Awesome
<br> <h1 align="center">Verbal Exprejon</h1> <p align="center"><a href="https://github.com/VerbalExpressions/JSVerbalExpressions/">VerbalExpressions</a> with a lisp</p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://travis-ci.org/GuillaumeBadi/Verbal-Exprejon"><img src="https://travis-ci.org/GuillaumeBadi/Verbal-Exprejon.svg?branch=master" alt="travis"></a> <a href="https://github.com/GuillaumeBadi/vimconfig"><img src="http://imgh.us/Slice_1_2.svg" width="98" alt="travis"></a> </p> <br> <br>Usage
Create a Regex
(def url
(->> (then "http")
(maybe "s")
(then "://")
(maybe "www.")
(anything-but " ")
(end-of-line)))
(re-matches url "http://www.google.com")
Create your own midleware
A middleware is a function that takes a regex as its last parameter, and output a regex.
; Match a `domain` url like https://domain.com
(defpattern url?
"Match if it is a url"
[domain]
(->> (then "http")
(maybe "s")
(then "://")
(maybe "www.")
(then domain)
(anything-but " ")))
Reuse your middlewares
Match stuff like https://www.facebook.com facebook
or https://www.google.com google
(defpattern url-name
"Match if it is a domain url followed by its name"
[domain]
(->> (url? domain)
(then " ")
(then domain)))
(def match (matcher url-name "google"))
(println (match "https://www.google.com google"))
;; -> true
Examples:
(defpattern hour-pattern
"Matches an hour"
[] (->> (interval [\0 \9])
(times [1 2])
(any-blank)
(maybe (OR ["h" (->> (then "hour") (maybe "s"))]))))
(defpattern minute-pattern
"Matches a minute"
[] (->> (interval [\0 \9])
(times [1 2])
(any-blank)
(maybe (OR ["m" (->> (then "minute") (maybe "s"))]))))
(defpattern second-pattern
"Matches a second"
[] (->> (interval [\0 \9])
(times [1 2])
(any-blank)
(maybe (OR ["s" (->> (then "second") (maybe "s"))]))))
(defpattern time-separator
"Matches the separation between hours, minutes and seconds"
[] (maybe (->> (any-blank)
(maybe (OR ["and" " " ", " ":"]))
(any-blank))))
(defpattern time-pattern
"Matches a time"
[] (->> (maybe (->> (hour)
(time-separator)))
(maybe (->> (minute)
(time-separator)))
(maybe (second))))
(def time? (matcher time-pattern))
(defn testit
[time]
(time? time))
(testit "12h")
(testit "12h5")
(testit "12h05")
(testit "12h30m")
(testit "12:07")
(testit "12hours")
(testit "12hours and 3 minutes")
(testit "12:5:4")
(testit "12h and 5 minutes")
(testit "5 hours")
(testit "12 minutes")
(testit "12 minutes and 5 seconds")
(testit "5s")
Reference
(then "string")
:
Matches the string literally
(maybe "string")
:
Matches the string if any
(anything)
:
Matches anything
(anything-but "string")
:
Matches anything except the provided value
(one-or-more)
:
Matches the previous middleware one ore more times
(zero-or-more)
:
Matches the previous middleware zero or more times
(any "letters")
:
Matches any letter from the provided string
(any-blank)
:
Matches any blank characters including line breaks, spaces and tabs
(end-of-line)
:
Matches the end of a line
(start-of-line)
:
Matches the start of a line
(line-break)
:
Matches a \n
(interval [characters])
:
Matches the pairs ranges provided. Examples:
;; matches any letter between a-z and A-Z
(interval \a \z \A \Z)
(tab)
:
Matches a tabulation
(word)
:
Matches a word (case insensitive)
(OR [vector])
:
Matches the first matching expression in the vector
(times [start end])
:
Matches the previous middleware from start
times to end
times
Example:
; [0-9]{1,3}
(interval \0 \9)
(times [1 3])
(words-split-by [delimiters])
:
Matches a sequence of words split by any delimiters in the provided vector
(sentence)
:
Matches a sequence of words split by spaces
License
This has been done by a Clojure newbie.
Copyright © 2016 Guillaume Badi
Distributed under the MIT License