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authorJeremy Evans <code@jeremyevans.net>2021-07-27 12:30:43 -0700
committerJeremy Evans <code@jeremyevans.net>2021-07-27 12:30:43 -0700
commit4fc9ddd7b6af54abf88d702c2e11e97ca7750ce3 (patch)
treecd983955de5f8a8fd64542115fd641317e07e83d /doc
parent35e467080ca35a9a129e95f802f102c3bc0a81b3 (diff)
Update Capturing and Anchors sections of regexp documention
Document that only first 9 numbered capture groups can use the \n backreference syntax. Document \0 backreference. Document \K anchor. Fixes [Bug #14500]
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/regexp.rdoc36
1 files changed, 31 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/doc/regexp.rdoc b/doc/regexp.rdoc
index 5ec64907f5..23fe7113b9 100644
--- a/doc/regexp.rdoc
+++ b/doc/regexp.rdoc
@@ -222,13 +222,13 @@ jeopardises the overall match.
== Capturing
Parentheses can be used for <i>capturing</i>. The text enclosed by the
-<i>n</i><sup>th</sup> group of parentheses can be subsequently referred to
+<i>n</i>th group of parentheses can be subsequently referred to
with <i>n</i>. Within a pattern use the <i>backreference</i>
-<tt>\n</tt>; outside of the pattern use
-<tt>MatchData[</tt><i>n</i><tt>]</tt>.
+<tt>\n</tt> (e.g. <tt>\1</tt>); outside of the pattern use
+<tt>MatchData[n]</tt> (e.g. <tt>MatchData[1]</tt>).
-'at' is captured by the first group of parentheses, then referred to later
-with <tt>\1</tt>:
+In this example, <tt>'at'</tt> is captured by the first group of
+parentheses, then referred to later with <tt>\1</tt>:
/[csh](..) [csh]\1 in/.match("The cat sat in the hat")
#=> #<MatchData "cat sat in" 1:"at">
@@ -238,6 +238,21 @@ available with its #[] method:
/[csh](..) [csh]\1 in/.match("The cat sat in the hat")[1] #=> 'at'
+While Ruby supports an arbitrary number of numbered captured groups,
+only groups 1-9 are supported using the <tt>\n</tt> backreference
+syntax.
+
+Ruby also supports <tt>\0</tt> as a special backreference, which
+references the entire matched string. This is also available at
+<tt>MatchData[0]</tt>. Note that the <tt>\0</tt> backreference cannot
+be used inside the regexp, as backreferences can only be used after the
+end of the capture group, and the <tt>\0</tt> backreference uses the
+implicit capture group of the entire match. However, you can use
+this backreference when doing substitution:
+
+ "The cat sat in the hat".gsub(/[csh]at/, '\0s')
+ # => "The cats sats in the hats"
+
=== Named captures
Capture groups can be referred to by name when defined with the
@@ -524,6 +539,17 @@ characters, <i>anchoring</i> the match to a specific position.
* <tt>(?<!</tt><i>pat</i><tt>)</tt> - <i>Negative lookbehind</i>
assertion: ensures that the preceding characters do not match
<i>pat</i>, but doesn't include those characters in the matched text
+* <tt>\K</tt> - Uses an positive lookbehind of the content preceding
+ <tt>\K</tt> in the regexp. For example, the following two regexps are
+ almost equivalent:
+
+ /ab\Kc/
+ /(?<=ab)c/
+
+ As are the following two regexps:
+
+ /(a)\K(b)\Kc/
+ /(?<=(?<=(a))(b))c/
If a pattern isn't anchored it can begin at any point in the string: