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QRegExp(3qt)					     QRegExp(3qt)

NAME
       QRegExp - Pattern matching using regular expressions or
       wildcards

       #include <qregexp.h>

   Public Members
       QRegExp ()
       QRegExp ( const QString &, bool caseSensitive=TRUE, bool
	   wildcard=FALSE )
       QRegExp ( const QRegExp & )
       ~QRegExp ()
       QRegExp& operator= ( const QRegExp & )
       QRegExp& operator= ( const QString & pattern ) (obsolete)
       bool operator== ( const QRegExp & ) const
       bool operator!= ( const QRegExp & r ) const
       bool isEmpty () const
       bool isValid () const
       bool caseSensitive () const
       void setCaseSensitive ( bool )
       bool wildcard () const
       void setWildcard ( bool )
       QString pattern () const
       void setPattern ( const QString & pattern )
       int match ( const QString & str, int index=0, int * len=0,
	   bool indexIsStart = TRUE ) const
       int find ( const QString & str, int index )

   Protected Members
       void compile () (internal)
       const QChar* matchstr ( uint *, const QChar *, uint, const
	   QChar * ) const (internal)

DESCRIPTION
       The QRegExp class provides pattern matching using regular
       expressions or wildcards.

       QRegExp knows these regexp primitives:

       c matches the character 'c'

       ^ matches start of input

       $ matches end of input

       [] matches a defined set of characters - see below.

       a* matches a sequence of zero or more a's

       a+ matches a sequence of one or more a's

Trolltech AS		   13 June 2001				1

QRegExp(3qt)					     QRegExp(3qt)

       a? matches an optional a

       \c escape code for matching special characters such as \,
       [, *, +, . etc.

       \t matches the TAB character (9)

       \n matches newline (10)

       \r matches return (13)

       \s matches a white space (defined as any character for
       which QChar::isSpace() returns TRUE. This includes at
       least ASCII characters 9 (TAB), 10 (LF), 11 (VT), 12(FF),
       13 (CR) and 32 (Space)).

       \d matches a digit (defined as any character for which
       QChar::isDigit() returns TRUE. This includes at least
       ASCII characters '0'-'9').

       \x1f6b matches the character with unicode point U1f6b
       (hexadecimal 1f6b). \x0012 will match the ASCII/Latin1
       character 0x12 (18 decimal, 12 hexadecimal).

       \022 matches the ASCII/Latin1 character 022 (18 decimal,
       22 octal).

       In wildcard mode, it only knows four primitives:

       c matches the character 'c'

       ? matches any character

       * matches any sequence of characters

       [] matches a defined set of characters - see below.

       QRegExp supports Unicode both in the pattern strings and
       in the strings to be matched.

       When writing regular expressions in C++ code, remember
       that C++ processes \ characters. So in order to match e.g.
       a "." character, you must write "\\." in C++ source, not
       "\.".

       A character set matches a defined set of characters. For
       example, [BSD] matches any of 'B', 'D' and 'S'. Within a
       character set, the special characters '.', '*', '?', '^',
       '$', '+' and '[' lose their special meanings. The
       following special characters apply:

       ^ When placed first in the list, changes the character set
       to match any character not in the list. To include the
       character '^' itself in the set, escape it or place it

Trolltech AS		   13 June 2001				2

QRegExp(3qt)					     QRegExp(3qt)

       anywhere but first.

       - Defines a range of characters. To include the character
       '-' itself in the set, escape it or place it last.

       ] Ends the character set definition. To include the
       character ']' itself in the set, escape it or place it
       first (but after the negation operator '^', if present)
       Thus, [a-zA-Z0-9.] matches upper and lower case ASCII
       letters, digits and dot; and [^\s] matches everything
       except white space.

       \note In Qt 3.0, the language of regular expressions will
       contain five more special characters, namely '(', ')',
       '{', '|' and '}'. To ease porting, it's a good idea to
       escape these characters with a backslash in all the
       regular expressions you'll write from now on.

       Bugs and limitations:

       Case insensitive matching is not supported for non-
       ASCII/Latin1 (non-8bit) characters. Any character with a
       non-zero QChar.row() is matched case sensitively even if
       the QRegExp is in case insensitive mode.

       Examples: qmag/qmag.cpp

MEMBER FUNCTION DOCUMENTATION
QRegExp::QRegExp ()
       Constructs an empty regular expression.

QRegExp::QRegExp ( const QString & pattern, bool
       caseSensitive=TRUE, bool wildcard=FALSE )
       Constructs a regular expression.

       Arguments:

       pattern is the regular expression pattern string.

       caseSensitive specifies whether or not to use case
       sensitive matching.

       wildcard specifies whether the pattern string should be
       used for wildcard matching (also called globbing
       expression), normally used for matching file names.

       See also setWildcard().

QRegExp::QRegExp ( const QRegExp & r )
       Constructs a regular expression which is a copy of r.

       See also operator=(const and QRegExp&).

Trolltech AS		   13 June 2001				3

QRegExp(3qt)					     QRegExp(3qt)

QRegExp::~QRegExp ()
       Destructs the regular expression and cleans up its
       internal data.

bool QRegExp::caseSensitive () const
       Returns TRUE if case sensitivity is enabled, otherwise
       FALSE. The default is TRUE.

       See also setCaseSensitive().

int QRegExp::find ( const QString & str, int index )
       Attempts to match in str, starting from position index.
       Returns the position of the match, or -1 if there was no
       match.

       See also match().

bool QRegExp::isEmpty () const
       Returns TRUE if the regexp is empty.

bool QRegExp::isValid () const
       Returns TRUE if the regexp is valid, or FALSE if it is
       invalid.

       The pattern "[a-z" is an example of an invalid pattern,
       since it lacks a closing bracket.

int QRegExp::match ( const QString & str, int index=0, int *
       len=0, bool indexIsStart = TRUE ) const
       Attempts to match in str, starting from position index.
       Returns the position of the match, or -1 if there was no
       match.

       If len is not a null pointer, the length of the match is
       stored in *len.

       If indexIsStart is TRUE (the default), the position index
       in the string will match the start-of-input primitive (^)
       in the regexp, if present. Otherwise, position 0 in str
       will match.

       Example:

	   QRegExp r("[0-9]*\\.[0-9]+");	       // matches floating point
	   int len;
	   r.match("pi = 3.1416", 0, &len);	       // returns 5, len == 6

       \note In Qt 3.0, this function will be replaced by find().

       Examples: qmag/qmag.cpp

bool QRegExp::operator!= ( const QRegExp & r ) const
       Returns TRUE if this regexp is not equal to r.

Trolltech AS		   13 June 2001				4

QRegExp(3qt)					     QRegExp(3qt)

       See also operator==().

QRegExp & QRegExp::operator= ( const QString & pattern )
       This function is obsolete. It is provided to keep old
       source working, and will probably be removed in a future
       version of Qt. We strongly advise against using it in new
       code.

       Consider using setPattern() instead of this method.

       Sets the pattern string to pattern and returns a reference
       to this regexp. The case sensitivity or wildcard options
       do not change.

QRegExp & QRegExp::operator= ( const QRegExp & r )
       Copies the regexp r and returns a reference to this
       regexp. The case sensitivity and wildcard options are
       copied, as well.

bool QRegExp::operator== ( const QRegExp & r ) const
       Returns TRUE if this regexp is equal to r.

       Two regexp objects are equal if they have equal pattern
       strings, case sensitivity options and wildcard options.

QString QRegExp::pattern () const
       Returns the pattern string of the regexp.

void QRegExp::setCaseSensitive ( bool enable )
       Enables or disables case sensitive matching.

       In case sensitive mode, "a.e" matches "axe" but not "Axe".

       See also: caseSensitive().

void QRegExp::setPattern ( const QString & pattern )
       Sets the pattern string to pattern and returns a reference
       to this regexp. The case sensitivity or wildcard options
       do not change.

void QRegExp::setWildcard ( bool wildcard )
       Sets the wildcard option for the regular expression. The
       default is FALSE.

       Setting wildcard to TRUE makes it convenient to match
       filenames instead of plain text.

       For example, "qr*.cpp" matches the string "qregexp.cpp" in
       wildcard mode, but not "qicpp" (which would be matched in
       normal mode).

       See also wildcard().

Trolltech AS		   13 June 2001				5

QRegExp(3qt)					     QRegExp(3qt)

bool QRegExp::wildcard () const
       Returns TRUE if wildcard mode is on, otherwise FALSE.

       See also setWildcard().

void QRegExp::compile () [protected]
       For internal use only.

const QChar * QRegExp::matchstr ( uint * rxd, const QChar * str,
       uint strlength, const QChar * bol ) const [protected]
       For internal use only.

SEE ALSO
       http://doc.trolltech.com/qregexp.html
       http://www.trolltech.com/faq/tech.html

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 1992-2001 Trolltech AS,
       http://www.trolltech.com.  See the license file included
       in the distribution for a complete license statement.

AUTHOR
       Generated automatically from the source code.

BUGS
       If you find a bug in Qt, please report it as described in
       http://doc.trolltech.com/bughowto.html.	Good bug reports
       make our job much simpler. Thank you.

       In case of content or formattting problems with this
       manual page, please report them to qt-bugs@trolltech.com.
       Please include the name of the manual page (qregexp.3qt)
       and the Qt version (2.3.1).

Trolltech AS		   13 June 2001				6

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