How do I count the number of matches using C++11's std::regex
?
std::regex re("[^\\s]+");
std::cout << re.matches("Harry Botter - The robot who lived.").count() << std::endl;
Expected output:
7
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You can use regex_iterator
to generate all of the matches, then use distance
to count them:
std::regex const expression("[^\\s]+");
std::string const text("Harry Botter - The robot who lived.");
std::ptrdiff_t const match_count(std::distance(
std::sregex_iterator(text.begin(), text.end(), expression),
std::sregex_iterator()));
std::cout << match_count << std::endl;
std::sregex_iterator
returns and what the 'distance' between the two means?
– Mateen Ulhaq
Nov 27 '11 at 10:15
sregex_iterator
is a typedef over regex_iterator
, which iterates over all of the matches in the text. distance
is the Standard Library function that computes the number of elements in an iterator range (so, in this case, it reads all of the matches and returns how many there are).
– James McNellis
Nov 27 '11 at 19:04
match_count
operation." match_count
is a variable, in which I store the number of matches computed by std::distance
.
– James McNellis
May 7 '14 at 15:33
You can use this:
int countMatchInRegex(std::string s, std::string re)
{
std::regex words_regex(re);
auto words_begin = std::sregex_iterator(
s.begin(), s.end(), words_regex);
auto words_end = std::sregex_iterator();
return std::distance(words_begin, words_end);
}
Example usage:
std::cout << countMatchInRegex("Harry Botter - The robot who lived.", "[^\\s]+");
Output:
7
error: ‘regex_count’ was not declared in this scope
. ;) – Mateen Ulhaq Nov 27 '11 at 7:41