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author | Skip Montanaro <skip@pobox.com> | 2005-01-16 20:48:27 (GMT) |
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committer | Skip Montanaro <skip@pobox.com> | 2005-01-16 20:48:27 (GMT) |
commit | 058858151d1015adfa429318b8340779e6caeceb (patch) | |
tree | 64e9f3e5799667878c115692d42dd2b7d164a669 /Doc/lib | |
parent | 891a1ba3b23b5f50c78fd4b03988cf9dd0df218c (diff) | |
download | cpython-058858151d1015adfa429318b8340779e6caeceb.zip cpython-058858151d1015adfa429318b8340779e6caeceb.tar.gz cpython-058858151d1015adfa429318b8340779e6caeceb.tar.bz2 |
Document the reconvert module.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/lib')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/lib.tex | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/libreconvert.tex | 80 |
2 files changed, 81 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/lib.tex b/Doc/lib/lib.tex index 78556bf..1350dd9 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/lib.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/lib.tex @@ -106,6 +106,7 @@ and how to embed it in other applications. \input{libstrings} % String Services \input{libstring} \input{libre} +\input{libreconvert} \input{libstruct} \input{libdifflib} \input{libfpformat} diff --git a/Doc/lib/libreconvert.tex b/Doc/lib/libreconvert.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..29c6e52 --- /dev/null +++ b/Doc/lib/libreconvert.tex @@ -0,0 +1,80 @@ +\section{\module{reconvert} --- + Convert regular expressions from regex to re form} +\declaremodule{standard}{reconvert} +\moduleauthor{Andrew M. Kuchling}{amk@amk.ca} +\sectionauthor{Skip Montanaro}{skip@pobox.com} + + +\modulesynopsis{Convert regex-, emacs- or sed-style regular expressions +to re-style syntax.} + + +This module provides a facility to convert regular expressions from the +syntax used by the deprecated \module{regex} module to those used by the +newer \module{re} module. Because of similarity between the regular +expression syntax of \code{sed(1)} and \code{emacs(1)} and the +\module{regex} module, it is also helpful to convert patterns written for +those tools to \module{re} patterns. + +When used as a script, a Python string literal (or any other expression +evaluating to a string) is read from stdin, and the translated expression is +written to stdout as a string literal. Unless stdout is a tty, no trailing +newline is written to stdout. This is done so that it can be used with +Emacs \code{C-U M-|} (shell-command-on-region) which filters the region +through the shell command. + +\begin{seealso} + \seetitle{Mastering Regular Expressions}{Book on regular expressions + by Jeffrey Friedl, published by O'Reilly. The second + edition of the book no longer covers Python at all, + but the first edition covered writing good regular expression + patterns in great detail.} +\end{seealso} + +\subsection{Module Contents} +\nodename{Contents of Module reconvert} + +The module defines two functions and a handful of constants. + +\begin{funcdesc}{convert}{pattern\optional{, syntax=None}} + Convert a \var{pattern} representing a \module{regex}-stype regular + expression into a \module{re}-style regular expression. The optional + \var{syntax} parameter is a bitwise-or'd set of flags that control what + constructs are converted. See below for a description of the various + constants. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{funcdesc}{quote}{s\optional{, quote=None}} + Convert a string object to a quoted string literal. + + This is similar to \function{repr} but will return a "raw" string (r'...' + or r"...") when the string contains backslashes, instead of doubling all + backslashes. The resulting string does not always evaluate to the same + string as the original; however it will do just the right thing when passed + into re.compile(). + + The optional second argument forces the string quote; it must be a single + character which is a valid Python string quote. Note that prior to Python + 2.5 this would not accept triple-quoted string delimiters. +\end{funcdesc} + +\begin{datadesc}{RE_NO_BK_PARENS} + Suppress paren conversion. This should be omitted when converting + \code{sed}-style or \code{emacs}-style regular expressions. +\end{datadesc} + +\begin{datadesc}{RE_NO_BK_VBAR} + Suppress vertical bar conversion. This should be omitted when converting + \code{sed}-style or \code{emacs}-style regular expressions. +\end{datadesc} + +\begin{datadesc}{RE_BK_PLUS_QM} + Enable conversion of \code{+} and \code{?} characters. This should be + added to the \var{syntax} arg of \function{convert} when converting + \code{sed}-style regular expressions and omitted when converting + \code{emacs}-style regular expressions. +\end{datadesc} + +\begin{datadesc}{RE_NEWLINE_OR} + When set, newline characters are replaced by \code{|}. +\end{datadesc} |