Ast in regex_syntax::ast - Rust (original) (raw)

pub enum Ast {
    Empty(Span),
    Flags(SetFlags),
    Literal(Literal),
    Dot(Span),
    Assertion(Assertion),
    Class(Class),
    Repetition(Repetition),
    Group(Group),
    Alternation(Alternation),
    Concat(Concat),
}

Expand description

An abstract syntax tree for a single regular expression.

An Ast’s fmt::Display implementation uses constant stack space and heap space proportional to the size of the Ast.

This type defines its own destructor that uses constant stack space and heap space proportional to the size of the Ast.

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An empty regex that matches everything.

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A set of flags, e.g., (?is).

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A single character literal, which includes escape sequences.

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The “any character” class.

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A single zero-width assertion.

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A single character class. This includes all forms of character classes except for .. e.g., \d, \pN, [a-z] and [[:alpha:]].

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A repetition operator applied to an arbitrary regular expression.

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A grouped regular expression.

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An alternation of regular expressions.

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A concatenation of regular expressions.

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Return the span of this abstract syntax tree.

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Return true if and only if this Ast is empty.

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Generate an arbitrary value of Self from the given unstructured data. Read more

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Generate an arbitrary value of Self from the entirety of the given unstructured data. Read more

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Get a size hint for how many bytes out of an Unstructured this type needs to construct itself. Read more

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Print a display representation of this Ast.

This does not preserve any of the original whitespace formatting that may have originally been present in the concrete syntax from which this Ast was generated.

This implementation uses constant stack space and heap space proportional to the size of the Ast.

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A custom Drop impl is used for Ast such that it uses constant stack space but heap space proportional to the depth of the Ast.

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This method tests for self and other values to be equal, and is used by ==.

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This method tests for !=. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.

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