![Crown in double quotes logo](./assets/logo.svg) # rulex A new, portable, regular expression language Read **[the book](https://rulex-rs.github.io/docs/)** to get started!

Examples

On the left are rulex expressions (rulexes for short), on the right is the compiled regex:

```py

String

'hello world' # hello world

Greedy repetition

'hello'{1,5} # (?:hello){1,5} 'hello'* # (?:hello)* 'hello'+ # (?:hello)+

Lazy repetition

'hello'{1,5} lazy # (?:hello){1,5}? 'hello'* lazy # (?:hello)*? 'hello'+ lazy # (?:hello)+?

Alternation

'hello' | 'world' # hello|world

Character classes

['aeiou'] # [aeiou] ['p'-'s'] # [p-s]

Named character classes

[.] [w] [s] [n] # .\w\s\n

Combined

[w 'a' 't'-'z' U+15] # [\wat-z\x15]

Negated character classes

!['a' 't'-'z'] # [^at-z]

Unicode

[Greek] U+30F Grapheme # \p{Greek}\u030F\X

Boundaries

<% %> # ^$ % 'hello' !% # \bhello\B

Non-capturing groups

'terri' ('fic' | 'ble') # terri(?:fic|ble)

Capturing groups

:('test') # (test) :name('test') # (?Ptest)

Lookahead/lookbehind

'foo' | 'bar' # (?=foo|bar) << 'foo' | 'bar' # (?<=foo|bar) !>> 'foo' | 'bar' # (?!foo|bar) !<< 'foo' | 'bar' # (?

Backreferences

:('test') ::1 # (test)\1 :name('test') ::name # (?Ptest)\1

Ranges

range '0'-'999' # 0|[1-9][0-9]{0,2} range '0'-'255' # 0|1[0-9]{0,2}|2(?:[0-4][0-9]?|5[0-5]?|[6-9])?|[3-9][0-9]? ```

Variables

```rust let operator = '+' | '-' | '*' | '/'; let number = '-'? [digit]+;

number (operator number)* ```

Usage

Read the book to get started, or check out the CLI program, the Rust library and the procedural macro.

Why use this instead of normal regexes?

Normal regexes are very concise, but when they get longer, they get increasingly difficult to understand. By default, they don't have comments, and whitespace is significant. Then there's the plethora of sigils and backslash escapes that follow no discernible system: (?<=) (?P<>) .?? \N \p{} \k<> \g'' and so on. And with various inconsistencies between regex implementations, it's the perfect recipe for confusion.

Rulex solves these problems with a new, simpler but also more powerful syntax:

Compatibility

Rulex is currently compatible with PCRE, JavaScript, Java, .NET, Python, Ruby and Rust. The regex flavor must be specified during compilation, so rulex can ensure that the produced regex works as desired on the targeted regex engine.

Important note for JavaScript users: Don't forget to enable the u flag. This is required for Unicode support. All other major regex engines support Unicode by default.

Diagnostics

Rulex looks for mistakes and displays helpful diagnostics:

Roadmap

You can find the Roadmap here.

Contributing

You can contribute by using rulex and providing feedback. If you find a bug or have a question, please create an issue.

I also gladly accept code contributions. To make sure that CI succeeds, please run cargo fmt, cargo clippy and cargo test before creating a pull request.

License

Dual-licensed under the MIT license or the Apache 2.0 license.