Qore Programming Language Reference Manual
1.12.1
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Regular expression functionality in Qore is provided by PCRE: Perl-Compatible Regular Expression library.
Using this library, Qore implements regular expression pattern matching using very simple syntax with semantics similar to those of Perl 5. One difference between Qore and Perl to keep in mind is that backreferences in Qore are referenced as $1
, $2
, $3
, etc which differs from Perl's syntax (which uses numbered backslashes instead).
The following is a list of operators based on regular expressions (or similar to regular expressions in the case of the transliteration operator).
Regular Expression Operators
Operator | Description |
Regular Expression Match Operator (=~) | Returns True if the regular expression matches a string |
Regular Expression No Match Operator (!~) | Returns True if the regular expression does not match a string |
Regular Expression Substitution Operator | Substitutes text in a string based on matching a regular expression |
Regular Expression Pattern Extraction Operator | Returns a list of substrings in a string based on matching patterns defined by a regular expression |
Transliteration Operator | Not a regular expression operator; transliterates one or more characters to other characters in a string |
See the table below for valid regular expression options.
Regular Expression Options
Option | Description |
i | Ignores case when matching |
m | makes start-of-line (^ ) or end-of-line ($ ) match after or before any newline in the subject string |
s | makes a dot (. ) match a newline character |
x | ignores whitespace characters and enables comments prefixed by # |
u | extends Posix character matching to Unicode characters |
g | makes global substitutions or global extractions (only applicable with the substitution and extraction operators) |
The following is a list of functions providing regular expression functionality where the pattern may be given at run-time:
Regular Expression Functions
Function | Description |
regex() | Returns True if the regular expression matches a string |
regex_subst() | Substitutes a pattern in a string based on regular expressions and returns the new string |
regex_extract() | Returns a list of substrings in a string based on matching patterns defined by a regular expression |
Escape characters in the pattern string are processed by the PCRE library similar to how Perl5 handles escape characters.
Regular expression substitution expressions have the following pattern:
s/
<pattern>/
<replacement>/
The escape codes in the following table are supported in the replacement string.
Regular Expression Replacement String Escape Codes
Escape | ASCII | Decimal | Octal | Hex | Description |
\a | BEL | 7 | 007 | 07 | alarm or bell |
\b | BS | 8 | 010 | 08 | backspace |
\e | ESC | 27 | 033 | 1B | escape character |
\f | FF | 12 | 014 | 0C | form feed |
\n | LF | 10 | 012 | 0A | line feed |
\r | CR | 13 | 015 | 0D | carriage return |
\t | HT | 9 | 011 | 09 | horizontal tab |
\v | VT | 11 | 013 | 0B | vertical tab |
\$ | $ | 36 | 044 | 24 | a literal dollar sign character |
\\ | \ | 134 | 092 | 5C | a literal backslash character |
\[0-7][0-7][0-7] | - | - | - | - | the ASCII character represented by the octal code |
Otherwise any backslashes in the replacement string will be copied literally to the output string.
Qore uses $
num for backreferences in regular expression substitution expressions. The first backreference is $1
, the second $2, and so on.