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StringExpression

Usage

 ~~  ~~ ... or StringExpression[ ,  , ... ] represents a sequence of strings and symbolic string objects  .


Notes

" " ~~ " " ~~ ... yields an ordinary string obtained by concatenating the characters in the " ".
• The following objects can appear in StringExpression:
"string" a literal string of characters
_ any single character
__ any substring of one or more characters
___ any substring of zero or more characters
x_, x__, x___ substrings given the name x
x:pattern pattern given the name x
pattern.. pattern repeated one or more times
pattern... pattern repeated zero or more times
{ ,  , ... } or  |  | ... a pattern matching at least one of the
patt /; cond a pattern for which cond evaluates to True
pattern ? test a pattern for which test yields True for each character
Whitespace a sequence of whitespace characters
NumberString the characters of a number
charobj an object representing a character class (see below)
RegularExpression["regexp"] substring matching a regular expression
StringExpression[... ] an arbitrary string expression
• The following represent classes of characters:
{" ", " ", ... } any of the " "
Characters["  ... "] any of the " "
CharacterRange[" ", " "] any character in the range " " to " "
DigitCharacter digit 0-9
LetterCharacter letter
WhitespaceCharacter space, newline, tab or other whitespace character
WordCharacter letter or digit
Except[p] any character except ones matching p
• The following represent positions in strings:
StartOfString start of the whole string
EndOfString end of the whole string
StartOfLine start of a line
EndOfLine end of a line
WordBoundary boundary between word characters and others
Except[WordBoundary] anywhere except a word boundary
• When constructs like __ or .. are present, there may be several different ways in which a given StringExpression can match a particular string.
• By default, Mathematica will use the one that makes pattern elements that appear earlier in the StringExpression match the longest possible substrings.
• The following determine which match will be used if there are several possibilities:
ShortestMatch[p] the shortest consistent match for p
LongestMatch[p] the longest consistent match for p (default)
• In matching ordinary expressions instead of strings, the shortest instead of the longest consistent match is used.
StringExpression objects can be used in many string manipulation functions, including StringReplace, StringCases, StringSplit, StringMatchQ.
StringExpression has attributes Flat and OneIdentity.
• See Section 2.8.4.
• New in Version 5.1.


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