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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.

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  • 1
    Regex can't match the longest or shortest match. You need to match all occurrences and then use other language means to find the longest one. Or, when iterating, rewrite the result with the longer match. Feb 6, 2019 at 16:40
  • 2
    How can you ever find the longest matching string without viewing the whole string? Feb 6, 2019 at 16:43
  • There was a similar question here recently: stackoverflow.com/questions/54237547/… Feb 6, 2019 at 16:44
  • The problem is not finding all occurrences of the first contiguous match, that's fine, the problem is that in a circumstance like "1234 foo bar 1234 1234" I'd like to stop the search after the first series of matches ends (so after first 1234).
    – Jack
    Feb 6, 2019 at 16:45
  • And the std::regex implementation doesn't do so (see the link I sent, the answer is tehre). Feb 6, 2019 at 16:46

1 Answer 1

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First of all [+-]?[1-9]?[0-9]+ I think it does the same think, but should be a bit faster. Or you intend to use something like this: [+-]?[1-9][0-9]*|0 (zero without sign or number not starting with zero).

Secondly C++ provides regular expression iterator:

const std::string s = "51+12*3";

std::regex number_regex("[+-]?[1-9]?[0-9]+");
auto words_begin = 
    std::sregex_iterator(s.begin(), s.end(), number_regex);
auto words_end = std::sregex_iterator();

std::cout << "Found " 
          << std::distance(words_begin, words_end) 
          << " numbers:\n";

for (std::sregex_iterator i = words_begin; i != words_end; ++i) {
    std::smatch match = *i;                                                 
    std::string match_str = match.str(); 
    std::cout << match_str << '\n';
} 

And looks like this is what you need.

https://wandbox.org/permlink/tkaAfIslkWeY2poo

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