Home

Awesome

regroup

Simple library to match regex expression named groups into go struct using struct tags and automatic parsing

codecov License PkgGoDev Go Report Card codeclimate

Installing

go get github.com/oriser/regroup

Example

Named groups map

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"github.com/oriser/regroup"
)

var re = regroup.MustCompile(`(?P<duration>.*?)\s+(?P<num>\d+)\s+(?P<foo>.*)`)

func main() {
	matches, err := re.Groups("5s 123 bar")
	if err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}
	fmt.Printf("%+v\n", matches)
}

Will output: map[duration:5s foo:bar num:123]

Single match

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"github.com/oriser/regroup"
	"time"
)

var re = regroup.MustCompile(`(?P<duration>.*?)\s+(?P<num>\d+)\s+(?P<foo>.*)`)

type B struct {
	Str string `regroup:"foo"`
}

type A struct {
	Number        int           `regroup:"num"`
	Dur           time.Duration `regroup:"duration"`
	AnotherStruct B
}

func main() {
	a := &A{}
	if err := re.MatchToTarget("5s 123 bar", a); err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}
	fmt.Printf("%+v\n", a)
}

Will output: &{Number:123 Dur:5s AnotherStruct:{Str:bar}}

Multiple matches

You can also get all matches parsed as given target struct. The return value in this case will be an array of interfaces, you should cast it to the target type in order to access its fields.

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"github.com/oriser/regroup"
	"time"
)

var re = regroup.MustCompile(`\s*(?P<duration>.*?)\s+(?P<num>\d+)\s+(?P<foo>.*)`)

type B struct {
	Str string `regroup:"foo"`
}

type A struct {
	Number        int           `regroup:"num"`
	Dur           time.Duration `regroup:"duration"`
	AnotherStruct B
}

func main() {
	a := &A{}
	s := `5s 123 bar1
		  1m 456 bar2
		  10h 789 bar3`
	rets, err := re.MatchAllToTarget(s, -1, a)
	if err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}
	for _, elem := range rets {
		fmt.Printf("%+v\n", elem.(*A))
	}
}

Will output:

&{Number:123 Dur:5s AnotherStruct:{Str:bar1}}
&{Number:456 Dur:1m0s AnotherStruct:{Str:bar2}}
&{Number:789 Dur:10h0m0s AnotherStruct:{Str:bar3}}

Required groups

You can specify that a specific group is required, means that it can't be empty.

If a required group is empty, an error (*regroup.RequiredGroupIsEmpty) will be returned .

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"github.com/oriser/regroup"
	"time"
)

var re = regroup.MustCompile(`(?P<duration>.*?)\s+(?P<num>\d+)\s+(?P<foo>.*)`)

type B struct {
	Str string `regroup:"foo,required"`
}

type A struct {
	Number        int           `regroup:"num"`
	Dur           time.Duration `regroup:"duration"`
	AnotherStruct B
}

func main() {
	a := &A{}
	if err := re.MatchToTarget("5s 123 ", a); err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}
	fmt.Printf("%+v\n", a)
}

Will return an error: required regroup "foo" is empty for field "Str"

Existence Match Groups

You can check for the presence of an optional group using a bool with the exists tag.

package main

type Exist struct {
	IsAdmin bool `regroup:"is_admin,exists"`
}

func main() {
	r := MustCompile(`^(?P<name>\w*)(?:,(?P<is_admin>admin))?$`)
	parsed := &Exist{}
	if err := r.MatchToTarget("bob_smith", parsed); err != nil {
		panic(err)
	}
	fmt.Printf("%t\n", parsed.IsAdmin)
}

This example would print false. However if the input were bob_smith,admin it would print true. When using the exists tag, make ure that you regular expression has an optional group and matches all the expected input patterns.

Supported struct field types

Pointers and nested structs are also supported, both on single match and multiple matches