;;; regexp-opt.el --- generate efficient regexps to match strings -*- lexical-binding: t -*- ;; Copyright (C) 1994-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Author: Simon Marshall ;; Maintainer: emacs-devel@gnu.org ;; Keywords: strings, regexps, extensions ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs. ;; GNU Emacs 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. ;; GNU Emacs 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 GNU Emacs. If not, see . ;;; Commentary: ;; The "opt" in "regexp-opt" stands for "optim\\(al\\|i[sz]e\\)". ;; ;; 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 keep-order) "Return a regexp to match a string in the list STRINGS. Each member of STRINGS is treated as a fixed string, not as a regexp. Optional PAREN specifies how the returned regexp is surrounded by grouping constructs. If STRINGS is the empty list, the return value is a regexp that never matches anything. The optional argument PAREN can be any of the following: a string the resulting regexp is preceded by PAREN and followed by \\), e.g. use \"\\\\(?1:\" to produce an explicitly numbered group. `words' the resulting regexp is surrounded by \\=\\<\\( and \\)\\>. `symbols' the resulting regexp is surrounded by \\_<\\( and \\)\\_>. non-nil the resulting regexp is surrounded by \\( and \\). nil the resulting regexp is surrounded by \\(?: and \\), if it is necessary to ensure that a postfix operator appended to it will apply to the whole expression. The optional argument KEEP-ORDER, if nil or omitted, allows the returned regexp to match the strings in any order. If non-nil, the match is guaranteed to be performed in the order given, as if the strings were made into a regexp by joining them with the `\\|' operator. Up to reordering, the resulting regexp is equivalent to but usually more efficient than that of a simplified version: (defun simplified-regexp-opt (strings &optional paren) (let ((parens (cond ((stringp paren) (cons paren \"\\\\)\")) ((eq paren \\='words) \\='(\"\\\\\\=<\\\\(\" . \"\\\\)\\\\>\")) ((eq paren \\='symbols) \\='(\"\\\\_<\\\\(\" . \"\\\\)\\\\_>\")) ((null paren) \\='(\"\\\\(?:\" . \"\\\\)\")) (t \\='(\"\\\\(\" . \"\\\\)\"))))) (concat (car parens) (mapconcat \\='regexp-quote strings \"\\\\|\") (cdr parens))))" (save-match-data ;; Recurse on the sorted list. (let* ((max-lisp-eval-depth 10000) (max-specpdl-size 10000) (completion-ignore-case nil) (completion-regexp-list nil) (open (cond ((stringp paren) paren) (paren "\\("))) (sorted-strings (delete-dups (sort (copy-sequence strings) 'string-lessp))) (re (cond ;; No strings: return \`a\` which cannot match anything. ((null strings) (concat (or open "\\(?:") "\\`a\\`\\)")) ;; If we cannot reorder, give up all attempts at ;; optimisation. There is room for improvement (Bug#34641). ((and keep-order (regexp-opt--contains-prefix sorted-strings)) (concat (or open "\\(?:") (mapconcat #'regexp-quote strings "\\|") "\\)")) (t (regexp-opt-group sorted-strings (or open t) (not open)))))) (cond ((eq paren 'words) (concat "\\<" re "\\>")) ((eq paren 'symbols) (concat "\\_<" re "\\_>")) (t re))))) ;;;###autoload (defun regexp-opt-depth (regexp) "Return the depth of REGEXP. This means the number of non-shy regexp grouping constructs \(parenthesized 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 last) (while (string-match "\\\\(\\(\\?[0-9]*:\\)?" regexp start) (setq start (match-end 0)) ; Start of next search. (when (and (not (match-beginning 1)) (subregexp-context-p regexp (match-beginning 0) last)) ;; It's not a shy group and it's not inside brackets or after ;; a backslash: it's really a group-open marker. (setq last start) ; Speed up next regexp-opt-re-context-p. (setq count (1+ count)))) count))) ;;; Workhorse functions. (defun regexp-opt-group (strings &optional paren lax) "Return a regexp to match a string in the sorted list 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's 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 there are several one-char strings, use charsets ((and (= (length (car strings)) 1) (let ((strs (cdr strings))) (while (and strs (/= (length (car strs)) 1)) (pop strs)) strs)) (let (letters rest) ;; Collect one-char strings (dolist (s strings) (if (= (length s) 1) (push (string-to-char s) letters) (push s rest))) (if rest ;; several one-char strings: take them and recurse ;; on the rest (first so as to match the longest). (concat open-group (regexp-opt-group (nreverse rest)) "\\|" (regexp-opt-charset letters) close-group) ;; all are one-char strings: just return a character set. (concat open-charset (regexp-opt-charset letters) close-charset)))) ;; ;; We have a list of different length strings. (t (let ((prefix (try-completion "" strings))) (if (> (length prefix) 0) ;; common prefix: take it and recurse on the suffixes. (let* ((n (length prefix)) (suffixes (mapcar (lambda (s) (substring s n)) strings))) (concat open-group (regexp-quote prefix) (regexp-opt-group suffixes t t) close-group)) (let* ((sgnirts (mapcar #'reverse strings)) (xiffus (try-completion "" sgnirts))) (if (> (length xiffus) 0) ;; common suffix: take it and recurse on the prefixes. (let* ((n (- (length xiffus))) (prefixes ;; Sorting is necessary in cases such as ("ad" "d"). (sort (mapcar (lambda (s) (substring s 0 n)) strings) 'string-lessp))) (concat open-group (regexp-opt-group prefixes t t) (regexp-quote (nreverse xiffus)) close-group)) ;; Otherwise, divide the list into those that start with a ;; particular letter and those that do not, and recurse on them. (let* ((char (substring-no-properties (car strings) 0 1)) (half1 (all-completions char 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. CHARS should be a list of characters." ;; 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* ((charmap (make-char-table 'regexp-opt-charset)) (start -1) (end -2) (charset "") (bracket "") (dash "") (caret "")) ;; ;; Make a character map but extract character set meta characters. (dolist (char chars) (cond ((eq char ?\]) (setq bracket "]")) ((eq char ?^) (setq caret "^")) ((eq char ?-) (setq dash "-")) (t (aset charmap char t)))) ;; ;; Make a character set from the map using ranges where applicable. (map-char-table (lambda (c v) (when v (if (consp c) (if (= (1- (car c)) end) (setq end (cdr c)) (if (> end (+ start 2)) (setq charset (format "%s%c-%c" charset start end)) (while (>= end start) (setq charset (format "%s%c" charset start)) (setq start (1+ start)))) (setq start (car c) end (cdr c))) (if (= (1- c) end) (setq end c) (if (> end (+ start 2)) (setq charset (format "%s%c-%c" charset start end)) (while (>= end start) (setq charset (format "%s%c" charset start)) (setq start (1+ start)))) (setq start c end c))))) charmap) (when (>= end start) (if (> end (+ start 2)) (setq charset (format "%s%c-%c" charset start end)) (while (>= end start) (setq charset (format "%s%c" charset start)) (setq start (1+ start))))) ;; ;; Make sure a caret is not first and a dash is first or last. (if (and (string-equal charset "") (string-equal bracket "")) (if (string-equal dash "") "\\^" ; [^] is not a valid regexp (concat "[" dash caret "]")) (concat "[" bracket charset caret dash "]")))) (defun regexp-opt--contains-prefix (strings) "Whether STRINGS contains a proper prefix of one of its other elements. STRINGS must be a list of sorted strings without duplicates." (let ((s strings)) ;; In a lexicographically sorted list, a string always immediately ;; succeeds one of its prefixes. (while (and (cdr s) (not (string-equal (car s) (substring (cadr s) 0 (min (length (car s)) (length (cadr s))))))) (setq s (cdr s))) (cdr s))) (provide 'regexp-opt) ;;; regexp-opt.el ends here