I'm trying to find an efficient way to greedily find the first match for a std::regex
without analyzing the whole input.
My specific problem is that I wrote a hand made lexer and I'm trying to provide rules to parse common literal values (eg. a numeric value).
So suppose a simple let's say
std::regex integralRegex = std::regex("([+-]?[1-9]*[0-9]+)");
Is there a way to find the longest match starting from the beginning of input without scanning all of it? It looks like std::regex_match
tries to match the whole input while std::regex_search
forcefully finds all matches.
Maybe I'm missing a trivial overload for my purpose but I can't find an efficient solution to the problem.
Just to clarify the question: I'm not interested in stopping after first sub-match and ignore the remainder of input but for an input like "51+12*3"
I'd like something that finds first 51
match and then stops, ignoring whatever is after.