frak transforms collections of strings into regular expressions for matching those strings. The primary goal of this library is to generate regular expressions from a known set of inputs which avoid backtracking as much as possible. It is available as a command line utility and for the browser as a JavaScript library.
Add frak as a dependency to your project.clj
file.
user> (require 'frak)
nil
user> (frak/pattern ["foo" "bar" "baz" "quux"])
#"(?:ba[rz]|foo|quux)"
user> (frak/pattern ["Clojure" "Clojars" "ClojureScript"])
#"Cloj(?:ure(?:Script)?|ars)"
user> (frak/pattern ["skill" "skills" "skull" "skulls"])
#"sk(?:[ui]lls?)"
Frak's pattern
function can accept an options map as its second argument, the available options are:
:capture?
- boolean (default false), whether rendered regex should create capture groups for each match:escape-chars
- vector (default seefrak/metacharacters
), characters to escape when rendering a regular expression.:exact?
- boolean (default false), whether the rendered regex should only produces matches when the entire input string matches.:whole-words?
- boolean (default false), whether the rendered regex should match only whole words (word boundary at both ends of the match) in the input string.
frak can be used from the command line with either Leiningen or NodeJS.
Use the lein run
command:
$ lein run -e foo bar baz quux
^(?:ba[rz]|foo|quux)$
Compile the NodeJS version
$ lein do cljx once, cljsbuild once node
$ chmod +x bin/frak
$ bin/frak -e foo bar baz quux
^(?:ba[rz]|foo|quux)$
To use frak as a standalone library in the browser with JavaScript compile the browser version:
$ lein do cljx once, cljsbuild once browser
$ mv ./target/js/frak.min.js <destination>
Try it using this HTML:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
</head>
<body>
<pre>Input: <span id="input"></span></pre>
<pre>Output: <span id="output"></span></pre>
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.0.3.min.js"></script>
<script src="frak.min.js"></script>
<script>
var strings = ["foo", "bar", "baz", "quux"];
// It's a good idea to use the `"exact?"` option.
var pattern = frak.pattern(strings, {"exact?": true})
jQuery("#input").text(strings.join(" "));
jQuery("#output").text(pattern);
</script>
</body>
</html>
For even more fun try it with AngularJS!
A frak pattern is constructed from a trie of characters and a renderer which processes it. As characters are added to the trie, data such as such as which characters are terminal are stored in it's branches.
During the rendering process frak analyzes each branch and attempts to emit the most concise regular expression possible. Additional post operations are applied after rendering to improve the expression where possible.
Here's why. Also because.
Let's build a regular expression for matching any word in
/usr/share/dict/words
.
user> (require '[clojure.java.io :as io])
nil
user> (def words
(-> (io/file "/usr/share/dict/words")
io/reader
line-seq))
#'user/words
user> (def word-re (frak/pattern words))
#'user/word-re
user> (every? #(re-matches word-re %) words)
true
The last two operations will take a moment since there are over 235,000 words to consider.
You can view the full expression
here
(it's approximately 1.5M
!).
(use 'criterium.core)
(def words
(-> (io/file "/usr/share/dict/words")
io/reader
line-seq))
(defn naive-pattern
"Create a naive regular expression pattern for matching every string
in strs."
[strs]
(->> strs
(clojure.string/join "|")
(format "(?:%s)")
re-pattern))
;; Shuffle 10000 words and build a naive and frak pattern from them.
(def ws (shuffle (take 10000 words)))
(def n-pat (naive-pattern ws))
(def f-pat (frak/pattern ws))
;; Verify the naive pattern matches everything it was constructed from.
(every? #(re-matches n-pat %) ws)
;; => true
;; Shuffle the words again since the naive pattern is built in the
;; same order as it's inputs.
(def ws' (shuffle ws))
;;;; Benchmarks
;; Naive pattern
(bench (doseq [w ws'] (re-matches n-pat w)))
;; Execution time mean : 1.499489 sec
;; Execution time std-deviation : 181.365166 ms
;; Execution time lower quantile : 1.337817 sec ( 2.5%)
;; Execution time upper quantile : 1.828733 sec (97.5%)
;; frak pattern
(bench (doseq [w ws'] (re-matches f-pat w)))
;; Execution time mean : 155.515855 ms
;; Execution time std-deviation : 5.663346 ms
;; Execution time lower quantile : 148.168855 ms ( 2.5%)
;; Execution time upper quantile : 164.164294 ms (97.5%)