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Feature #18788
closedSupport passing Regexp options as String to Regexp.new
Status:
Closed
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
Description
Current situation¶
Regexp.new
takes an integer as second argument which needs to be ORed together from multiple constants:
Regexp.new('foo', Regexp::IGNORECASE | Regexp::MULTILINE | Regexp::EXTENDED) # => /foo/imx
Any other non-nil value is treated as i
flag:
Regexp.new('foo', Object.new) # => /foo/i
Suggestion¶
Regexp.new
should support passing the regexp flags not only as an Integer, but also as a String, like so:
Regexp.new('foo', 'i') # => /foo/i
Regexp.new('foo', 'imx') # => /foo/imx
# edge cases
Regexp.new('foo', 'iii') # => /foo/i
Regexp.new('foo', '') # => /foo/
# unsupported flags should probably emit a warning
Regexp.new('foo', 'jmq') # => /foo/m
Regexp.new('foo', '-m') # => /foo/m
Reasons¶
- The constants are a bit cumbersome to use, particularly when building the regexp from variable data:
def make_regexp(regexp_body, opt_string)
opt_int = 0
opt_int |= Regexp::IGNORECASE if opt_string.include?('i')
opt_int |= Regexp::MULTILINE if opt_string.include?('m')
opt_int |= Regexp::EXTENDED if opt_string.include?('x')
Regexp.new(regexp_body, opt_int)
end
- Passing a String is already silently accepted, and people might get the wrong impression that it works:
Regexp.new('foo', 'i') # => /foo/i
... but it doesn't really work:
Regexp.new('foo', 'x') # => /foo/i
Backwards compatibility¶
This change would not be fully backwards compatible.
Code that relies on the second argument being a String which does not contain "i" in order to make the Regexp case insensitive would break.
Note: originally I suggested supporting Symbols in the same way as Strings, but removed that in light of the discussion.
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