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Expand POSIX bracket expressions (character classes) in glob patterns.

Install

Install with npm:

$ npm install --save expand-brackets

Install with yarn:

$ yarn add expand-brackets

Usage

var brackets = require('expand-brackets');
brackets(string[, options]);

Params

The main export is a function that takes the following parameters:

Example

console.log(brackets('[![:lower:]]'));
//=> '[^a-z]'

API

brackets

Parses the given POSIX character class pattern and returns a string that can be used for creating regular expressions for matching.

Params

.match

Takes an array of strings and a POSIX character class pattern, and returns a new array with only the strings that matched the pattern.

Params

Example

const brackets = require('expand-brackets');
console.log(brackets.match(['1', 'a', 'ab'], '[[:alpha:]]'));
//=> ['a']

console.log(brackets.match(['1', 'a', 'ab'], '[[:alpha:]]+'));
//=> ['a', 'ab']

.isMatch

Returns true if the specified string matches the given brackets pattern.

Params

Example

const brackets = require('expand-brackets');

console.log(brackets.isMatch('a.a', '[[:alpha:]].[[:alpha:]]'));
//=> true
console.log(brackets.isMatch('1.2', '[[:alpha:]].[[:alpha:]]'));
//=> false

.matcher

Takes a POSIX character class pattern and returns a matcher function. The returned function takes the string to match as its only argument.

Params

Example

const brackets = require('expand-brackets');
const isMatch = brackets.matcher('[[:lower:]].[[:upper:]]');

console.log(isMatch('a.a'));
//=> false
console.log(isMatch('a.A'));
//=> true

.makeRe

Create a regular expression from the given pattern.

Params

Example

const brackets = require('expand-brackets');
const re = brackets.makeRe('[[:alpha:]]');
console.log(re);
//=> /^(?:[a-zA-Z])$/

.create

Parses the given POSIX character class pattern and returns an object with the compiled output and optional source map.

Params

Example

const brackets = require('expand-brackets');
console.log(brackets('[[:alpha:]]'));
// { options: { source: 'string' },
//   input: '[[:alpha:]]',
//   state: {},
//   compilers:
//    { eos: [Function],
//      noop: [Function],
//      bos: [Function],
//      not: [Function],
//      escape: [Function],
//      text: [Function],
//      posix: [Function],
//      bracket: [Function],
//      'bracket.open': [Function],
//      'bracket.inner': [Function],
//      'bracket.literal': [Function],
//      'bracket.close': [Function] },
//   output: '[a-zA-Z]',
//   ast:
//    { type: 'root',
//      errors: [],
//      nodes: [ [Object], [Object], [Object] ] },
//   parsingErrors: [] }

Options

options.sourcemap

Generate a source map for the given pattern.

Example

var res = brackets('[:alpha:]', {sourcemap: true});

console.log(res.map);
// { version: 3,
//   sources: [ 'brackets' ],
//   names: [],
//   mappings: 'AAAA,MAAS',
//   sourcesContent: [ '[:alpha:]' ] }

POSIX Character classes

The following named POSIX bracket expressions are supported:

See posix-character-classes for more details.

Not supported

Changelog

v4.0.0

Breaking changes

v3.0.0

Breaking changes

v2.0.0

Breaking changes

Added features

v0.2.0

In addition to performance and matching improvements, the v0.2.0 refactor adds complete POSIX character class support, with the exception of equivalence classes and POSIX.2 collating symbols which are not relevant to node.js usage.

Added features

source map example

var brackets = require('expand-brackets');
var res = brackets('[:alpha:]');
console.log(res.map);

{ version: 3,
     sources: [ 'brackets' ],
     names: [],
     mappings: 'AAAA,MAAS',
     sourcesContent: [ '[:alpha:]' ] }

About

Related projects

Contributing

Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, please create an issue.

Contributors

CommitsContributor
69jonschlinkert
13danez
2MartinKolarik
2es128
1doowb
1eush77
1mjbvz

Building docs

(This project's readme.md is generated by verb, please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the .verb.md readme template.)

To generate the readme, run the following command:

$ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb

Running tests

Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command:

$ npm install && npm test

Author

Jon Schlinkert

License

Copyright © 2018, Jon Schlinkert. Released under the MIT License.


This file was generated by verb-generate-readme, v0.6.0, on April 30, 2018.