;;; regexp-opt.el --- generate efficient regexps to match strings ;; Copyright (C) 1994,95,96,97,98,99,2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Author: Simon Marshall ;; Maintainer: FSF ;; Keywords: strings, regexps, extensions ;; This file is part of SXEmacs. ;; SXEmacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or ;; (at your option) any later version. ;; SXEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the ;; GNU General Public License for more details. ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ;; along with this program. If not, see . ;;; Synched up with: GNU Emacs 21.3 + paren-in-char-set fix from CVS ;;; revision 1.25. Some implementation differences in ;;; regexp-opt-group and regexp-opt-charset but the APIs ;;; are compatible and should return compatible (if not ;;; exactly the same) regexps. ;;; Commentary: ;; The "opt" in "regexp-opt" stands for "optim\\(?:al\\|i\\(?:se\\|ze\\)\\)". ;; ;; This package generates a regexp from a given list of strings (which matches ;; one of those strings) so that the regexp generated by: ;; ;; (regexp-opt strings) ;; ;; is equivalent to, but more efficient than, the regexp generated by: ;; ;; (mapconcat 'regexp-quote strings "\\|") ;; ;; For example: ;; ;; (let ((strings '("cond" "if" "when" "unless" "while" ;; "let" "let*" "progn" "prog1" "prog2" ;; "save-restriction" "save-excursion" "save-window-excursion" ;; "save-current-buffer" "save-match-data" ;; "catch" "throw" "unwind-protect" "condition-case"))) ;; (concat "(" (regexp-opt strings t) "\\>")) ;; => "(\\(c\\(?:atch\\|ond\\(?:ition-case\\)?\\)\\|if\\|let\\*?\\|prog[12n]\\|save-\\(?:current-buffer\\|excursion\\|match-data\\|restriction\\|window-excursion\\)\\|throw\\|un\\(?:less\\|wind-protect\\)\\|wh\\(?:en\\|ile\\)\\)\\>" ;; ;; Searching using the above example `regexp-opt' regexp takes approximately ;; two-thirds of the time taken using the equivalent `mapconcat' regexp. ;; Since this package was written to produce efficient regexps, not regexps ;; efficiently, it is probably not a good idea to in-line too many calls in ;; your code, unless you use the following trick with `eval-when-compile': ;; ;; (defvar definition-regexp ;; (eval-when-compile ;; (concat "^(" ;; (regexp-opt '("defun" "defsubst" "defmacro" "defalias" ;; "defvar" "defconst") t) ;; "\\>"))) ;; ;; The `byte-compile' code will be as if you had defined the variable thus: ;; ;; (defvar definition-regexp ;; "^(\\(def\\(alias\\|const\\|macro\\|subst\\|un\\|var\\)\\)\\>") ;; ;; Note that if you use this trick for all instances of `regexp-opt' and ;; `regexp-opt-depth' in your code, regexp-opt.el would only have to be loaded ;; at compile time. But note also that using this trick means that should ;; regexp-opt.el be changed, perhaps to fix a bug or to add a feature to ;; improve the efficiency of `regexp-opt' regexps, you would have to recompile ;; your code for such changes to have effect in your code. ;; Originally written for font-lock.el, from an idea from Stig's hl319.el, with ;; thanks for ideas also to Michael Ernst, Bob Glickstein, Dan Nicolaescu and ;; Stefan Monnier. ;; No doubt `regexp-opt' doesn't always produce optimal regexps, so code, ideas ;; or any other information to improve things are welcome. ;; ;; One possible improvement would be to compile '("aa" "ab" "ba" "bb") ;; into "[ab][ab]" rather than "a[ab]\\|b[ab]". I'm not sure it's worth ;; it but if someone knows how to do it without going through too many ;; contortions, I'm all ears. ;;; Code: ;;;###autoload (defun regexp-opt (strings &optional paren) "Return a regexp to match a string in STRINGS. Each string should be unique in STRINGS and should not contain any regexps, quoted or not. If optional PAREN is non-nil, ensure that the returned regexp is enclosed by at least one regexp grouping construct. The returned regexp is typically more efficient than the equivalent regexp: (let ((open (if PAREN \"\\\\(\" \"\")) (close (if PAREN \"\\\\)\" \"\"))) (concat open (mapconcat 'regexp-quote STRINGS \"\\\\|\") close)) If PAREN is `words', then the resulting regexp is additionally surrounded by \\=\\< and \\>." (save-match-data ;; Recurse on the sorted list. (let* ((max-lisp-eval-depth (* 1024 1024)) (completion-ignore-case nil) (words (eq paren 'words)) (open (cond ((stringp paren) paren) (paren "\\("))) (sorted-strings (sort (copy-sequence strings) 'string-lessp)) (re (regexp-opt-group sorted-strings open))) (if words (concat "\\<" re "\\>") re)))) (defconst regexp-opt-not-groupie*-re (let* ((harmless-ch "[^\\\\[]") (esc-pair-not-lp "\\\\[^(]") (class-harmless-ch "[^][]") (class-lb-harmless "[^]:]") (class-lb-colon-maybe-charclass ":\\([a-z]+:]\\)?") (class-lb (concat "\\[\\(" class-lb-harmless "\\|" class-lb-colon-maybe-charclass "\\)")) (class (concat "\\[^?]?" "\\(" class-harmless-ch "\\|" class-lb "\\)*" "\\[?]")) ; special handling for bare [ at end of re (shy-lp "\\\\(\\?:")) (concat "\\(" harmless-ch "\\|" esc-pair-not-lp "\\|" class "\\|" shy-lp "\\)*")) "Matches any part of a regular expression EXCEPT for non-shy \"\\\\(\"s") ;;;###autoload (defun regexp-opt-depth (regexp) "Return the depth of REGEXP. This means the number of regexp grouping constructs (parenthesised expressions) in REGEXP." (save-match-data ;; Hack to signal an error if REGEXP does not have balanced parentheses. (string-match regexp "") ;; Count the number of open parentheses in REGEXP. (let ((count 0) start) (while (progn (string-match regexp-opt-not-groupie*-re regexp start) (setq start ( + (match-end 0) 2)) ; +2 for "\\(" after match-end. (<= start (length regexp))) (setq count (1+ count))) count))) ;;; Workhorse functions. (eval-when-compile (require 'cl)) (defun regexp-opt-group (strings &optional paren lax) "Return a regexp to match a string in STRINGS. If PAREN non-nil, output regexp parentheses around returned regexp. If LAX non-nil, don't output parentheses if it doesn't require them. Merges keywords to avoid backtracking in Emacs' regexp matcher. The basic idea is to find the shortest common prefix or suffix, remove it and recurse. If there is no prefix, we divide the list into two so that \(at least) one half will have at least a one-character common prefix. Also we delay the addition of grouping parenthesis as long as possible until we're sure we need them, and try to remove one-character sequences so we can use character sets rather than grouping parenthesis." (let* ((open-group (cond ((stringp paren) paren) (paren "\\(?:") (t ""))) (close-group (if paren "\\)" "")) (open-charset (if lax "" open-group)) (close-charset (if lax "" close-group))) (cond ;; ;; If there are no strings, just return the empty string. ((= (length strings) 0) "") ;; ;; If there is only one string, just return it. ((= (length strings) 1) (if (= (length (car strings)) 1) (concat open-charset (regexp-quote (car strings)) close-charset) (concat open-group (regexp-quote (car strings)) close-group))) ;; ;; If there is an empty string, remove it and recurse on the rest. ((= (length (car strings)) 0) (concat open-charset (regexp-opt-group (cdr strings) t t) "?" close-charset)) ;; ;; If all are one-character strings, just return a character set. ((= (length strings) (apply '+ (mapcar 'length strings))) (concat open-charset (regexp-opt-charset strings) close-charset)) ;; ;; We have a list of different length strings. (t (let ((prefix (try-completion "" (mapcar 'list strings))) (letters (let ((completion-regexp-list '("^.$"))) (all-completions "" (mapcar 'list strings))))) (cond ;; ;; If there is a common prefix, remove it and recurse on the suffixes. ((> (length prefix) 0) (let* ((length (length prefix)) (suffixes (mapcar (lambda (s) (substring s length)) strings))) (concat open-group (regexp-quote prefix) (regexp-opt-group suffixes t t) close-group))) ;; ;; If there are several one-character strings, remove them and recurse ;; on the rest (first so the final regexp finds the longest match). ((> (length letters) 1) (let ((rest (let ((completion-regexp-list '("^..+$"))) (all-completions "" (mapcar 'list strings))))) (concat open-group (regexp-opt-group rest) "\\|" (regexp-opt-charset letters) close-group))) ;; ;; Otherwise, divide the list into those that start with a particular ;; letter and those that do not, and recurse on them. (t (let* ((char (substring (car strings) 0 1)) (half1 (all-completions char (mapcar 'list strings))) (half2 (nthcdr (length half1) strings))) (concat open-group (regexp-opt-group half1) "\\|" (regexp-opt-group half2) close-group))))))))) (defun regexp-opt-charset (chars) ;; ;; Return a regexp to match a character in CHARS. ;; ;; The basic idea is to find character ranges. Also we take care in the ;; position of character set meta characters in the character set regexp. ;; (let* ((charwidth 256) ; Yeah, right. ;; XEmacs: use bit-vectors instead of bool-vectors (charmap (make-bit-vector charwidth 0)) (charset "") (bracket "") (dash "") (caret "")) ;; ;; Make a character map but extract character set meta characters. (dolist (char (mapcar 'string-to-char chars)) (case char (?\] (setq bracket "]")) (?^ (setq caret "^")) (?- (setq dash "-")) (otherwise ;; XEmacs: 1 (aset charmap char 1)))) ;; ;; Make a character set from the map using ranges where applicable. (dotimes (char charwidth) (let ((start char)) (while (and (< char charwidth) ;; XEmacs: (not (zerop ...)) (not (zerop (aref charmap char)))) (incf char)) (cond ((> char (+ start 3)) (setq charset (format "%s%c-%c" charset start (1- char)))) ((> char start) (setq charset (format "%s%c" charset (setq char start))))))) ;; ;; Make sure a caret is not first and a dash is first or last. (if (and (string-equal charset "") (string-equal bracket "")) (concat "[" dash caret "]") (concat "[" bracket charset caret dash "]")))) (provide 'regexp-opt) ;;; regexp-opt.el ends here