3

I've hit s small block with string parsing. I have a string like:

footage/down/temp/cars_[100]_upper/cars_[100]_upper.exr

and I'm having difficulty using gsub to delete a portion of the string. Normally I would do this

lineA = footage/down/temp/cars_[100]_upper/cars_[100]_upper.exr
lineB = footage/down/temp/cars_[100]_upper/
newline = lineA:gsub(lineB, "")

which would normally give me 'cars_[100]_upper.exr'

The problem is that gsub doesn't like the [] or other special characters in the string and unlike string.find gsub doesn't have the option of using the 'plain' flag to cancel pattern searching.

I am not able to manually edit the lines to include escape characters for the special characters as I'm doing file a file comparison script.

Any help to get from lineA to newline using lineB would be most appreciated.

3 Answers 3

8

Taking from page 181 of Programming in Lua 2e:

The magic characters are:

( ) . % + - * ? [ ] ^ $

The character '%' works as an escape for these magic characters.

So, we can just come up with a simple function to escape these magic characters, and apply it to your input string (lineB):

function literalize(str)
    return str:gsub("[%(%)%.%%%+%-%*%?%[%]%^%$]", function(c) return "%" .. c end)
end

lineA = "footage/down/temp/cars_[100]_upper/cars_[100]_upper.exr"

lineB = literalize("footage/down/temp/cars_[100]_upper/")

newline = lineA:gsub(lineB, "")

print(newline)

Which of course prints: cars_[100]_upper.exr.

2
  • 2
    Another (probably faster) way to write literalize: str:gsub("[%(%)%.%%%+%-%*%?%[%]%^%$]", "%%%0")
    – catwell
    Nov 19, 2012 at 14:20
  • EXCELLENT approach. Side note: yeah lua patterns are in the way a lot of the time. 'Powerful'. How about useful? Jul 31, 2014 at 13:59
4

You may use another approach like:

local i1, i2 = lineA:find(lineB, nil, true)
local result = lineA:sub(i2 + 1)
3
  • Just put that in a loop until find returns non-nil to match that gsub replaces all occurrences of the pattern.
    – sbk
    Nov 17, 2009 at 0:24
  • This doesn't work either, because also in string.find magic characters are considered as such (see next answer below).
    – Gert
    Sep 20, 2010 at 9:01
  • 1
    Passing true as the forth parameter (self, pattern, init, plain) makes the function ignore magic characters in the pattern.
    – Kknd
    Dec 28, 2010 at 20:19
2

You can also escape punctuation in a text string, str, using:

str:gsub ("%p", "%%%0")

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