Now when I want to return all match positions in str, such as:
abcd123abcd123abcd
Suppose I want to get all "abcd", I must use regexec(),get the first position:0, 3, then I will use:
123abcd123abcd
as the new string to use regexec() again, and so on.
I read the manual about regexec(), it says:
int regexec(const regex_t *preg, const char *string, size_t nmatch,
regmatch_t pmatch[], int eflags);
nmatch and pmatch are used to provide information regarding the location of any
matches.
but why doesn't this work?
This is my code:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <regex.h>
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
int i = 0;
int res;
int len;
char result[BUFSIZ];
char err_buf[BUFSIZ];
char* src = argv[1];
const char* pattern = "\<[^,;]+\>";
regex_t preg;
regmatch_t pmatch[10];
if( (res = regcomp(&preg, pattern, REG_EXTENDED)) != 0)
{
regerror(res, &preg, err_buf, BUFSIZ);
printf("regcomp: %s
", err_buf);
exit(res);
}
res = regexec(&preg, src, 10, pmatch, REG_NOTBOL);
//~ res = regexec(&preg, src, 10, pmatch, 0);
//~ res = regexec(&preg, src, 10, pmatch, REG_NOTEOL);
if(res == REG_NOMATCH)
{
printf("NO match
");
exit(0);
}
for (i = 0; pmatch[i].rm_so != -1; i++)
{
len = pmatch[i].rm_eo - pmatch[i].rm_so;
memcpy(result, src + pmatch[i].rm_so, len);
result[len] = 0;
printf("num %d: '%s'
", i, result);
}
regfree(&preg);
return 0;
}
./regex 'hello, world'
the output:
num 0: 'hello'
this is my respect outputs:
num 0: 'hello'
num 1: 'world'
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