🔍 An RStudio addin slash regex utility belt
Nie możesz wybrać więcej, niż 25 tematów Tematy muszą się zaczynać od litery lub cyfry, mogą zawierać myślniki ('-') i mogą mieć do 35 znaków.
Garrick Aden-Buie c06337a8b4 Add padding to results group when many groups 8 lat temu
R Add padding to results group when many groups 8 lat temu
data-raw Update cheatsheet 8 lat temu
docs Fix nested groups calculation and add example to Readme 8 lat temu
inst Add padding to results group when many groups 8 lat temu
man Add docs for run_regex and regex_gadget 8 lat temu
tests Update regex_gadget and add Rstudio add-in 8 lat temu
.Rbuildignore Initial commit 8 lat temu
.gitignore Initial commit 8 lat temu
DESCRIPTION Use stringi to escape unicode sequences and add warning message alerts 8 lat temu
LICENSE Initial commit 8 lat temu
LICENSE.md Update regex_gadget and add Rstudio add-in 8 lat temu
NAMESPACE Add help tab to regex_gadget 8 lat temu
Readme.Rmd Fix nested groups calculation and add example to Readme 8 lat temu
Readme.md Fix nested groups calculation and add example to Readme 8 lat temu
regexplain.Rproj Rename to regexplain 8 lat temu

Readme.md

regexplain

WORK IN PROGRESS!!

regexplain is going to be an RStudio addin that helps you interactively build up your regex. Inspired by RegExr and stringr::str_view.

Done (ish)

You can use view_regex() for a stringr::str_view() replacement that includes groups.

text <- c("breakfast=eggs;lunch=pizza",
          "breakfast=bacon;lunch=spaghetti", 
          "no food here")
pattern <- "((\\w+)=)(\\w+).+(ch=s?p)"

view_regex(text, pattern)
Example view_regex(text, pattern).
Example view_regex(text, pattern).
t_nested <- "anestedgroupwithingroupexample"
r_nested <- "(a(nested)(group(within(group))(example)))"
view_regex(t_nested, r_nested)
Example of nested groups
Example of nested groups

Planned (ish)

  1. An Rstudio addin gadget that allows you to interactively enter the regex and see the results. Like the above example, where the regex field is a text input.

  2. Import data from your environment, like a character vector, file, or data.frame column when opening the gadget.

  3. Help tab in the gadget, pulling from ?regex but with some navigation.

  4. Tab to interactively explore output of varying regex-applying functions. In other words, see what stringr::str_locate_all or stringr::str_match_all or grep or grepl return when applying the regex to your text.