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What's a good way to do this? Seems like I could use a combination of a few different methods to achieve what I want, but there's probably a simpler method I'm overlooking. For example, the PHP function preg_replace will do this. Anything similar in Ruby?

simple example of what I'm planning to do:

orig_string = "all dogs go to heaven"
string_to_insert = "nice "
regex = /dogs/

end_result = "all nice dogs go to heaven"
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  • Is it suitable for your requirenents to replace 'dogs' to 'nice dogs'?
    – Anatoly
    Jul 19, 2011 at 6:57

2 Answers 2

14

It can be done using Ruby's "gsub", as per:

http://railsforphp.com/2008/01/17/regular-expressions-in-ruby/#preg_replace

orig_string = "all dogs go to heaven"
end_result = orig_string.gsub(/dogs/, 'nice \0')
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  • Hey it should be orig_string.gsub(/dogs/, 'nice \\0')
    – rubyprince
    Jul 19, 2011 at 7:15
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result = subject.gsub(/(?=\bdogs\b)/, 'nice ')

The regex checks for each position in the string whether the entire word dogs can be matched there, and then it inserts the string nice there.

The word boundary anchors \b ensure that we don't accidentally match hotdogs etc.

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