Description
Use the RegExpr.ModifierStr
property to turn on and off modifiers applied to the regular expressions. The following modifiers are available:
Modifier key | Default state | Description |
---|---|---|
i | Enabled | Makes the pattern match case-insensitive. |
m | Disabled | Treats string as multiple lines. In this mode, the caret ^ and dollar $ match before and after newlines in the subject string. See also Line separators . |
s | Enabled | Treats string as single lines. In this mode, the dot matches new lines. See also Line separators. |
g | Enabled |
Controls greedy mode. Non-standard modifier. "Greedy" repetition operator takes as many matching characters as possible, "non-greedy" takes as few as possible. For example, b+ and b* applied to string abbbbc will return bbbb, where as b+? will return b and b*? will return an empty string. Switching into non-greedy mode makes + work as +?, * as *? and so on. |
x | Disabled |
Permits whitespaces and comments in the pattern. Non-standard modifier. In this mode, the whitespaces (\s) that are neither backslashed nor within a character class are ignored. You can use this to break up your regular expression into more readable parts. Also the # character is treated as a metacharacter introducing a comment. For example: ( # This pattern matches If you want to place a whitespace or # characters in the pattern, then you have to prefix them with / or encode them using hex notations (\xNN). |
Declaration
RegExprObj.ModifierStr
Read-Write Property | String |
RegExprObj | An expression, variable or parameter that specifies a reference to a RegExpr object |
Applies To
The property is applied to the following object:
Property Value
The string that contains any combination of modifier keys.
If a modifier key is prefixed with the minus sign the modifier turns off. For example, ModifierStr := 'ig-s'
enables case-insensitive matching and greedy mode and disables single-line mode.
Remarks
To apply modifiers inside a regular expression or to a part of the regular expression specify a modifier keys within the (? ) structure. For example, expression (?i)te(?-i)st should match test and TEst, but not teST or TEST.
If you try to specify unsupported modifier keys an error occurs.
Example
The following example specifies a regular expression’s modifier to make the pattern case-insensitive and to enable the multiline mode. It finds the first words in all the lines that start with “l” or “L”.
DelphiScript
var
MyRegExpr : OleVariant;
Modifier: string;
Input, Expr, ResStr: string;
begin
MyRegExpr := HISUtils.RegExpr;
Input := 'L' + #13 + 'line' + #13 + 'string';
MyRegExpr.InputString := Input;
// Specifies a regular expression's modifier
// Makes the pattern case-insensitive and enables the multiline mode
MyRegExpr.ModifierStr := 'mi';
// Specifies patters for lines that starts with "l"
MyRegExpr.Expression := '^L([\w]+)*( +[\w]+)*';
if MyRegExpr.Exec(Input) then
begin
repeat
ResStr := MyRegExpr.Match[0];
// Posts a line that starts with "l" to the log
Log.Message(ResStr);
until not MyRegExpr.ExecNext
end;
end;
See Also
Using Regular Expressions in Scripts
Using Regular Expressions in Scripts
InputString Property