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These functions operate on regular expressions.
This function returns a regular expression whose only exact match is
string. Using this regular expression in looking-at
will
succeed only if the next characters in the buffer are string; using it
in a search function will succeed if the text being searched contains
string.
This allows you to request an exact string match or search when calling a function that wants a regular expression.
(regexp-quote "^The cat$") ⇒ "\\^The cat\\$" |
One use of regexp-quote
is to combine an exact string match with
context described as a regular expression. For example, this searches for
the string that is the value of string, surrounded by whitespace:
(re-search-forward (concat "\\s-" (regexp-quote string) "\\s-")) |
This function returns an efficient regular expression that will match any of the strings in the list strings. This is useful when you need to make matching or searching as fast as possible—for example, for Font Lock mode.
If the optional argument paren is non-nil
, then the returned
regular expression is always enclosed by at least one parentheses-grouping
construct. If paren is words
, then that construct is
additionally surrounded by ‘\<’ and ‘\>’.
This simplified definition of regexp-opt
produces a regular
expression which is equivalent to the actual value (but not as efficient):
(defun regexp-opt (strings paren) (let ((open-paren (if paren "\\(" "")) (close-paren (if paren "\\)" ""))) (concat open-paren (mapconcat 'regexp-quote strings "\\|") close-paren))) |
This function returns the total number of grouping constructs (parenthesized expressions) in regexp. (This does not include shy groups.)
Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 13 Octobre 2007 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.