#10713: merge with 3.2.

This commit is contained in:
Ezio Melotti 2012-02-29 11:49:45 +02:00
commit 0b8123d8ae
2 changed files with 40 additions and 8 deletions

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@ -330,16 +330,22 @@ the second character. For example, ``\$`` matches the character ``'$'``.
Matches the empty string, but only at the beginning or end of a word.
A word is defined as a sequence of Unicode alphanumeric or underscore
characters, so the end of a word is indicated by whitespace or a
non-alphanumeric, non-underscore Unicode character. Note that
formally, ``\b`` is defined as the boundary between a ``\w`` and a
``\W`` character (or vice versa). By default Unicode alphanumerics
are the ones used, but this can be changed by using the :const:`ASCII`
flag. Inside a character range, ``\b`` represents the backspace
character, for compatibility with Python's string literals.
non-alphanumeric, non-underscore Unicode character. Note that formally,
``\b`` is defined as the boundary between a ``\w`` and a ``\W`` character
(or vice versa), or between ``\w`` and the beginning/end of the string.
This means that ``r'\bfoo\b'`` matches ``'foo'``, ``'foo.'``, ``'(foo)'``,
``'bar foo baz'`` but not ``'foobar'`` or ``'foo3'``.
By default Unicode alphanumerics are the ones used, but this can be changed
by using the :const:`ASCII` flag. Inside a character range, ``\b``
represents the backspace character, for compatibility with Python's string
literals.
``\B``
Matches the empty string, but only when it is *not* at the beginning or end of a
word. This is just the opposite of ``\b``, so word characters are
Matches the empty string, but only when it is *not* at the beginning or end
of a word. This means that ``r'py\B'`` matches ``'python'``, ``'py3'``,
``'py2'``, but not ``'py'``, ``'py.'``, or ``'py!'``.
``\B`` is just the opposite of ``\b``, so word characters are
Unicode alphanumerics or the underscore, although this can be changed
by using the :const:`ASCII` flag.

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@ -355,6 +355,32 @@ class ReTests(unittest.TestCase):
self.assertEqual(re.search(r"\d\D\w\W\s\S",
"1aa! a", re.UNICODE).group(0), "1aa! a")
def test_string_boundaries(self):
# See http://bugs.python.org/issue10713
self.assertEqual(re.search(r"\b(abc)\b", "abc").group(1),
"abc")
# There's a word boundary at the start of a string.
self.assertTrue(re.match(r"\b", "abc"))
# A non-empty string includes a non-boundary zero-length match.
self.assertTrue(re.search(r"\B", "abc"))
# There is no non-boundary match at the start of a string.
self.assertFalse(re.match(r"\B", "abc"))
# However, an empty string contains no word boundaries, and also no
# non-boundaries.
self.assertEqual(re.search(r"\B", ""), None)
# This one is questionable and different from the perlre behaviour,
# but describes current behavior.
self.assertEqual(re.search(r"\b", ""), None)
# A single word-character string has two boundaries, but no
# non-boundary gaps.
self.assertEqual(len(re.findall(r"\b", "a")), 2)
self.assertEqual(len(re.findall(r"\B", "a")), 0)
# If there are no words, there are no boundaries
self.assertEqual(len(re.findall(r"\b", " ")), 0)
self.assertEqual(len(re.findall(r"\b", " ")), 0)
# Can match around the whitespace.
self.assertEqual(len(re.findall(r"\B", " ")), 2)
def test_bigcharset(self):
self.assertEqual(re.match("([\u2222\u2223])",
"\u2222").group(1), "\u2222")