NAME ^

src/dynpmc/matchrange.pmc - MatchRange Numbers PMC Class

DESCRIPTION ^

MatchRange provides a representation of regular expression matches, by describing the starting and ending offsets within the input string. This PMC only provides the start and end values; the Match PMC is responsible for interpreting these values appropriately (namely, as a substring within the input string.)

This really probably shouldn't be a top-level class; it probably ought to inherit from "IntPair" or something like that. (But it can't just *be* "IntPair", because the Match PMC uses the type to figure out whether it has a regular variable or something that it needs to interpret as a string given its value and the input string.)

This PMC is used by the languages/regex rule compiler, together with the Match PMC.

Functions ^

static INTVAL *matchrange_locate_keyed_int(Interp *interp, PMC *self, STRING *key)

Interpret the string key; valid keys are start and end, representing the offsets of the first and last characters of the matching range.

Methods ^

void class_init()

Class initialization. Caches the type id of the MatchRange PMC, because it will be used frequently here.

*/

    void class_init() {
        /* class_init_code */
        if (pass) {
            MatchRange_type_id = entry;
        }
    }
/*

void init()

Initializes the matchrange with [-2,-2].

void init_pmc(PMC *initializer)

Initializes the matchrange number with the specified values. (not implemented)

void destroy()

Cleans up.

PMC *clone()

Creates an identical copy of the matchrange number.

INTVAL get_bool()

Returns true if the match range is defined.

INTVAL get_integer_keyed(PMC *key)

INTVAL get_integer_keyed_str(STRING *key)

FLOATVAL get_number_keyed(PMC *key)

FLOATVAL get_number_keyed_str(STRING *key)

PMC *get_pmc_keyed(PMC *key)

PMC *get_pmc_keyed_str(STRING *key)

Returns the requested number (real part for real and imaginary for imag).

INTVAL get_integer_keyed_int(INTVAL key)

Quick hack to emulate get_start() and get_end():

  key = 0 ... get start offset
  key = 1 ... get end offset
void set_integer_keyed_int(INTVAL key, INTVAL v)

Set start or end depending on key

*/

    INTVAL get_integer_keyed_int(INTVAL key) {
        switch (key) {
            case 0:
                return RANGE_START(SELF);
            case 1:
                return RANGE_END(SELF);
            default:
                Parrot_ex_throw_from_c_args(interp, NULL, 1,
                    "MatchRange: key must be 0 or 1");
        }
        return -2;
    }

    void set_integer_keyed_int(INTVAL key, INTVAL v) {
        switch (key) {
            case 0:
                RANGE_START(SELF) = v;
                break;
            case 1:
                RANGE_END(SELF) = v;
                break;
            default:
                Parrot_ex_throw_from_c_args(interp, NULL, 1,
                    "MatchRange: key must be 0 or 1");
        }
    }
/*
void set_pmc(PMC *value)

if value is a MatchRange PMC then the set the range indices to the same values; otherwise throw an exception. This really only makes sense if you're using a MatchRange from the same Match, or at least for the same input string, but I won't worry about that for now.

void set_integer_keyed(PMC *key, INTVAL value)

void set_integer_keyed_str(STRING *key, INTVAL value)

void set_number_keyed(PMC *key, FLOATVAL value)

void set_number_keyed_str(STRING *key, FLOATVAL value)

void set_number_keyed_int(INTVAL key, FLOATVAL value)

void set_pmc_keyed(PMC *key, PMC *value)

void set_pmc_keyed_str(STRING *key, PMC *value)

Sets the requested number(start offset for start and end offset for end) to value. For the keyed_int variants, 0 means RANGE_START, 1 means RANGE_END.

PMC *add(PMC *value, PMC *dest)

PMC *add_int(INTVAL value, PMC *dest)

PMC *add_float(FLOATVAL value, PMC *dest)

Adds value to the ending offset of the match range, placing the result in dest.

PMC *subtract(PMC *value, PMC *dest)

PMC *subtract_int(INTVAL value, PMC *dest)

PMC *subtract_float(FLOATVAL value, PMC *dest)

Subtracts value from the ending offset of the match range, placing the result in dest.

INTVAL is_equal(PMC *value)

Compares the matchrange number with value and returs true if they are equal.


parrot