# replace-megaparsec [![Hackage](https://img.shields.io/hackage/v/replace-megaparsec.svg?style=flat)](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/replace-megaparsec) [![Stackage Nightly](http://stackage.org/package/replace-megaparsec/badge/nightly)](http://stackage.org/nightly/package/replace-megaparsec) [![Stackage LTS](http://stackage.org/package/replace-megaparsec/badge/lts)](http://stackage.org/lts/package/replace-megaparsec) __replace-megaparsec__ is for finding text patterns, and also editing and replacing the found patterns. This activity is traditionally done with regular expressions, but __replace-megaparsec__ uses [__Megaparsec__](http://hackage.haskell.org/package/megaparsec) parsers instead for the pattern matching. __replace-megaparsec__ can be used in the same sort of “pattern capture” or “find all” situations in which one would use Python [`re.findall`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/re.html#re.findall) or Perl [`m//`](https://perldoc.perl.org/functions/m.html), or Unix [`grep`](https://www.gnu.org/software/grep/). __replace-megaparsec__ can be used in the same sort of “stream editing” or “search-and-replace” situations in which one would use Python [`re.sub`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/re.html#re.sub), or Perl [`s///`](https://perldoc.perl.org/functions/s.html), or Unix [`sed`](https://www.gnu.org/software/sed/manual/html_node/The-_0022s_0022-Command.html), or [`awk`](https://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/gawk.html). ## Why would we want to do pattern matching and substitution with parsers instead of regular expressions? * Haskell parsers have a nicer syntax than [regular expressions](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression), which are notoriously [difficult to read](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Write-only_language). * Regular expressions can do “group capture” on sections of the matched pattern, but they can only return stringy lists of the capture groups. Parsers can construct typed data structures based on the capture groups, guaranteeing no disagreement between the pattern rules and the rules that we're using to build data structures based on the pattern matches. For example, consider scanning a string for numbers. A lot of different things can look like a number, and can have leading plus or minus signs, or be in scientific notation, or have commas, or whatever. If we try to parse all of the numbers out of a string using regular expressions, then we have to make sure that the regular expression and the string-to-number conversion function agree about exactly what is and what isn't a numeric string. We can get into an awkward situation in which the regular expression says it has found a numeric string but the string-to-number conversion function fails. A typed parser will perform both the pattern match and the conversion, so it will never be in that situation. * Regular expressions are only able to pattern-match [regular](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chomsky_hierarchy#The_hierarchy) grammers. Parsers are able pattern-match with context-free grammers, and even context-sensitive or Turing grammers, if needed. See below for an example of lifting a `Parser` into a `State` monad for context-sensitive pattern-matching. The replacement expression for a traditional regular expression-based substitution command is usually just a simple string template in which the *Nth* “capture group” can be inserted with the syntax `\N`. With this library, instead of a template, we get an `editor` function which can perform any computation, including IO. ## Examples Try the examples in `ghci` by running `cabal v2-repl` in the `replace-megaparsec/` root directory. The examples depend on these imports. ```haskell import Replace.Megaparsec import Text.Megaparsec import Text.Megaparsec.Char import Text.Megaparsec.Char.Lexer ``` ### Parsing with `sepCap` family of parser combinators The following examples show how to match a pattern to a string of text and deconstruct the string of text by separating it into sections which match the pattern, and sections which don't match. #### Pattern match, capture only the parsed result Separate the input string into sections which can be parsed as a hexadecimal number with a prefix `"0x"`, and sections which can't. ```haskell let hexparser = chunk "0x" >> hexadecimal :: Parsec Void String Integer parseTest (sepCap hexparser) "0xA 000 0xFFFF" ``` ```haskell [Right 10,Left " 000 ",Right 65535] ``` #### Pattern match, capture only the matched text Just get the strings sections which match the hexadecimal parser, throw away the parsed number. ```haskell let hexparser = chunk "0x" >> hexadecimal :: Parsec Void String Integer parseTest (findAll hexparser) "0xA 000 0xFFFF" ``` ```haskell [Right "0xA",Left " 000 ",Right "0xFFFF"] ``` #### Pattern match, capture the matched text and the parsed result Capture the parsed hexadecimal number, as well as the string section which parses as a hexadecimal number. ```haskell let hexparser = chunk "0x" >> hexadecimal :: Parsec Void String Integer parseTest (findAllCap hexparser) "0xA 000 0xFFFF" ``` ```haskell [Right ("0xA",10),Left " 000 ",Right ("0xFFFF",65535)] ``` #### Pattern match, capture only the locations of the matched patterns Find all of the sections of the stream which match the `Text.Megaparsec.Char.space1` parser (a string of whitespace). Print a list of the offsets of the beginning of every pattern match. ```haskell import Data.Either let spaceoffset = getOffset <* space1 :: Parsec Void String Int parseTest (return . rights =<< sepCap spaceoffset) " a b " ``` ```haskell [0,2,5] ``` ### Edit text strings by running parsers with `streamEdit` The following examples show how to search for a pattern in a string of text and then edit the string of text to substitute in some replacement text for the matched patterns. #### Pattern match and replace with a constant Replace all carriage-return-newline instances with newline. ```haskell streamEdit (chunk "\r\n") (const "\n") "1\r\n2\r\n" ``` ```haskell "1\n2\n" ``` #### Pattern match and edit the matches Replace alphabetic characters with the next character in the alphabet. ```haskell streamEdit (some letterChar) (fmap succ) "HAL 9000" ``` ```haskell "IBM 9000" ``` #### Pattern match and maybe edit the matches, or maybe leave them alone Find all of the string sections *`s`* which can be parsed as a hexadecimal number *`r`*, and if *`r≤16`*, then replace *`s`* with a decimal number. Uses the [`match`](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/megaparsec/docs/Text-Megaparsec.html#v:match) combinator. ```haskell let hexparser = chunk "0x" >> hexadecimal :: Parsec Void String Integer streamEdit (match hexparser) (\(s,r) -> if r <= 16 then show r else s) "0xA 000 0xFFFF" ``` ```haskell "10 000 0xFFFF" ``` #### Context-sensitive pattern match and edit the matches Capitalize the third letter in a string. The `capthird` parser searches for individual letters, and it needs to remember how many times it has run so that it can match successfully only on the third time that it finds a letter. To enable the parser to remember how many times it has run, we'll compose the parser with a `State` monad from the `mtl` package. (Run in `ghci` with `cabal v2-repl -b mtl`). ```haskell import qualified Control.Monad.State.Strict as MTL import Control.Monad.State.Strict (get, put, evalState) import Data.Char (toUpper) let capthird :: ParsecT Void String (MTL.State Int) String capthird = do x <- letterChar i <- get put (i+1) if i==3 then return [x] else empty flip evalState 1 $ streamEditT capthird (return . fmap toUpper) "a a a a a" ``` ```haskell "a a A a a" ``` ## Alternatives ## Motivation I wanted to scan a Markdown document and find tokens inside backticks that look like a Haskell identifier, then look up the identifier in Hoogle to see if it has a definition in __base__, and if so, insert a Hackage link for the identifier into the Markdown. I couldn't find a simple and obvious way to do that with any existing technology.