---
title: "regreplaceR"
output: rmarkdown::html_vignette
vignette: >
%\VignetteIndexEntry{regreplaceR}
%\VignetteEngine{knitr::rmarkdown}
%\VignetteEncoding{UTF-8}
---
```{r, include = FALSE}
knitr::opts_chunk$set(
collapse = TRUE,
comment = "#>"
)
```
# regreplaceR
This R package provides 4 tiny regex tools to extract, match, and replace named regex groups in strings.
It contains in addition to 3 functions `groups()`, `match_group()` and `replace_group()` and an `R6` class `Replacer`
which is thought as the main interface of this package.
## Installation
You can install this package by installing it from CRAN or from this GitHub repository.
```{r, eval=FALSE}
# install directly from CRAN
install.packages("regreplaceR")
# or install directly from this github repository
# install the devtools package if not already installed
install.packages("devtools")
# install the package directly from this repository
devtools::install_github("gwangjinkim/regreplaceR")
```
## Overview
The package offers three core functions to interact with strings using regular expressions with named groups:
- groups(): Extract all named groups from a string.
- match_group(): Extract a specific named group.
- replace_group(): Replace the value of a specific named group.
Additionally, it includes an R6 class called Replacer that encapsulates these functionalities for a more
object-oriented approach to regex-based operations.
I couldn't use `match()` and `replace()` as generic functions, because there are already generic functions
which require a specific set of arguments.
By using an R6 class, I was free to choose the arguments for `match()` and `replace()`.
## 1. groups()
This function extracts all named groups from a string based on a provided regex pattern.
```{r}
library(regreplaceR)
pattern <- "(?P\\w+) is (?P\\d+)"
s <- "Jane is 25"
result <- groups(pattern, s)
# Output:
# $name
# [1] "Jane"
#
# $age
# [1] "25"
```
## 2. match_group()
Extract the value of a specific named group from the string.
```{r}
library(regreplaceR)
pattern <- "(?P\\w+) is (?P\\d+)"
s <- "Jane is 25"
name <- match_group(pattern, s, "name")
# Output:
# [1] "Jane"
```
## 3. replace_group()
Replace the value of a specific named group with a new string.
```{r}
library(regreplaceR)
pattern <- "(?P\\w+) is (?P\\d+)"
s <- "Jane is 25"
modified <- replace_group(pattern, s, "name", "John")
# Output:
# [1] "John is 25"
```
## 4. The Replacer Class
The Replacer class in the regreplace package provides utilities for
regex operations, such as matching and replacing named groups.
### Example Usage
```{r}
library(regreplaceR)
# Create a new Replacer object
r <- Replacer$new(pattern = ".*?_(?P\\d{8}-\\d{6})(?P\\..+$)")
# Match a group within a string
date <- r$match("file_20230905-123456.txt", "date")
# Replace the value of a matched group
modified_string <- r$replace("file_20230905-123456.txt", "date", "20240905-123456")
## simpler example:
# Create a Replacer object with a regex pattern
r <- Replacer$new(pattern="(?P\\w+) is (?P\\d+)")
# Match the "name" group in the string
name_match <- r$match("Jane is 25", "name")
print(name_match) # Should print "Jane"
# Match the "age" group in the string
age_match <- r$match("Jane is 25", "age")
print(age_match) # Should print "25"
# Replace the "name" group in the string
replaced_string <- r$replace("Jane is 25", "name", "John")
print(replaced_string) # Should print "John is 25"
```
## Class Methods
- match(): Extracts the value of a named group from the string.
- replace(): Replaces the value of a named group with a specified string.
## License
This package is licensed under the MIT License. See LICENSE for details.
Happy regexing! If you have any questions or find any bugs, please feel
free to open an issue on the GitHub repository.