Book Image

Boost C++ Application Development Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Anton Polukhin Alekseevic
Book Image

Boost C++ Application Development Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Anton Polukhin Alekseevic

Overview of this book

If you want to take advantage of the real power of Boost and C++ and avoid the confusion about which library to use in which situation, then this book is for you. Beginning with the basics of Boost C++, you will move on to learn how the Boost libraries simplify application development. You will learn to convert data such as string to numbers, numbers to string, numbers to numbers and more. Managing resources will become a piece of cake. You’ll see what kind of work can be done at compile time and what Boost containers can do. You will learn everything for the development of high quality fast and portable applications. Write a program once and then you can use it on Linux, Windows, MacOS, Android operating systems. From manipulating images to graphs, directories, timers, files, networking – everyone will find an interesting topic. Be sure that knowledge from this book won’t get outdated, as more and more Boost libraries become part of the C++ Standard.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Searching and replacing strings using regular expressions


My wife enjoyed the Matching strings by regular expressions recipe very much. But, she wanted more and told me that I'll get no food until I promote the recipe to be able to replace parts of the input string according to a regex match.

Ok, here it comes. Each matched sub-expression (part of the regex in parenthesis) must get a unique number starting from 1; this number would be used to create a new string.

This is how an updated program should work like:

 Available regex syntaxes:
 [0] Perl
 [1] Perl case insensitive
 [2] POSIX extended
 [3] POSIX extended case insensitive
 [4] POSIX basic
 [5] POSIX basic case insensitive

 Choose regex syntax: 0
 Input regex: (\d)(\d)
 String to match: 00
 MATCH: 0, 0,
 Replace pattern: \1#\2
 RESULT: 0#0
 String to match: 42
 MATCH: 4, 2,
 Replace pattern: ###\1-\1-\2-\1-\1###
 RESULT: ###4-4-2-4-4###

Getting ready

We'll be reusing the code from the Matching strings by regular expressions recipe. It is...