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From: | Elias Mårtenson |
Subject: | Re: [Bug-apl] Not a bug, need help coding search&replace on a vector |
Date: | Thu, 23 Jun 2016 20:33:41 +0800 |
As strange as it may seem, the parenthesed _expression_ returns an operator, which is then applied to the function on the left.
GNU APL does not support first-class functions (and operators) so this syntax is not an option for us.
Regards,
Elias
Since Dyalog has created those ⎕R and ⎕S, it might be a good starting point.But i am always baffled by the syntax of using parenthesis to group on the function on the left and have it applied to the right argument, like Dialog shows on their webpage:R←{X} (A ⎕R B) YOn Jun 22, 2016, at 14:12, Juergen Sauermann <address@hidden> wrote:Hi,
I believe regular expressions would be a useful and reasonable thing and I would
not object to making it a ⎕-function. I can provide the framework for the ⎕-part of
it (class definition, parser etc) if somebody wants to fill in the rest.
I would need to know its name, and how it is called (monadic, dyadic, axis, function
argument(s) etc).
Please also provide a testcase file to check if (and demonstrate how) it works.
/// Jürgen
On 06/22/2016 05:41 AM, Elias Mårtenson wrote:
Sure, that shouldn't be a problem at all.
Regards,Elias
On 22 June 2016 at 11:10, Christian Robert <address@hidden> wrote:
Oh yes, would be nice. (pcre would be as nice as regex, may be more)
make it a ⎕regex or ⎕pcre so, no need to load a specific .so file or )lib to use it ;-)
Ideal would be to be able to not only scan but be able to compile a pcre, find patterns, search & replace ...
I am dreaming, but still awake ...
Xtian.
On 2016-06-21 22:39, Elias Mårtenson wrote:
Would anyone be interested if I actually implemented support regex by calling into the C library?
I'm envisioning something like this:
* "^([a-z]+):([0-9]+)$" regex∆scan "foo:123"*
┏→━━━━━━━━━━┓
┃"foo" "123"┃
┗∊━━━━━━━━━━┛
Regards,
Elias
On 22 June 2016 at 10:35, Xiao-Yong Jin <address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>> wrote:
At some point I really wanted to implement the simplest editor, namely ed (it would be much better than any APL system has offered), in APL, but I never finished the regex part. Perhaps it would be a nice exercise for someone who’s interested in learning APL to actually implement some of the most used Unix command line utilities.
> On Jun 21, 2016, at 8:53 PM, Christian Robert <address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> A more general purpose search&replace (some bug fixed), take (2), was "snr".
>
>
>
> )sic
> )erase replace
> ∇z←s replace p;fr;to;P;i;⎕io
> ⍝ -------------
> →(2≤≡s)/ForEach
> →(2≤⍴⍴s)/Matrix
> →Vector
> ⍝ -------------
> ForEach: z←{⍵ replace p}¨s ◊ →0
> Matrix: z←⊃ {⍵ replace p}¨ ⊂[2]s ◊ →0
> ⍝ -------------
> Vector: p←,¨p ◊ z←s←,s ⋄ ⎕io←1
> Loop:→((⍴p)<2)/0
> (fr to)←2↑p ◊ p←2↓p
> P←¯1↓∧/[1](¯1+⍳⍴fr)⌽fr∘.=z,⎕ucs 1
> i←0
> Sanitize: i←i+1
> →(i>(⍴P)-⍴fr)/Substitute
> →(0=P[i])/Sanitize
> ((⊂ i+¯1+⍳⍴fr)⌷P)←(⍴fr)↑1
> →Sanitize
> Substitute: P←⌽(P/⍳⍴P)
> ⊣ {z←((¯1+⍵)↑z),to,(¯1+⍵+⍴fr)↓z}¨P
> →Loop
> ∇
>
> It should be vector, matrix and embedded objects "aware" (as long as it is all text)
>
> Syntax:
>
> source replace "this" "by_that" "this" "by_that" [...] (eg: pairs of "from" and "to")
>
> Examples:
>
> (⎕cr 'replace') replace 'replace' 'snr' 'ForEach' "Each" "Substitute" "Subst" "Sanitize" "Sane"
> z←s snr p;fr;to;P;i;⎕io
> ⍝ -------------
> →(2≤≡s)/Each
> →(2≤⍴⍴s)/Matrix
> →Vector
> ⍝ -------------
> Each: z←{⍵ snr p}¨s ◊ →0
> Matrix: z←⊃ {⍵ snr p}¨ ⊂[2]s ◊ →0
> ⍝ -------------
> Vector: p←,¨p ◊ z←s←,s ⋄ ⎕io←1
> Loop:→((⍴p)<2)/0
> (fr to)←2↑p ◊ p←2↓p
> P←¯1↓∧/[1](¯1+⍳⍴fr)⌽fr∘.=z,⎕ucs 1
> i←0
> Sane: i←i+1
> →(i>(⍴P)-⍴fr)/Subst
> →(0=P[i])/Sane
> ((⊂ i+¯1+⍳⍴fr)⌷P)←(⍴fr)↑1
> →Sane
> Subst: P←⌽(P/⍳⍴P)
> ⊣ {z←((¯1+⍵)↑z),to,(¯1+⍵+⍴fr)↓z}¨P
> →Loop
>
>
> You can even try "⎕fx" the result if it looks like Ok. (ps: always check the result before committing)
>
> Substitutions are done in pair sequence for each /vector/matrix/embedded obj.
>
> So replace order is *very* important.
>
> It must still have some bugs, report them to me, with examples if so. Will do my best but no promises.
>
> Purpose: well, not sure, it was an exercise. I used it on itself to finally rename the function and change some variables/labels names.
>
>
> Features: would be fun to pass parameters to each of the /from/to/ like maximum number of substitutions to do per line ...
> whole words only (taking apl characters as blanks) ... so variable "s" won't match last character of variable "pairs"
> ... no limits
>
>
> Xtian.
>
>
> On 2016-06-21 12:27, Juergen Sauermann wrote:
>> Hi Xtian,
>>
>> how about this:
>>
>> * **s←"444This4is4a4444test44with44444lot4of4blanks4444at4beginning4and444end444444"**
>> from←"444"**
>> ** to←"5"**
>> **
>> ** ↑⍎')HOST echo "',s,'" | sed s/',from,'/',to,'/g'**
>> **5This4is4a54test44with544lot4of4blanks54at4beginning4and5end55**
>> ** **
>> *I have replaced the *^* in your example because it (and some other characters) have a special meaning in
>> regular expressions. But the special characters can be easily quoted in APL if needed, for example:
>>
>> * s←"^^^This^is^a^^^^test^^with^^^^^lot^of^blanks^^^^at^beginning^and^^^end^^^^^^" **
>> ** ((s='^')/s)←⊂'\^'**
>> ** ⊃,/s**
>> **\^\^\^This\^is\^a\^\^\^\^test\^\^with\^\^\^\^\^lot\^of\^blanks\^\^\^\^at\^beginning\^and\^\^\^end\^\^\^\^\^\^**
>> *
>> /// Jürgen
>>
>>
>> On 06/21/2016 05:12 AM, Christian Robert wrote:
>>> Hi, it's not a bug but a request for help,
>>>
>>>
>>> suppose s="^^^This^is^a^^^^test^^with^^^^^lot^of^blanks^^^^at^beginning^and^^^end^^^^^^"
>>> suppose from="^^^"
>>> suppose to="^"
>>>
>>> I need a function who can replace ("^^^" to "^"), or ("^" to "^^^^^^^^") or ("" to "blabla" with limits of source size) ie: without being lost in infinite loop.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> "s" is a character vector, "from" is a character vector, and "to" is a character vector,
>>> both "s", "from" and "to" can be "".
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I'm pretty sure this idiom already exist.
>>>
>>> if you can help me, please do.
>>>
>>> Xtian.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
---Louis Chrétien
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