Awesome
RegExplain
Regular expressions are tricky. RegExplain makes it easier to see what you’re doing.
<!-- [![packageversion](https://img.shields.io/github/description/v/gadenbuie/regexplain.svg)](commits/master) --> <!-- [![Last-changedate](https://img.shields.io/badge/last%20change-2020--07--02-yellowgreen.svg)](/commits/master) --> <!-- Links -->RegExplain is an RStudio addin slash utility belt for regular expressions. Interactively build your regexp, check the output of common string matching functions, consult the interactive help pages, or use the included resources to learn regular expressions. And more.
Inspired by RegExr.com and stringr::str_view()
.
Installation
Installation is easy with remotes
# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("gadenbuie/regexplain")
RegExplain in Action
Overview
Regular Expressions Library
Try the Built-In Examples
RStudio Addin
The main feature of this package is the RStudio Addin RegExplain Selection. Just select the text or object containing text (such as the variable name of a vector or a data.frame column) and run RegExplain Selection from the RStudio Addins dropdown.
<img src="docs/rstudio-addin-list.png" width = "250px;" alt="regexplain in the Rstudio Addins dropdown">You can also open the addin with regexplain_gadget()
. This allows you
to pass text or a regular expression to the gadget, which is useful when
you want to work with a regular expression in your code or environment.
regexplain_gadget(text_vector, "\\b(red|blue|green): \\d{3}")
The addin will open an interface with 4 panes where you can
- edit the text you’ve imported
- build up a regex expression and interactively see it applied to your text
- test the output of common string matching and replacement
functions from
base
andstringr
- and refer to a helpful cheatsheet
When you’re done, click on the Send Regex to Console to send your regex expression to… the console!
> pattern <- "\\b(red|orange|yellow|green|blue|purple|white|brown)(?:\\s(\\w+))?"
Notice that RegExplain handled the extra backslashes needed for
storing the RegEx characters \b
, \s
, and \w
. Inside the gadget you
can use regular old regular expressions as you found them in the wild
(hello, Stack
Overflow!).
Help and Cheat Sheet
The Help tab is full of resources, guides, and R packages and includes an easy-to-navigate reference of commonly used regular expression syntax.
Open RegExplain Cheatsheet from the RStudio Addins drop down to open the regex reference page in the Viewer pane without blocking your current R session.
Import Your Text
There are two ways to get your text into RegExplain. The first way was described above: select an object name or lines of text or code in the RStudio source pane and run RegExplain Selection. To import text from a file, use RegExplain File to you import the text you want to process with regular expressions.
When importing text, RegExplain automatically reduces the text to the unique entries and limits the number of lines.
Regular Expressions Library
The RegExplain gadget includes a regular expressions library in the RegEx tab. The library features common regular expressions, sourced from qdapRegex and Regex Hub, with several additional patterns.
The full library is stored as a JSON file in inst/extdata/patterns.json, feel free to contribute patterns you find useful or use regularly via pull request.
<img src="docs/regexplain-gadget-library.png" height="400px" alt="regexplain library modal">View Static Regex Results
RegExplain provides the function view_regex()
that you can use as a
stringr::str_view()
replacement. In addition to highlighting matched
portions of the text, view_regex()
colorizes groups and attempts to
colorize the regex expression itself as well.
text <- c("breakfast=eggs;lunch=pizza",
"breakfast=bacon;lunch=spaghetti",
"no food here")
pattern <- "((\\w+)=)(\\w+).+(ch=s?p)"
view_regex(text, pattern)
t_nested <- "anestedgroupwithingroupexample"
r_nested <- "(a(nested)(group(within(group))(example)))"
view_regex(t_nested, r_nested)
Notes
Regular expressions are nothing if not a collection of corner cases. Trying to pass regular expressions through Shiny and HTML inputs is a bit of a labyrinth. For now, assume any issues or oddities you experience with this addin are entirely my fault and have nothing to do with the fine packages this addin is built on. If you do find an issue, please file an issue. Pull requests are welcomed!