View source: R/search_match_4.R
stri_match_all | R Documentation |
These functions extract substrings in str
that
match a given regex pattern
. Additionally, they extract matches
to every capture group, i.e., to all the sub-patterns given
in round parentheses.
stri_match_all(str, ..., regex)
stri_match_first(str, ..., regex)
stri_match_last(str, ..., regex)
stri_match(str, ..., regex, mode = c("first", "all", "last"))
stri_match_all_regex(
str,
pattern,
omit_no_match = FALSE,
cg_missing = NA_character_,
...,
opts_regex = NULL
)
stri_match_first_regex(
str,
pattern,
cg_missing = NA_character_,
...,
opts_regex = NULL
)
stri_match_last_regex(
str,
pattern,
cg_missing = NA_character_,
...,
opts_regex = NULL
)
str |
character vector; strings to search in |
... |
supplementary arguments passed to the underlying functions,
including additional settings for |
mode |
single string;
one of: |
pattern , regex |
character vector; search patterns; for more details refer to stringi-search |
omit_no_match |
single logical value; if |
cg_missing |
single string to be used if a capture group match is unavailable |
opts_regex |
a named list with ICU Regex settings,
see |
Vectorized over str
and pattern
(with recycling
of the elements in the shorter vector if necessary). This allows to,
for instance, search for one pattern in each given string,
search for each pattern in one given string,
and search for the i-th pattern within the i-th string.
If no pattern match is detected and omit_no_match=FALSE
,
then NA
s are included in the resulting matrix (matrices), see Examples.
stri_match
, stri_match_all
, stri_match_first
,
and stri_match_last
are convenience functions.
They merely call stri_match_*_regex
and are
provided for consistency with other string searching functions' wrappers,
see, among others, stri_extract
.
For stri_match_all*
,
a list of character matrices is returned. Each list element
represents the results of a different search scenario.
For stri_match_first*
and stri_match_last*
a character matrix is returned.
Each row corresponds to a different search result.
The first matrix column gives the whole match. The second one corresponds to the first capture group, the third – the second capture group, and so on.
If regular expressions feature a named capture group,
the matrix columns will be named accordingly.
However, for stri_match_first*
and stri_match_last*
this will only be the case if there is a single pattern.
Marek Gagolewski and other contributors
The official online manual of stringi at https://stringi.gagolewski.com/
Gagolewski M., stringi: Fast and portable character string processing in R, Journal of Statistical Software 103(2), 2022, 1-59, \Sexpr[results=rd]{tools:::Rd_expr_doi("10.18637/jss.v103.i02")}
Other search_extract:
about_search
,
stri_extract_all_boundaries()
,
stri_extract_all()
stri_match_all_regex('breakfast=eggs, lunch=pizza, dessert=icecream',
'(\\w+)=(\\w+)')
stri_match_all_regex(c('breakfast=eggs', 'lunch=pizza', 'no food here'),
'(\\w+)=(\\w+)')
stri_match_all_regex(c('breakfast=eggs;lunch=pizza',
'breakfast=bacon;lunch=spaghetti', 'no food here'),
'(\\w+)=(\\w+)')
stri_match_all_regex(c('breakfast=eggs;lunch=pizza',
'breakfast=bacon;lunch=spaghetti', 'no food here'),
'(?<when>\\w+)=(?<what>\\w+)') # named capture groups
stri_match_first_regex(c('breakfast=eggs;lunch=pizza',
'breakfast=bacon;lunch=spaghetti', 'no food here'),
'(\\w+)=(\\w+)')
stri_match_last_regex(c('breakfast=eggs;lunch=pizza',
'breakfast=bacon;lunch=spaghetti', 'no food here'),
'(\\w+)=(\\w+)')
stri_match_first_regex(c('abcd', ':abcd', ':abcd:'), '^(:)?([^:]*)(:)?$')
stri_match_first_regex(c('abcd', ':abcd', ':abcd:'), '^(:)?([^:]*)(:)?$', cg_missing='')
# Match all the pattern of the form XYX, including overlapping matches:
stri_match_all_regex('ACAGAGACTTTAGATAGAGAAGA', '(?=(([ACGT])[ACGT]\\2))')[[1]][,2]
# Compare the above to:
stri_extract_all_regex('ACAGAGACTTTAGATAGAGAAGA', '([ACGT])[ACGT]\\1')
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