regexp_parser 0.1.5 → 0.1.6

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data/ChangeLog CHANGED
@@ -1,3 +1,40 @@
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+ Sun Oct 5 19:58:17 2014 Ammar Ali <ammarabuali@gmail.com>
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+
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+ * Fixed test and gem building rake tasks and extracted the gem
4
+ specification from the Rakefile into a .gemspec file.
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+
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+ * Added syntax files for missing ruby 2.x versions. These do not add
7
+ extra syntax support, they just make the gem work with the newer
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+ ruby versions.
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+
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+ * Added .travis.yml to project root.
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+
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+ * README:
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+
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+ * Removed note purporting runtime support for ruby 1.8.6.
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+
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+ * Added a section identifying the main unsupported syntax features.
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+
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+ * Added sections for Testing and Building
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+
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+ * Added badges for gem version, Travis CI, and code climate.
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+
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+ Sat Oct 4 13:46:24 2014 Ammar Ali <ammarabuali@gmail.com>
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+
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+ * Updated README, fixing broken examples, and converting it from
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+ a rdoc file to Github's flavor of Markdown.
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+
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+ * Fixed a parser bug where an alternation sequence that contained
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+ nested expressions was incorrectly being appended to the parent
29
+ expression when the nesting was exited. e.g. in /a|(b)c/, c was
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+ appended to the root.
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+
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+ Wed May 7 5:52:37 2014 Ammar Ali <ammarabuali@gmail.com>
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+
34
+ * Fixed a bug where character types were not being correctly scanned
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+ within character sets. e.g. in [\d], two tokens were scanned; one
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+ for the backslash '\' and one for the 'd'
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+
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  Tue Jan 14 13:14:24 2014 Ammar Ali <ammarabuali@gmail.com>
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  * Released version 0.1.5, with a correct ChangeLog.
data/README.md ADDED
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+ # Regexp::Parser [![Gem Version](https://badge.fury.io/rb/regexp_parser.svg)](http://badge.fury.io/rb/regexp_parser) [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/ammar/regexp_parser.png?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/ammar/regexp_parser) [![Code Climate](https://codeclimate.com/github/ammar/regexp_parser.png)](https://codeclimate.com/github/ammar/regexp_parser/badges)
2
+
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+ A ruby library to help with lexing, parsing, and transforming regular expressions.
4
+
5
+ * Multilayered
6
+ * A scanner based on [ragel](http://www.complang.org/ragel/)
7
+ * A lexer that produces a "stream" of tokens
8
+ * A parser that produces a "tree" of Regexp::Expression objects (OO API)
9
+ * Supports ruby 1.8, 1.9, and all but one of the 2.x expressions [See Scanner Syntax](#scanner-syntax)
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+ * Supports ruby 1.8, 1.9, 2.0, and 2.1 runtimes.
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+
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+ _For an example of regexp_parser in use, see the [meta_re project](https://github.com/ammar/meta_re)_
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+
14
+ ---
15
+ ## Requirements
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+
17
+ * ruby '1.8.7'..'2.1.3'
18
+ * ragel, but only if you want to build the gem or work on the scanner
19
+
20
+
21
+ _Note: See the .travis.yml file for covered versions._
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+
23
+ ---
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+ ## Install
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+
26
+ `gem install regexp_parser`
27
+
28
+ ---
29
+ ## Usage
30
+
31
+ ```ruby
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+ # require the gem, then call one of:
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+ require 'regexp_parser'
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+
35
+ # The Scanner
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+ Regexp::Scanner.scan regexp
37
+
38
+ # The Lexer
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+ Regexp::Lexer.scan regexp
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+
41
+ # Or the Parser
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+ Regexp::Parser.parse regexp
43
+ ```
44
+
45
+ _All three can either return their results or take a block to perform further handling._
46
+
47
+ ---
48
+ ## Components
49
+
50
+ ### Scanner
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+ A ragel generated scanner that recognizes the cumulative syntax of both
52
+ supported flavors. Breaks the expression's text into tokens, including
53
+ their type, token, text, and start/end offsets within the original
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+ pattern.
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+
56
+ #### Example
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+ The following scans the given pattern and prints out the type, token, text and
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+ start/end offsets for each token found.
59
+
60
+ ```ruby
61
+ require 'regexp_parser'
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+
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+ Regexp::Scanner.scan /(ab?(cd)*[e-h]+)/ do |type, token, text, ts, te|
64
+ puts "type: #{type}, token: #{token}, text: '#{text}' [#{ts}..#{te}]"
65
+ end
66
+
67
+ # output
68
+ # type: group, token: capture, text: '(' [0..1]
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+ # type: literal, token: literal, text: 'ab' [1..3]
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+ # type: quantifier, token: zero_or_one, text: '?' [3..4]
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+ # type: group, token: capture, text: '(' [4..5]
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+ # type: literal, token: literal, text: 'cd' [5..7]
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+ # type: group, token: close, text: ')' [7..8]
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+ # type: quantifier, token: zero_or_more, text: '*' [8..9]
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+ # type: set, token: open, text: '[' [9..10]
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+ # type: set, token: range, text: 'e-h' [10..13]
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+ # type: set, token: close, text: ']' [13..14]
78
+ # type: quantifier, token: one_or_more, text: '+' [14..15]
79
+ # type: group, token: close, text: ')' [15..16]
80
+ ```
81
+
82
+ A one-liner that returns an array of the textual parts of the given pattern:
83
+
84
+ ```ruby
85
+ Regexp::Scanner.scan( /(cat?([bhm]at)){3,5}/ ).map {|token| token[2]}
86
+ #=> ["(", "cat", "?", "(", "[", "b", "h", "m", "]", "at", ")", ")", "{3,5}"]
87
+ ```
88
+
89
+
90
+ #### Notes
91
+ * The scanner performs basic syntax error checking, like detecting missing
92
+ balancing punctuation and premature end of pattern. Flavor validity checks
93
+ are performed in the lexer.
94
+
95
+ * If the input is a ruby Regexp object, the scanner calls #source on it to
96
+ get its string representation. #source does not include the options of
97
+ expression (m, i, and x) To include the options the scan, #to_s should
98
+ be called on the Regexp before passing it to the scanner, or any of the
99
+ higher layers.
100
+
101
+ * To keep the scanner simple(r) and fairly reusable for other purposes, it
102
+ does not perform lexical analysis on the tokens, sticking to the task
103
+ of tokenizing and leaving lexical analysis upto to the lexer.
104
+
105
+
106
+ ---
107
+ ### Syntax
108
+ Defines the supported tokens for a specific engine implementation (aka a
109
+ flavor). Syntax classes act as lookup tables, and are layered to create
110
+ flavor variations. Syntax only comes into play in the lexer.
111
+
112
+ #### Example
113
+ The following instantiates the syntax for Ruby 1.9 and checks a couple of its
114
+ implementations features, and then does the same for Ruby 1.8:
115
+
116
+ ```ruby
117
+ require 'regexp_parser'
118
+
119
+ ruby_19 = Regexp::Syntax.new 'ruby/1.9'
120
+ ruby_19.implements? :quantifier, :zero_or_one # => true
121
+ ruby_19.implements? :quantifier, :zero_or_one_reluctant # => true
122
+ ruby_19.implements? :quantifier, :zero_or_one_possessive # => true
123
+
124
+ ruby_18 = Regexp::Syntax.new 'ruby/1.8'
125
+ ruby_18.implements? :quantifier, :zero_or_one # => true
126
+ ruby_18.implements? :quantifier, :zero_or_one_reluctant # => true
127
+ ruby_18.implements? :quantifier, :zero_or_one_possessive # => false
128
+ ```
129
+
130
+
131
+ #### Notes
132
+ * Variatiions on a token, for example a named group with < and > vs one with a
133
+ pair of single quotes, are specified with an underscore followed by two
134
+ characters appended to the base token. In the previous named group example,
135
+ the tokens would be :named_ab (angle brackets) and :named_sq (single quotes).
136
+ These variations are normalized by the syntax to :named.
137
+
138
+
139
+ ---
140
+ ### Lexer
141
+ Sits on top of the scanner and performs lexical analysis on the tokens that
142
+ it emits. Among its tasks are breaking quantified literal runs, collecting the
143
+ emitted token structures into an array of Token objects, calculating their
144
+ nesting depth, normalizing tokens for the parser, and checkng if the tokens
145
+ are implemented by the given syntax flavor.
146
+
147
+ Tokens are Struct objects, with a few helper methods; #next, #previous, #offsets
148
+ and #length.
149
+
150
+ #### Example
151
+ The following example scans the given pattern, checks it against the ruby 1.8
152
+ syntax, and prints the token objects' text.
153
+
154
+ ```ruby
155
+ require 'regexp_parser'
156
+
157
+ Regexp::Lexer.scan /a?(b(c))*[d]+/ do |token|
158
+ puts "#{' ' * token.level}#{token.text}"
159
+ end
160
+
161
+ # output
162
+ # a
163
+ # ?
164
+ # (
165
+ # b
166
+ # (
167
+ # c
168
+ # )
169
+ # )
170
+ # *
171
+ # [
172
+ # d
173
+ # ]
174
+ # +
175
+ ```
176
+
177
+ A one-liner that returns an array of the textual parts of the given pattern.
178
+ Compare the output with that of the one-liner example of the Scanner; notably
179
+ how the sequence 'cat' is treated.
180
+
181
+ ```ruby
182
+ Regexp::Lexer.scan( /(cat?([b]at)){3,5}/ ).map {|token| token.text}
183
+ #=> ["(", "ca", "t", "?", "(", "[", "b", "]", "at", ")", ")", "{3,5}"]
184
+ ```
185
+
186
+ #### Notes
187
+ * The default syntax is that of the latest released version of ruby.
188
+
189
+ * The lexer performs some basic parsing to determine the depth of the
190
+ emitted tokens. This responsibility might be relegated to the scanner
191
+ in a future release.
192
+
193
+
194
+ ---
195
+ ### Parser
196
+ Sits on top of the lexer and transforms the "stream" of Token objects emitted
197
+ by it into a tree of Expression objects represented by an instance of the
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+ Expression::Root class. See Expression below for more information.
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+
200
+ #### Example
201
+
202
+ ```ruby
203
+ require 'regexp_parser'
204
+
205
+ regex = /a?(b)*[c]+/m
206
+
207
+ # using #to_s on the Regexp object to include options. Note that this turns the
208
+ # expression into '(?m-ix:a?(b)*[c]+)', thus the Group::Options in the output
209
+ root = Regexp::Parser.parse( regex.to_s, 'ruby/2.1')
210
+
211
+ root.multiline? # => true (aliased as m?)
212
+ root.case_insensitive? # => false (aliased as i?)
213
+
214
+ # simple tree walking method (depth-first, pre-order)
215
+ def walk(e, depth = 0)
216
+ puts "#{' ' * depth}> #{e.class}"
217
+
218
+ if e.respond_to?(:expressions)
219
+ e.each {|s| walk(s, depth+1) }
220
+ end
221
+ end
222
+
223
+ walk(root)
224
+
225
+ # output
226
+ # > Regexp::Expression::Root
227
+ # > Regexp::Expression::Group::Options
228
+ # > Regexp::Expression::Literal
229
+ # > Regexp::Expression::Group::Capture
230
+ # > Regexp::Expression::Literal
231
+ # > Regexp::Expression::CharacterSet
232
+ ```
233
+
234
+ _Note: quantifiers do not appear in the output because they are members of the
235
+ Expression class. See the next section for details._
236
+
237
+
238
+ ---
239
+ ### Expression
240
+ The base class of all objects returned by the parser, implements most of the
241
+ functions that are common to all expression classes.
242
+
243
+ Each Expression object contains the following members:
244
+
245
+ * **quantifier**: an instance of Expression::Quantifier that holds the details
246
+ of repetition for the Expression. Has a nil value if the expression is not
247
+ quantified.
248
+ * **expressions**: an array, holds the sub-expressions for the expression if it
249
+ is a group or alternation expression. Empty if the expression doesn't have
250
+ sub-expressions.
251
+ * **options**: a hash, holds the keys :i, :m, and :x with a boolean value that
252
+ indicates if the expression has a given option.
253
+
254
+
255
+ Expressions also contain the following members from the scanner/lexer:
256
+
257
+ * **type**: a symbol, denoting the expression type, such as :group, :quantifier
258
+ * **token**: a symbol, for the object's token, or opening token (in the case of
259
+ groups and sets)
260
+ * **text**: a string, the text of the expression (same as token for nesting expressions)
261
+
262
+
263
+ Every expression also has the following methods:
264
+
265
+ * **to_s**: returns the string representation of the expression.
266
+ * **<<**: adds sub-expresions to the expression.
267
+ * **each**: iterates over the expressions sub-expressions, if any.
268
+ * **[]**: access sub-expressions by index.
269
+ * **quantified?**: return true if the expression was followed by a quantifier.
270
+ * **quantity**: returns an array of the expression's min and max repetitions.
271
+ * **greedy?**: returns true if the expression's quantifier is greedy.
272
+ * **reluctant?** or **lazy?**: returns true if the expression's quantifier is
273
+ reluctant.
274
+ * **possessive?**: returns true if the expression's quantifier is possessive.
275
+ * **multiline?** or **m?**: returns true if the expression has the m option
276
+ * **case_insensitive?** or **ignore_case?** or **i?**: returns true if the expression
277
+ has the i option
278
+ * **free_spacing?** or **extended?** or **x?**: returns true if the expression has the x
279
+ option
280
+
281
+
282
+ A special expression class **Expression::Sequence** is used to hold the
283
+ expressions of a branch within an **Expression::Alternation** expression. For
284
+ example, the expression 'bat|cat|hat' would result in an alternation with 3
285
+ sequences, one for each possible alternative.
286
+
287
+
288
+ ## Scanner Syntax
289
+ The following syntax elements are supported by the scanner.
290
+
291
+ - Alternation: a|b|c, etc.
292
+ - Anchors: ^, $, \b, etc.
293
+ - Character Classes _(aka Sets)_: [abc], [^\]]
294
+ - Character Types: \d, \H, \s, etc.
295
+ - Escape Sequences: \t, \+, \?, etc.
296
+ - Grouped Expressions
297
+ - Assertions
298
+ - Lookahead: (?=abc)
299
+ - Negative Lookahead: (?!abc)
300
+ - Lookabehind: (?<=abc)
301
+ - Negative Lookbehind: (?<\!abc)
302
+ - Atomic: (?>abc)
303
+ - Back-references:
304
+ - Named: \k<name>
305
+ - Nest Level: \k<n-1>
306
+ - Numbered: \k<1>
307
+ - Relative: \k<-2>
308
+ - Capturing: (abc)
309
+ - Comment: (?# comment)
310
+ - Named: (?<name>abc)
311
+ - Options: (?mi-x:abc)
312
+ - Passive: (?:abc)
313
+ - Sub-expression Calls: \g<name>, \g<1>
314
+ - Literals: abc, def?, etc.
315
+ - POSIX classes: [:alpha:], [:print:], etc.
316
+ - Quantifiers
317
+ - Greedy: ?, *, +, {m,M}
318
+ - Reluctant: ??, *?, +?, {m,M}?
319
+ - Possessive: ?+, *+, ++, {m,M}+
320
+ - String Escapes
321
+ - Control: \C-C, \cD, etc.
322
+ - Hex: \x20, \x{701230}, etc.
323
+ - Meta: \M-c, \M-\C-C etc.
324
+ - Octal: \0, \01, \012
325
+ - Unicode: \uHHHH, \u{H+ H+}
326
+ - Traditional Back-references: \1 thru \9
327
+ - Unicode Properties:
328
+ - Age: \p{Age=2.1}, \P{age=5.2}, etc.
329
+ - Classes: \p{Alpha}, \P{Space}, etc.
330
+ - Derived Properties: \p{Math}, \P{Lowercase}, etc.
331
+ - General Categories: \p{Lu}, \P{Cs}, etc.
332
+ - Scripts: \p{Arabic}, \P{Hiragana}, etc.
333
+ - Simple Properties: \p{Dash}, \p{Extender}, etc.
334
+
335
+
336
+ ### Missing Features
337
+
338
+ The following were added by the Onigmo regular expression library used by
339
+ ruby 2.x and are not currently recognized by the scanner:
340
+
341
+ - Planned for support
342
+ - Conditional Expressions: (?(cond)yes-subexp), (?(cond)yes-subexp|no-subexp)
343
+ - Negative POSIX Brackets: [:^alpha:], [:^digit:]
344
+ - New Character Set Options: d, a, and u _[see](https://github.com/k-takata/Onigmo/blob/master/doc/RE#L234)_
345
+ - Not planned for support
346
+ - Keep: \K _(not enabled for ruby syntax)_
347
+ - Quotes: \Q...\E _(perl and java syntax only) [see](https://github.com/k-takata/Onigmo/blob/master/doc/RE#L452)_
348
+ - Capture History: (?@...), (?@<name>...) _(not enabled for ruby syntax) [see](https://github.com/k-takata/Onigmo/blob/master/doc/RE#L499)_
349
+
350
+
351
+ See something else missing? Please submit an [issue](https://github.com/ammar/regexp_parser/issues)
352
+
353
+ _**Note**: Attempting to process expressions with any of the missing syntax features will
354
+ cause an error._
355
+
356
+
357
+ ## Testing
358
+ To run the tests simply run rake from the root directory, as 'test' is the default task.
359
+
360
+ In addition to the main test task, which runs all tests, there are also component specific test
361
+ tasks, which only run the tests for one component at a time. These are:
362
+
363
+ * test:scanner
364
+ * test:lexer
365
+ * test:parser
366
+ * test:expression
367
+ * test:syntax
368
+
369
+ _A special task 'test:full' generatees the scanner's code from the ragel source files and
370
+ runs all the tests. This requires ragel to be installed._
371
+
372
+
373
+ The tests use ruby's test_unit, so they can also be run with:
374
+
375
+ ```
376
+ ruby test/test_all.rb
377
+ ```
378
+
379
+ This is useful when there is a need to focus on specific test files, for example:
380
+
381
+ ```
382
+ ruby test/scanner/test_properties.rb
383
+ ```
384
+
385
+
386
+ ## Building
387
+ Building the scanner and the gem requires [ragel](http://www.complang.org/ragel/) to be
388
+ installed. The build tasks will automatically invoke the 'ragel:rb' task to generate the
389
+ ruby scanner code.
390
+
391
+
392
+ The project uses the standard rubygems package tasks:
393
+
394
+
395
+ To build, run:
396
+ ```
397
+ rake build
398
+ ```
399
+
400
+ To install, run:
401
+ ```
402
+ rake install
403
+ ```
404
+
405
+
406
+ ## References
407
+ Documentation and books used while working on this project.
408
+
409
+
410
+ #### Ruby Flavors
411
+ * Oniguruma Regular Expressions [link](http://www.geocities.jp/kosako3/oniguruma/doc/RE.txt)
412
+ * Read Ruby > Regexps [link](https://github.com/runpaint/read-ruby/blob/master/src/regexps.xml)
413
+
414
+
415
+ #### Regular Expressions
416
+ * Mastering Regular Expressions, By Jeffrey E.F. Friedl (2nd Edition) [book](http://oreilly.com/catalog/9781565922570/)
417
+ * Regular Expression Flavor Comparison [link](http://www.regular-expressions.info/refflavors.html)
418
+ * Enumerating the strings of regular languages [link](http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~doug/nfa.ps.gz)
419
+
420
+
421
+ #### Unicode
422
+ * Unicode Explained, By Jukka K. Korpela. [book](http://oreilly.com/catalog/9780596101213)
423
+ * Unicode Derived Properties [link](http://www.unicode.org/Public/UNIDATA/DerivedCoreProperties.txt)
424
+ * Unicode Property Aliases [link](http://www.unicode.org/Public/UNIDATA/PropertyAliases.txt)
425
+ * Unicode Regular Expressions [link](http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr18/)
426
+ * Unicode Standard Annex #44 [link](http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr44/)
427
+
428
+ ## Thanks
429
+ This work is based on and inspired by the hard work and ideas of many people,
430
+ directly or indirectly. The following are only a few of those that should be
431
+ thanked.
432
+
433
+ * Adrian Thurston, for developing [ragel](http://www.complang.org/ragel/).
434
+ * Caleb Clausen, for feedback, which inspired this, valuable insights on structuring the parser,
435
+ and lots of [cool code](http://github.com/coatl).
436
+ * Jan Goyvaerts, for his [excellent resource](http://www.regular-expressions.info) on regular expressions.
437
+ * Run Paint Run Run, for his work on [Read Ruby](https://github.com/runpaint/read-ruby)
438
+ * Yukihiro Matsumoto, of course! For "The Ruby", of course!
439
+
440
+
441
+ ---
442
+ ##### Copyright
443
+ _Copyright (c) 2010-2014 Ammar Ali. See LICENSE file for details._