Does it? If yes, where can I get the documentation for it... if not, then which would be the best alternative?
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C++11 now finally does have a standard regex library - std::regex. If you do not have access to a C++11 implementation, a good alternative could be boost regex. It isn't completely equivalent to std::regex (e.g. the "empty()" method is not in the std::regex) but it's a very mature regex implementation for C++ none the less. |
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Under UNIX-like systems you can use POSIX regex functions. |
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Check the boost regex library. It should become part of the standard with C++0x. |
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The Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 Feature Pack 1 (now rolled into the Visual Studio 2008 Service Pack 1) contains a implementation of the 'official' TR1 reg ex types. Knock yourself out :-) |
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If by standard you mean bundled with compiler, then not. But most of the other languages that bundle regex extension use pretty standard |
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Regular Expressions are part of the C++ extension TR1. Dinkumware, visual studio and others already have implemented this. See |
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Qt, from Trolltech, also has a regex implementation which I find very easy to use. However, if you are not planning of using Qt for anything else I would use Boost.Regex as you probably would be good off using Boost for other purposes as well. |
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+1 for PCRE - Perl Compatible Regular Expression , I remembered using Mircosoft's GRETA as well. |
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The standard ISO/IEC 14882:2011 Programming Language C++ describes a regex class as part of C++'s library, which is heavily influenced by the mature Boost library. Curiously, as of January 2013, compilers' compliance with this standard is still spotty, e.g. the GNU compiler suite's popular C++ compiler does not support/comply with this part of the standard. For that reason, it's best to use Boost at this point in time until compiler support reaches compliance. |
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