8

Trying to learn how to use the new std::regex in C++11. But the example I tried is throwing a regex_error exception I don't understand. Here is my sample code:

#include <iostream>
#include <regex>

int main()
{
    std::string str = "xyzabc1xyzabc2xyzabc3abc4xyz";
    std::regex re( "(abc[1234])" ); // <-- this line throws a C++ exception

    // also tried to do this:
    // std::regex re( "(abc[1234])", std::regex::optimize | std::regex::extended );

    while ( true )
    {
        std::cout << "searching in " << str << std::endl;
        std::smatch match;
        std::regex_search( str, match, re );
        if ( match.empty() )
        {
            std::cout << "...no more matches" << std::endl;
            break;
        }
        for ( auto x : match )
        {
            std::cout << "found: " << x << std::endl;
        }
        str = match.suffix().str();
    }
    return 0;
}

I compile and run like this:

g++ -g -std=c++11 test.cpp
./a.out
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'std::regex_error'
  what():  regex_error

Looking at the backtrace in gdb, I see the exception thrown is regex_constants::error_brack.

Praetorian
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Stéphane
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1 Answers1

5

Thanks for the hint. Had no idea the regex code in g++ was incomplete.

In the meantime, guess we'll have to refer to this old StackOverflow question:

C++: what regex library should I use?

Community
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Stéphane
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    First gcc support is in gcc 4.9 : http://stackoverflow.com/questions/23474121/what-part-of-regex-is-supported-by-gcc-4-9 – ACyclic Nov 02 '14 at 13:25