Import Tcl-core 8.6.6 (as of svn r86089)
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383
doc/RegExp.3
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383
doc/RegExp.3
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'\"
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'\" Copyright (c) 1994 The Regents of the University of California.
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'\" Copyright (c) 1994-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
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'\" Copyright (c) 1998-1999 Scriptics Corporation
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'\"
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'\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution
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'\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
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'\"
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.TH Tcl_RegExpMatch 3 8.1 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures"
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.so man.macros
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.BS
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.SH NAME
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Tcl_RegExpMatch, Tcl_RegExpCompile, Tcl_RegExpExec, Tcl_RegExpRange, Tcl_GetRegExpFromObj, Tcl_RegExpMatchObj, Tcl_RegExpExecObj, Tcl_RegExpGetInfo \- Pattern matching with regular expressions
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.nf
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\fB#include <tcl.h>\fR
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.sp
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int
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\fBTcl_RegExpMatchObj\fR(\fIinterp\fR, \fItextObj\fR, \fIpatObj\fR)
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.sp
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int
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\fBTcl_RegExpMatch\fR(\fIinterp\fR, \fItext\fR, \fIpattern\fR)
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.sp
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Tcl_RegExp
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\fBTcl_RegExpCompile\fR(\fIinterp\fR, \fIpattern\fR)
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.sp
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int
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\fBTcl_RegExpExec\fR(\fIinterp\fR, \fIregexp\fR, \fItext\fR, \fIstart\fR)
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.sp
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void
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\fBTcl_RegExpRange\fR(\fIregexp\fR, \fIindex\fR, \fIstartPtr\fR, \fIendPtr\fR)
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.sp
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Tcl_RegExp
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\fBTcl_GetRegExpFromObj\fR(\fIinterp\fR, \fIpatObj\fR, \fIcflags\fR)
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.sp
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int
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\fBTcl_RegExpExecObj\fR(\fIinterp\fR, \fIregexp\fR, \fItextObj\fR, \fIoffset\fR, \fInmatches\fR, \fIeflags\fR)
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.sp
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void
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\fBTcl_RegExpGetInfo\fR(\fIregexp\fR, \fIinfoPtr\fR)
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.fi
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.SH ARGUMENTS
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.AS Tcl_RegExpInfo *interp in/out
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.AP Tcl_Interp *interp in
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Tcl interpreter to use for error reporting. The interpreter may be
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NULL if no error reporting is desired.
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.AP Tcl_Obj *textObj in/out
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Refers to the value from which to get the text to search. The
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internal representation of the value may be converted to a form that
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can be efficiently searched.
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.AP Tcl_Obj *patObj in/out
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Refers to the value from which to get a regular expression. The
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compiled regular expression is cached in the value.
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.AP char *text in
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Text to search for a match with a regular expression.
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.AP "const char" *pattern in
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String in the form of a regular expression pattern.
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.AP Tcl_RegExp regexp in
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Compiled regular expression. Must have been returned previously
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by \fBTcl_GetRegExpFromObj\fR or \fBTcl_RegExpCompile\fR.
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.AP char *start in
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If \fItext\fR is just a portion of some other string, this argument
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identifies the beginning of the larger string.
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If it is not the same as \fItext\fR, then no
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.QW \fB^\fR
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matches will be allowed.
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.AP int index in
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Specifies which range is desired: 0 means the range of the entire
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match, 1 or greater means the range that matched a parenthesized
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sub-expression.
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.AP "const char" **startPtr out
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The address of the first character in the range is stored here, or
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NULL if there is no such range.
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.AP "const char" **endPtr out
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The address of the character just after the last one in the range
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is stored here, or NULL if there is no such range.
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.AP int cflags in
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OR-ed combination of the compilation flags \fBTCL_REG_ADVANCED\fR,
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\fBTCL_REG_EXTENDED\fR, \fBTCL_REG_BASIC\fR, \fBTCL_REG_EXPANDED\fR,
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\fBTCL_REG_QUOTE\fR, \fBTCL_REG_NOCASE\fR, \fBTCL_REG_NEWLINE\fR,
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\fBTCL_REG_NLSTOP\fR, \fBTCL_REG_NLANCH\fR, \fBTCL_REG_NOSUB\fR, and
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\fBTCL_REG_CANMATCH\fR. See below for more information.
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.AP int offset in
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The character offset into the text where matching should begin.
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The value of the offset has no impact on \fB^\fR matches. This
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behavior is controlled by \fIeflags\fR.
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.AP int nmatches in
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The number of matching subexpressions that should be remembered for
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later use. If this value is 0, then no subexpression match
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information will be computed. If the value is \-1, then
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all of the matching subexpressions will be remembered. Any other
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value will be taken as the maximum number of subexpressions to
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remember.
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.AP int eflags in
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OR-ed combination of the execution flags \fBTCL_REG_NOTBOL\fR and
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\fBTCL_REG_NOTEOL\fR. See below for more information.
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.AP Tcl_RegExpInfo *infoPtr out
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The address of the location where information about a previous match
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should be stored by \fBTcl_RegExpGetInfo\fR.
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.BE
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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.PP
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\fBTcl_RegExpMatch\fR determines whether its \fIpattern\fR argument
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matches \fIregexp\fR, where \fIregexp\fR is interpreted
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as a regular expression using the rules in the \fBre_syntax\fR
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reference page.
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If there is a match then \fBTcl_RegExpMatch\fR returns 1.
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If there is no match then \fBTcl_RegExpMatch\fR returns 0.
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If an error occurs in the matching process (e.g. \fIpattern\fR
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is not a valid regular expression) then \fBTcl_RegExpMatch\fR
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returns \-1 and leaves an error message in the interpreter result.
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\fBTcl_RegExpMatchObj\fR is similar to \fBTcl_RegExpMatch\fR except it
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operates on the Tcl values \fItextObj\fR and \fIpatObj\fR instead of
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UTF strings.
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\fBTcl_RegExpMatchObj\fR is generally more efficient than
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\fBTcl_RegExpMatch\fR, so it is the preferred interface.
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.PP
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\fBTcl_RegExpCompile\fR, \fBTcl_RegExpExec\fR, and \fBTcl_RegExpRange\fR
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provide lower-level access to the regular expression pattern matcher.
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\fBTcl_RegExpCompile\fR compiles a regular expression string into
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the internal form used for efficient pattern matching.
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The return value is a token for this compiled form, which can be
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used in subsequent calls to \fBTcl_RegExpExec\fR or \fBTcl_RegExpRange\fR.
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If an error occurs while compiling the regular expression then
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\fBTcl_RegExpCompile\fR returns NULL and leaves an error message
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in the interpreter result.
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Note: the return value from \fBTcl_RegExpCompile\fR is only valid
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up to the next call to \fBTcl_RegExpCompile\fR; it is not safe to
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retain these values for long periods of time.
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.PP
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\fBTcl_RegExpExec\fR executes the regular expression pattern matcher.
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It returns 1 if \fItext\fR contains a range of characters that
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match \fIregexp\fR, 0 if no match is found, and
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\-1 if an error occurs.
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In the case of an error, \fBTcl_RegExpExec\fR leaves an error
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message in the interpreter result.
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When searching a string for multiple matches of a pattern,
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it is important to distinguish between the start of the original
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string and the start of the current search.
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For example, when searching for the second occurrence of a
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match, the \fItext\fR argument might point to the character
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just after the first match; however, it is important for the
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pattern matcher to know that this is not the start of the entire string,
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so that it does not allow
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.QW \fB^\fR
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atoms in the pattern to match.
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The \fIstart\fR argument provides this information by pointing
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to the start of the overall string containing \fItext\fR.
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\fIStart\fR will be less than or equal to \fItext\fR; if it
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is less than \fItext\fR then no \fB^\fR matches will be allowed.
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.PP
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\fBTcl_RegExpRange\fR may be invoked after \fBTcl_RegExpExec\fR
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returns; it provides detailed information about what ranges of
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the string matched what parts of the pattern.
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\fBTcl_RegExpRange\fR returns a pair of pointers in \fI*startPtr\fR
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and \fI*endPtr\fR that identify a range of characters in
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the source string for the most recent call to \fBTcl_RegExpExec\fR.
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\fIIndex\fR indicates which of several ranges is desired:
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if \fIindex\fR is 0, information is returned about the overall range
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of characters that matched the entire pattern; otherwise,
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information is returned about the range of characters that matched the
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\fIindex\fR'th parenthesized subexpression within the pattern.
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If there is no range corresponding to \fIindex\fR then NULL
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is stored in \fI*startPtr\fR and \fI*endPtr\fR.
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.PP
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\fBTcl_GetRegExpFromObj\fR, \fBTcl_RegExpExecObj\fR, and
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\fBTcl_RegExpGetInfo\fR are value interfaces that provide the most
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direct control of Henry Spencer's regular expression library. For
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users that need to modify compilation and execution options directly,
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it is recommended that you use these interfaces instead of calling the
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internal regexp functions. These interfaces handle the details of UTF
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to Unicode translations as well as providing improved performance
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through caching in the pattern and string values.
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.PP
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\fBTcl_GetRegExpFromObj\fR attempts to return a compiled regular
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expression from the \fIpatObj\fR. If the value does not already
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contain a compiled regular expression it will attempt to create one
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from the string in the value and assign it to the internal
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representation of the \fIpatObj\fR. The return value of this function
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is of type \fBTcl_RegExp\fR. The return value is a token for this
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compiled form, which can be used in subsequent calls to
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\fBTcl_RegExpExecObj\fR or \fBTcl_RegExpGetInfo\fR. If an error
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occurs while compiling the regular expression then
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\fBTcl_GetRegExpFromObj\fR returns NULL and leaves an error message in
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the interpreter result. The regular expression token can be used as
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long as the internal representation of \fIpatObj\fR refers to the
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compiled form. The \fIcflags\fR argument is a bit-wise OR of
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zero or more of the following flags that control the compilation of
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\fIpatObj\fR:
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.RS 2
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_ADVANCED\fR
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Compile advanced regular expressions
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.PQ ARE s .
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This mode corresponds to
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the normal regular expression syntax accepted by the Tcl \fBregexp\fR and
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\fBregsub\fR commands.
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_EXTENDED\fR
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Compile extended regular expressions
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.PQ ERE s .
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This mode corresponds
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to the regular expression syntax recognized by Tcl 8.0 and earlier
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versions.
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_BASIC\fR
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Compile basic regular expressions
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.PQ BRE s .
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This mode corresponds
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to the regular expression syntax recognized by common Unix utilities
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like \fBsed\fR and \fBgrep\fR. This is the default if no flags are
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specified.
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_EXPANDED\fR
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Compile the regular expression (basic, extended, or advanced) using an
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expanded syntax that allows comments and whitespace. This mode causes
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non-backslashed non-bracket-expression white
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space and #-to-end-of-line comments to be ignored.
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_QUOTE\fR
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Compile a literal string, with all characters treated as ordinary characters.
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_NOCASE\fR
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Compile for matching that ignores upper/lower case distinctions.
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_NEWLINE\fR
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Compile for newline-sensitive matching. By default, newline is a
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completely ordinary character with no special meaning in either
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regular expressions or strings. With this flag,
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.QW [^
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bracket expressions and
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.QW .
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never match newline,
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.QW ^
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matches an empty string
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after any newline in addition to its normal function, and
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.QW $
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matches
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an empty string before any newline in addition to its normal function.
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\fBREG_NEWLINE\fR is the bit-wise OR of \fBREG_NLSTOP\fR and
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\fBREG_NLANCH\fR.
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_NLSTOP\fR
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Compile for partial newline-sensitive matching,
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with the behavior of
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.QW [^
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bracket expressions and
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.QW .
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affected, but not the behavior of
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.QW ^
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and
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.QW $ .
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In this mode,
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.QW [^
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bracket expressions and
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.QW .
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never match newline.
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_NLANCH\fR
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Compile for inverse partial newline-sensitive matching,
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with the behavior of
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.QW ^
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and
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.QW $
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(the
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.QW anchors )
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affected, but not the behavior of
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.QW [^
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bracket expressions and
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.QW . .
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In this mode
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.QW ^
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matches an empty string
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after any newline in addition to its normal function, and
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.QW $
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matches
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an empty string before any newline in addition to its normal function.
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_NOSUB\fR
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Compile for matching that reports only success or failure,
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not what was matched. This reduces compile overhead and may improve
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performance. Subsequent calls to \fBTcl_RegExpGetInfo\fR or
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\fBTcl_RegExpRange\fR will not report any match information.
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_CANMATCH\fR
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Compile for matching that reports the potential to complete a partial
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match given more text (see below).
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.RE
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.PP
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Only one of
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\fBTCL_REG_EXTENDED\fR,
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\fBTCL_REG_ADVANCED\fR,
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\fBTCL_REG_BASIC\fR, and
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\fBTCL_REG_QUOTE\fR may be specified.
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.PP
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\fBTcl_RegExpExecObj\fR executes the regular expression pattern
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matcher. It returns 1 if \fIobjPtr\fR contains a range of characters
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that match \fIregexp\fR, 0 if no match is found, and \-1 if an error
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occurs. In the case of an error, \fBTcl_RegExpExecObj\fR leaves an
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error message in the interpreter result. The \fInmatches\fR value
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indicates to the matcher how many subexpressions are of interest. If
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\fInmatches\fR is 0, then no subexpression match information is
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recorded, which may allow the matcher to make various optimizations.
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If the value is \-1, then all of the subexpressions in the pattern are
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remembered. If the value is a positive integer, then only that number
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of subexpressions will be remembered. Matching begins at the
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specified Unicode character index given by \fIoffset\fR. Unlike
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\fBTcl_RegExpExec\fR, the behavior of anchors is not affected by the
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offset value. Instead the behavior of the anchors is explicitly
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controlled by the \fIeflags\fR argument, which is a bit-wise OR of
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zero or more of the following flags:
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.RS 2
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_NOTBOL\fR
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The starting character will not be treated as the beginning of a
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line or the beginning of the string, so
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.QW ^
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will not match there.
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Note that this flag has no effect on how
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.QW \fB\eA\fR
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matches.
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.TP
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\fBTCL_REG_NOTEOL\fR
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The last character in the string will not be treated as the end of a
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line or the end of the string, so
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.QW $
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will not match there.
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Note that this flag has no effect on how
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.QW \fB\eZ\fR
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matches.
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.RE
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.PP
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\fBTcl_RegExpGetInfo\fR retrieves information about the last match
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performed with a given regular expression \fIregexp\fR. The
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\fIinfoPtr\fR argument contains a pointer to a structure that is
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defined as follows:
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.PP
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.CS
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typedef struct Tcl_RegExpInfo {
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int \fInsubs\fR;
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Tcl_RegExpIndices *\fImatches\fR;
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long \fIextendStart\fR;
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} \fBTcl_RegExpInfo\fR;
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.CE
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.PP
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The \fInsubs\fR field contains a count of the number of parenthesized
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subexpressions within the regular expression. If the \fBTCL_REG_NOSUB\fR
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was used, then this value will be zero. The \fImatches\fR field
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points to an array of \fInsubs\fR+1 values that indicate the bounds of each
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subexpression matched. The first element in the array refers to the
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range matched by the entire regular expression, and subsequent elements
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refer to the parenthesized subexpressions in the order that they
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appear in the pattern. Each element is a structure that is defined as
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follows:
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.PP
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.CS
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typedef struct Tcl_RegExpIndices {
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long \fIstart\fR;
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long \fIend\fR;
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} \fBTcl_RegExpIndices\fR;
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.CE
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.PP
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The \fIstart\fR and \fIend\fR values are Unicode character indices
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relative to the offset location within \fIobjPtr\fR where matching began.
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The \fIstart\fR index identifies the first character of the matched
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subexpression. The \fIend\fR index identifies the first character
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after the matched subexpression. If the subexpression matched the
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empty string, then \fIstart\fR and \fIend\fR will be equal. If the
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subexpression did not participate in the match, then \fIstart\fR and
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\fIend\fR will be set to \-1.
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.PP
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The \fIextendStart\fR field in \fBTcl_RegExpInfo\fR is only set if the
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\fBTCL_REG_CANMATCH\fR flag was used. It indicates the first
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character in the string where a match could occur. If a match was
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found, this will be the same as the beginning of the current match.
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If no match was found, then it indicates the earliest point at which a
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match might occur if additional text is appended to the string. If it
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is no match is possible even with further text, this field will be set
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to \-1.
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.SH "SEE ALSO"
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re_syntax(n)
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.SH KEYWORDS
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match, pattern, regular expression, string, subexpression, Tcl_RegExpIndices, Tcl_RegExpInfo
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