I have special strings like name1="value1" name2='value2'. Values can contain whitespaces and are delimited by either single quotes or double quotes. Names never contain whitespaces. name/value pairs are separated by whitespaces.
I want to parse them into a list of name-value pairs like this
string.magic_split() => { "name1"=>"value1", "name2"=>"value2" }
If Ruby understood lookaround assertions, I could do this by
string.split(/[\'\"](?=\s)/).each do |element|
element =~ /(\w+)=[\'\"](.*)[\'\"]/
hash[$1] = $2
end
but Ruby does not understand lookaround assertions, so I am somewhat stuck.
However, I am sure that there are much more elegant ways to solve this problem anyway, so I turn to you. Do you have a good idea for solving this problem?
This fails on values like '"hi" she said', but it might be good enough.
str = %q(name1="value1" name2='value 2')
p Hash[ *str.chop.split( /' |" |='|="/ ) ]
#=> {"name1"=>"value1", "name2"=>"value 2"}
This is not a complete answer, but Oniguruma, the standard regexp library in 1.9 supports lookaround assertions. It can be installed as a gem if you are using Ruby 1.8.x.
That said, and as Sorpigal has commented, instead of using a regexp I would be inclined to iterate through the string one character at a time keeping track of whether you are in a name portion, when you reach the equals sign, when you are within quotes and when you reach a matched closing quote. On reaching a closing quote you can put the name and value into the hash and proceed to the next entry.
class String
def magic_split
str = self.gsub('"', '\'').gsub('\' ', '\'\, ').split('\, ').map{ |str| str.gsub("'", "").split("=") }
Hash[str]
end
end
This should do it for you.
class SpecialString
def self.parse(string)
string.split.map{|s| s.split("=") }.inject({}) {|h, a| h[a[0]] = a[1].gsub(/"|'/, ""); h }
end
end
Have a try with : /[='"] ?/
I don't know Ruby syntax but here is a Perl script you could translate
#!/usr/bin/perl
use 5.10.1;
use warnings;
use strict;
use Data::Dumper;
my $str = qq/name1="val ue1" name2='va lue2'/;
my #list = split/[='"] ?/,$str;
my %hash;
for (my $i=0; $i<#list;$i+=3) {
$hash{$list[$i]} = $list[$i+2];
}
say Dumper \%hash;
Output :
$VAR1 = {
'name2' => 'va lue2',
'name1' => 'val ue1'
};
Related
I have a string as given below,
./component/unit
and need to split to get result as component/unit which I will use this as key for inserting hash.
I tried with .split(/.\//).last but its giving result as unit only not getting component/unit.
I think, this should help you:
string = './component/unit'
string.split('./')
#=> ["", "component/unit"]
string.split('./').last
#=> "component/unit"
Your regex was almost fine :
split(/\.\//)
You need to escape both . (any character) and / (regex delimiter).
As an alternative, you could just remove the first './' substring :
'./component/unit'.sub('./','')
#=> "component/unit"
All the other answers are fine, but I think you are not really dealing with a String here but with a URI or Pathname, so I would advise you to use these classes if you can. If so, please adjust the title, as it is not about do-it-yourself-regexes, but about proper use of the available libraries.
Link to the ruby doc:
https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/2.1.0/URI.html
and
https://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.1.0/libdoc/pathname/rdoc/Pathname.html
An example with Pathname is:
require 'pathname'
pathname = Pathname.new('./component/unit')
puts pathname.cleanpath # => "component/unit"
# pathname.to_s # => "component/unit"
Whether this is a good idea (and/or using URI would be cool too) also depends on what your real problem is, i.e. what you want to do with the extracted String. As stated, I doubt a bit that you are really intested in Strings.
Using a positive lookbehind, you could do use regex:
reg = /(?<=\.\/)[\w+\/]+\w+\z/
Demo
str = './component'
str2 = './component/unit'
str3 = './component/unit/ruby'
str4 = './component/unit/ruby/regex'
[str, str2, str3, str4].each { |s| puts s[reg] }
#component
#component/unit
#component/unit/ruby
#component/unit/ruby/regex
I'm trying to match a list of attributes that may have quotes around their value, something like this:
aaa=bbb ccc="ddd" eee=fff
What I want to get is a list of key/value without the quotes.
'aaa' => 'bbb', 'ccc' => 'ddd', 'eee' => 'fff'
The code (ruby) looks like this now :
attrs = {}
str.scan(/(\w+)=(".*?"|\S+)/).each do |k,v|
attrs[k] = v.sub(/^"(.*)"$/, '\1')
end
I don't know if I can get rid of the quotes by just using the regex.
Any idea ?
Thanks !
Try using the pipe for the possible attribue patterns, which is either EQUALS, QUOTE, NO-QUOTE, QUOTE, or EQUALS, NO-WHITESPACE.
str.scan(/(\w+)=("[^"]+"|\S+)/).each do |k, v|
puts "#{k}=#{v}"
end
Tested.
EDIT | Hmm, ok, I give up on a 'pure' regex solution (that will allow whitespace inside the quotes anyway). But you can do this:
attrs = {}
str.scan(/(\w+)=(?:(\w+)|"([^"]+)")/).each do |key, v_word, v_quot|
attrs[key] = v_word || v_quot
end
The key here is to capture the two alternatives and take advantage of the fact that whichever one wasn't matched will be nil.
If you want to allow whitespace around the = just add a \s* on either side of it.
I was able to get rid of the quotes in the regex, but only if I matched the quotes as well.
s = "aaa=bbb ccc=\"ddd\" eee=fff"
s.scan(/([^=]*)=(["]*)([^" ]*)(["]*)[ ]*/).each {|k, _, v, _ | puts "key=#{k} value=#{v}" }
Output is:
key=aaa value=bbb
key=ccc value=ddd
key=eee value=fff
(Match not =)=(Match 0 or more ")(Match not " or space)(Match 0 or more ")zero or more spaces
Then just ignore the quote matches in the processing.
I tried a number of combinations with OR's but could not get the operator precedence and matching to work correctly.
I don't know ruby, but maybe something like ([^ =]*)="?((?<=")[^"]*|[^ ]*)"? works?
How do I remove a substring after a certain character in a string using Ruby?
new_str = str.slice(0..(str.index('blah')))
I find that "Part1?Part2".split('?')[0] is easier to read.
I'm surprised nobody suggested to use 'gsub'
irb> "truncate".gsub(/a.*/, 'a')
=> "trunca"
The bang version of gsub can be used to modify the string.
str = "Hello World"
stopchar = 'W'
str.sub /#{stopchar}.+/, stopchar
#=> "Hello W"
A special case is if you have multiple occurrences of the same character and you want to delete from the last occurrence to the end (not the first one).
Following what Jacob suggested, you just have to use rindex instead of index as rindex gets the index of the character in the string but starting from the end.
Something like this:
str = '/path/to/some_file'
puts str.slice(0, str.index('/')) # => ""
puts str.slice(0, str.rindex('/')) # => "/path/to"
We can also use partition and rpartitiondepending on whether we want to use the first or last instance of the specified character:
string = "abc-123-xyz"
last_char = "-"
string.partition(last_char)[0..1].join #=> "abc-"
string.rpartition(last_char)[0..1].join #=> "abc-123-"
I want to strip leading and trailing quotes, in Ruby, from a string. The quote character will occur 0 or 1 time. For example, all of the following should be converted to foo,bar:
"foo,bar"
"foo,bar
foo,bar"
foo,bar
You could also use the chomp function, but it unfortunately only works in the end of the string, assuming there was a reverse chomp, you could:
'"foo,bar"'.rchomp('"').chomp('"')
Implementing rchomp is straightforward:
class String
def rchomp(sep = $/)
self.start_with?(sep) ? self[sep.size..-1] : self
end
end
Note that you could also do it inline, with the slightly less efficient version:
'"foo,bar"'.chomp('"').reverse.chomp('"').reverse
EDIT: Since Ruby 2.5, rchomp(x) is available under the name delete_prefix, and chomp(x) is available as delete_suffix, meaning that you can use
'"foo,bar"'.delete_prefix('"').delete_suffix('"')
I can use gsub to search for the leading or trailing quote and replace it with an empty string:
s = "\"foo,bar\""
s.gsub!(/^\"|\"?$/, '')
As suggested by comments below, a better solution is:
s.gsub!(/\A"|"\Z/, '')
As usual everyone grabs regex from the toolbox first. :-)
As an alternate I'll recommend looking into .tr('"', '') (AKA "translate") which, in this use, is really stripping the quotes.
Another approach would be
remove_quotations('"foo,bar"')
def remove_quotations(str)
if str.start_with?('"')
str = str.slice(1..-1)
end
if str.end_with?('"')
str = str.slice(0..-2)
end
end
It is without RegExps and start_with?/end_with? are nicely readable.
It frustrates me that strip only works on whitespace. I need to strip all kinds of characters! Here's a String extension that will fix that:
class String
def trim sep=/\s/
sep_source = sep.is_a?(Regexp) ? sep.source : Regexp.escape(sep)
pattern = Regexp.new("\\A(#{sep_source})*(.*?)(#{sep_source})*\\z")
self[pattern, 2]
end
end
Output
'"foo,bar"'.trim '"' # => "foo,bar"
'"foo,bar'.trim '"' # => "foo,bar"
'foo,bar"'.trim '"' # => "foo,bar"
'foo,bar'.trim '"' # => "foo,bar"
' foo,bar'.trim # => "foo,bar"
'afoo,bare'.trim /[aeiou]/ # => "foo,bar"
Assuming that quotes can only appear at the beginning or end, you could just remove all quotes, without any custom method:
'"foo,bar"'.delete('"')
I wanted the same but for slashes in url path, which can be /test/test/test/ (so that it has the stripping characters in the middle) and eventually came up with something like this to avoid regexps:
'/test/test/test/'.split('/').reject(|i| i.empty?).join('/')
Which in this case translates obviously to:
'"foo,bar"'.split('"').select{|i| i != ""}.join('"')
or
'"foo,bar"'.split('"').reject{|i| i.empty?}.join('"')
Regexs can be pretty heavy and lead to some funky errors. If you are not dealing with massive strings and the data is pretty uniform you can use a simpler approach.
If you know the strings have starting and leading quotes you can splice the entire string:
string = "'This has quotes!'"
trimmed = string[1..-2]
puts trimmed # "This has quotes!"
This can also be turned into a simple function:
# In this case, 34 is \" and 39 is ', you can add other codes etc.
def trim_chars(string, char_codes=[34, 39])
if char_codes.include?(string[0]) && char_codes.include?(string[-1])
string[1..-2]
else
string
end
end
You can strip non-optional quotes with scan:
'"foo"bar"'.scan(/"(.*)"/)[0][0]
# => "foo\"bar"
I want to replace the last occurrence of a substring in Ruby. What's the easiest way?
For example, in abc123abc123, I want to replace the last abc to ABC. How do I do that?
How about
new_str = old_str.reverse.sub(pattern.reverse, replacement.reverse).reverse
For instance:
irb(main):001:0> old_str = "abc123abc123"
=> "abc123abc123"
irb(main):002:0> pattern="abc"
=> "abc"
irb(main):003:0> replacement="ABC"
=> "ABC"
irb(main):004:0> new_str = old_str.reverse.sub(pattern.reverse, replacement.reverse).reverse
=> "abc123ABC123"
"abc123abc123".gsub(/(.*(abc.*)*)(abc)(.*)/, '\1ABC\4')
#=> "abc123ABC123"
But probably there is a better way...
Edit:
...which Chris kindly provided in the comment below.
So, as * is a greedy operator, the following is enough:
"abc123abc123".gsub(/(.*)(abc)(.*)/, '\1ABC\3')
#=> "abc123ABC123"
Edit2:
There is also a solution which neatly illustrates parallel array assignment in Ruby:
*a, b = "abc123abc123".split('abc', -1)
a.join('abc')+'ABC'+b
#=> "abc123ABC123"
Since Ruby 2.0 we can use \K which removes any text matched before it from the returned match. Combine with a greedy operator and you get this:
'abc123abc123'.sub(/.*\Kabc/, 'ABC')
#=> "abc123ABC123"
This is about 1.4 times faster than using capturing groups as Hirurg103 suggested, but that speed comes at the cost of lowering readability by using a lesser-known pattern.
more info on \K: https://www.regular-expressions.info/keep.html
Here's another possible solution:
>> s = "abc123abc123"
=> "abc123abc123"
>> s[s.rindex('abc')...(s.rindex('abc') + 'abc'.length)] = "ABC"
=> "ABC"
>> s
=> "abc123ABC123"
When searching in huge streams of data, using reverse will definitively* lead to performance issues. I use string.rpartition*:
sub_or_pattern = "!"
replacement = "?"
string = "hello!hello!hello"
array_of_pieces = string.rpartition sub_or_pattern
( array_of_pieces[(array_of_pieces.find_index sub_or_pattern)] = replacement ) rescue nil
p array_of_pieces.join
# "hello!hello?hello"
The same code must work with a string with no occurrences of sub_or_pattern:
string = "hello_hello_hello"
# ...
# "hello_hello_hello"
*rpartition uses rb_str_subseq() internally. I didn't check if that function returns a copy of the string, but I think it preserves the chunk of memory used by that part of the string. reverse uses rb_enc_cr_str_copy_for_substr(), which suggests that copies are done all the time -- although maybe in the future a smarter String class may be implemented (having a flag reversed set to true, and having all of its functions operating backwards when that is set), as of now, it is inefficient.
Moreover, Regex patterns can't be simply reversed. The question only asks for replacing the last occurrence of a sub-string, so, that's OK, but readers in the need of something more robust won't benefit from the most voted answer (as of this writing)
You can achieve this with String#sub and greedy regexp .* like this:
'abc123abc123'.sub(/(.*)abc/, '\1ABC')
simple and efficient:
s = "abc123abc123abc"
p = "123"
s.slice!(s.rindex(p), p.size)
s == "abc123abcabc"
string = "abc123abc123"
pattern = /abc/
replacement = "ABC"
matches = string.scan(pattern).length
index = 0
string.gsub(pattern) do |match|
index += 1
index == matches ? replacement : match
end
#=> abc123ABC123
I've used this handy helper method quite a bit:
def gsub_last(str, source, target)
return str unless str.include?(source)
top, middle, bottom = str.rpartition(source)
"#{top}#{target}#{bottom}"
end
If you want to make it more Rails-y, extend it on the String class itself:
class String
def gsub_last(source, target)
return self unless self.include?(source)
top, middle, bottom = self.rpartition(source)
"#{top}#{target}#{bottom}"
end
end
Then you can just call it directly on any String instance, eg "fooBAR123BAR".gsub_last("BAR", "FOO") == "fooBAR123FOO"
.gsub /abc(?=[^abc]*$)/, 'ABC'
Matches a "abc" and then asserts ((?=) is positive lookahead) that no other characters up to the end of the string are "abc".