[−][src]Struct regex_syntax::hir::Hir
A high-level intermediate representation (HIR) for a regular expression.
The HIR of a regular expression represents an intermediate step between its
abstract syntax (a structured description of the concrete syntax) and
compiled byte codes. The purpose of HIR is to make regular expressions
easier to analyze. In particular, the AST is much more complex than the
HIR. For example, while an AST supports arbitrarily nested character
classes, the HIR will flatten all nested classes into a single set. The HIR
will also "compile away" every flag present in the concrete syntax. For
example, users of HIR expressions never need to worry about case folding;
it is handled automatically by the translator (e.g., by translating (?i)A
to [aA]
).
If the HIR was produced by a translator that disallows invalid UTF-8, then the HIR is guaranteed to match UTF-8 exclusively.
This type defines its own destructor that uses constant stack space and heap space proportional to the size of the HIR.
The specific type of an HIR expression can be accessed via its kind
or into_kind
methods. This extra level of indirection exists for two
reasons:
- Construction of an HIR expression must use the constructor methods
on this
Hir
type instead of building theHirKind
values directly. This permits construction to enforce invariants like "concatenations always consist of two or more sub-expressions." - Every HIR expression contains attributes that are defined inductively, and can be computed cheaply during the construction process. For example, one such attribute is whether the expression must match at the beginning of the text.
Also, an Hir
's fmt::Display
implementation prints an HIR as a regular
expression pattern string, and uses constant stack space and heap space
proportional to the size of the Hir
.
Methods
impl Hir
[src]
pub fn kind(&self) -> &HirKind
[src]
Returns a reference to the underlying HIR kind.
pub fn into_kind(self) -> HirKind
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Consumes ownership of this HIR expression and returns its underlying
HirKind
.
pub fn empty() -> Hir
[src]
Returns an empty HIR expression.
An empty HIR expression always matches, including the empty string.
pub fn literal(lit: Literal) -> Hir
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Creates a literal HIR expression.
If the given literal has a Byte
variant with an ASCII byte, then this
method panics. This enforces the invariant that Byte
variants are
only used to express matching of invalid UTF-8.
pub fn class(class: Class) -> Hir
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Creates a class HIR expression.
pub fn anchor(anchor: Anchor) -> Hir
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Creates an anchor assertion HIR expression.
pub fn word_boundary(word_boundary: WordBoundary) -> Hir
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Creates a word boundary assertion HIR expression.
pub fn repetition(rep: Repetition) -> Hir
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Creates a repetition HIR expression.
pub fn group(group: Group) -> Hir
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Creates a group HIR expression.
pub fn concat(exprs: Vec<Hir>) -> Hir
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Returns the concatenation of the given expressions.
This flattens the concatenation as appropriate.
pub fn alternation(exprs: Vec<Hir>) -> Hir
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Returns the alternation of the given expressions.
This flattens the alternation as appropriate.
pub fn dot(bytes: bool) -> Hir
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Build an HIR expression for .
.
A .
expression matches any character except for \n
. To build an
expression that matches any character, including \n
, use the any
method.
If bytes
is true
, then this assumes characters are limited to a
single byte.
pub fn any(bytes: bool) -> Hir
[src]
Build an HIR expression for (?s).
.
A (?s).
expression matches any character, including \n
. To build an
expression that matches any character except for \n
, then use the
dot
method.
If bytes
is true
, then this assumes characters are limited to a
single byte.
pub fn is_always_utf8(&self) -> bool
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Return true if and only if this HIR will always match valid UTF-8.
When this returns false, then it is possible for this HIR expression to match invalid UTF-8.
pub fn is_all_assertions(&self) -> bool
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Returns true if and only if this entire HIR expression is made up of zero-width assertions.
This includes expressions like ^$\b\A\z
and even ((\b)+())*^
, but
not ^a
.
pub fn is_anchored_start(&self) -> bool
[src]
Return true if and only if this HIR is required to match from the
beginning of text. This includes expressions like ^foo
, ^(foo|bar)
,
^foo|^bar
but not ^foo|bar
.
pub fn is_anchored_end(&self) -> bool
[src]
Return true if and only if this HIR is required to match at the end
of text. This includes expressions like foo$
, (foo|bar)$
,
foo$|bar$
but not foo$|bar
.
pub fn is_line_anchored_start(&self) -> bool
[src]
Return true if and only if this HIR is required to match from the
beginning of text or the beginning of a line. This includes expressions
like ^foo
, (?m)^foo
, ^(foo|bar)
, ^(foo|bar)
, (?m)^foo|^bar
but not ^foo|bar
or (?m)^foo|bar
.
Note that if is_anchored_start
is true
, then
is_line_anchored_start
will also be true
. The reverse implication
is not true. For example, (?m)^foo
is line anchored, but not
is_anchored_start
.
pub fn is_line_anchored_end(&self) -> bool
[src]
Return true if and only if this HIR is required to match at the
end of text or the end of a line. This includes expressions like
foo$
, (?m)foo$
, (foo|bar)$
, (?m)(foo|bar)$
, foo$|bar$
,
(?m)(foo|bar)$
, but not foo$|bar
or (?m)foo$|bar
.
Note that if is_anchored_end
is true
, then
is_line_anchored_end
will also be true
. The reverse implication
is not true. For example, (?m)foo$
is line anchored, but not
is_anchored_end
.
pub fn is_any_anchored_start(&self) -> bool
[src]
Return true if and only if this HIR contains any sub-expression that
is required to match at the beginning of text. Specifically, this
returns true if the ^
symbol (when multiline mode is disabled) or the
\A
escape appear anywhere in the regex.
pub fn is_any_anchored_end(&self) -> bool
[src]
Return true if and only if this HIR contains any sub-expression that is
required to match at the end of text. Specifically, this returns true
if the $
symbol (when multiline mode is disabled) or the \z
escape
appear anywhere in the regex.
pub fn is_match_empty(&self) -> bool
[src]
Return true if and only if the empty string is part of the language matched by this regular expression.
This includes a*
, a?b*
, a{0}
, ()
, ()+
, ^$
, a|b?
, \B
,
but not a
, a+
or \b
.
pub fn is_literal(&self) -> bool
[src]
Return true if and only if this HIR is a simple literal. This is only
true when this HIR expression is either itself a Literal
or a
concatenation of only Literal
s.
For example, f
and foo
are literals, but f+
, (foo)
, foo()
are not (even though that contain sub-expressions that are literals).
pub fn is_alternation_literal(&self) -> bool
[src]
Return true if and only if this HIR is either a simple literal or an
alternation of simple literals. This is only
true when this HIR expression is either itself a Literal
or a
concatenation of only Literal
s or an alternation of only Literal
s.
For example, f
, foo
, a|b|c
, and foo|bar|baz
are alternaiton
literals, but f+
, (foo)
, foo()
are not (even though that contain sub-expressions that are literals).
Trait Implementations
impl PartialEq<Hir> for Hir
[src]
impl Clone for Hir
[src]
fn clone(&self) -> Hir
[src]
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
1.0.0[src]
Performs copy-assignment from source
. Read more
impl Eq for Hir
[src]
impl Drop for Hir
[src]
A custom Drop
impl is used for HirKind
such that it uses constant stack
space but heap space proportional to the depth of the total Hir
.
impl Display for Hir
[src]
Print a display representation of this Hir.
The result of this is a valid regular expression pattern string.
This implementation uses constant stack space and heap space proportional
to the size of the Hir
.
impl Debug for Hir
[src]
Auto Trait Implementations
Blanket Implementations
impl<T> From<T> for T
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impl<T> ToOwned for T where
T: Clone,
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T: Clone,
type Owned = T
The resulting type after obtaining ownership.
fn to_owned(&self) -> T
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fn clone_into(&self, target: &mut T)
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impl<T> ToString for T where
T: Display + ?Sized,
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T: Display + ?Sized,
impl<T, U> Into<U> for T where
U: From<T>,
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U: From<T>,
impl<T, U> TryFrom<U> for T where
U: Into<T>,
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U: Into<T>,
type Error = Infallible
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
fn try_from(value: U) -> Result<T, <T as TryFrom<U>>::Error>
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impl<T, U> TryInto<U> for T where
U: TryFrom<T>,
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U: TryFrom<T>,
type Error = <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
fn try_into(self) -> Result<U, <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error>
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impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
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T: ?Sized,
fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
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impl<T> Borrow<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
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T: ?Sized,
impl<T> Any for T where
T: 'static + ?Sized,
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T: 'static + ?Sized,