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I am writing a tool to help students learn regular expressions. I will probably be writing it in Java.

The idea is this: the student types in a regular expression and the tool shows which parts of a text will get matched by the regex. Simple enough.

But I want to support several different regex "flavors" such as:

  • Basic regular expressions (think: grep)
  • Extended regular expressions (think: egrep)
  • A subset of Perl regular expressions, including the character classes \w, \s, etc.
  • Sed-style regular expressions

Java has the java.util.Regex class, but it supports only Perl-style regular expressions, which is a superset of the basic and extended REs. What I think I need is a way to take any given regular expression and escape the meta-characters that aren't part of a given flavor. Then I could give it to the Regex object and it would behave as if it was written for the selected RE interpreter.

For example, given the following regex:

^\w+[0-9]{5}-(\d{4})?$

As a basic regular expression, it would be interpreted as:

^\\w\+[0-9]\{5\}-\(\\d\{4\}\)\?$

As an extended regular expression, it would be:

^\\w+[0-9]{5}-(\\d{4})?$

And as a Perl-style regex, it would be the same as the original expression.

Is there a "regular expression for regular expressions" than I could run through a regex search-and-replace to quote the non-meta characters? What else could I do? Are there alternative Java classes I could use?

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4 Answers

vote up 1 vote down

Alternatively, you could use Jakarta ORO?

This supports the following regex 'flavors':

  • Perl5 compatible regular expressions
  • AWK-like regular expressions
  • glob expressions
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vote up 1 vote down

check out this post for a 'regular expression for regular expressions': http://stackoverflow.com/questions/172303/is-there-a-regular-expression-to-detect-a-valid-regular-expression

You can use this as a basis for your module.

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vote up 0 vote down

I have written something similar: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/172303/is-there-a-regular-expression-to-detect-a-valid-regular-expression#172316

You could take part of that expression, and match each token separatly:

[^?+*{}()[\]\\]                # literal characters
\\[A-Za-z]                     # Character classes
\\\d+                          # Back references
\\\W                           # Escaped characters
\[\^?(?:\\.|[^\\])+?\]         # Character classs
\((?:\?[:=!>]|\?<[=!])?        # Beginning of a group
\)                             # End of a group
(?:[?+*]|\{\d+(?:,\d*)?\})\??  # Repetition
\|                             # Alternation

For each match, you could have some dictionary of appropriate replacements in the target flavor.

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vote up 0 vote down

hi there,

if you want your students to learn regex,why not use a freely available tool -- regex Coach -- http://www.weitz.de/regex-coach/ on the net that is pretty good to learn and evaluate regexes ?

look at this SO thread on a similar issue -- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/89718/is-there-anything-like-regexbuddy-in-the-open-source-world

BR,
~A

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