effort, the parser has been rewritten and has grown a substantial number of tests. The `regex` crate itself hasn't changed too much. I opted for the smallest possible delta to get it working with the new regex AST. In most cases, this simplified code because it no longer has to deal with unwieldy flags. (Instead, flag information is baked into the AST.) Here is a list of public facing non-breaking changes: * A new `regex-syntax` crate with a parser, regex AST and lots of tests. This closes #29 and fixes #84. * A new flag, `x`, has been added. This allows one to write regexes with insignificant whitespace and comments. * Repetition operators can now be directly applied to zero-width matches. e.g., `\b+` was previously not allowed but now works. Note that one could always write `(\b)+` previously. This change is mostly about lifting an arbitrary restriction. And a list of breaking changes: * A new `Regex::with_size_limit` constructor function, that allows one to tweak the limit on the size of a compiled regex. This fixes #67. The new method isn't a breaking change, but regexes that exceed the size limit (set to 10MB by default) will no longer compile. To fix, simply call `Regex::with_size_limit` with a bigger limit. * Capture group names cannot start with a number. This is a breaking change because regexes that previously compiled (e.g., `(?P<1a>.)`) will now return an error. This fixes #69. * The `regex::Error` type has been changed to reflect the better error reporting in the `regex-syntax` crate, and a new error for limiting regexes to a certain size. This is a breaking change. Most folks just call `unwrap()` on `Regex::new`, so I expect this to have minimal impact. Closes #29, #67, #69, #79, #84. [breaking-change]
This bug seems to still be there. let re = Regex::new(r"(.)(.)").unwrap();
let s1 = re.replace("ab","$1-$2");
let s2 = re.replace("ab","$1_$2");
assert_eq!("a-b", &s1);
assert_eq!("a_b", &s2); // Fails here "a_b" != "b" |
Ah I see, it looks like I only fixed the first half of this, which was to make capture group names that start with a number illegal. The latter half, which I forgot to do, is to fix expansion such that it treats capture group names starting with a number in the replacement correctly. Thanks for catching this! |
Since the docs weren't updated either, I'm marking this as something to be fixed in a regex2 some day. Fixing this now would be a breaking change. We'll just have to live with the wart for the time being. |
This adds more tests to cover some corner cases in named/numbered group expansion. See also: #69
Ugh, this is an unfortunate mistake. The "longest possible name" behavior pessimizes replacement strings that use numeric group references, so simple cases like It also differs from the behavior of all other regex engines I've used (Java, JavaScript, Python, .NET, IntelliJ IDEA, probably more), so no doubt will catch many people besides me by surprise. |
I think using braces to invoke the non-just-number variable will be a better idea.
|
@PeterlitsZo The issue here isn't "what should it do instead," but that changing it is a breaking change and I have no plans to do a breaking change release any time soon. |
Thanks for your reply. I just mean that MAYBE it is useful in regex2 in the future. I am sorry if I comment on the wrong issue. |
Using a
_
in the replacement string ofRegex::replace
leads to unexpected behaviour. The_
seems to be treated as a backspace. The documentation should either make mention of this, or this seems to be a bug.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: