[/ / Copyright (c) 2008 Eric Niebler / / Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying / file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt) /] [section Dynamic Regexes] [h2 Overview] Static regexes are dandy, but sometimes you need something a bit more ... dynamic. Imagine you are developing a text editor with a regex search/replace feature. You need to accept a regular expression from the end user as input at run-time. There should be a way to parse a string into a regular expression. That's what xpressive's dynamic regexes are for. They are built from the same core components as their static counterparts, but they are late-bound so you can specify them at run-time. [h2 Construction and Assignment] There are two ways to create a dynamic regex: with the _regex_compile_ function or with the _regex_compiler_ class template. Use _regex_compile_ if you want the default locale. Use _regex_compiler_ if you need to specify a different locale. In the section on [link boost_xpressive.user_s_guide.grammars_and_nested_matches regex grammars], we'll see another use for _regex_compiler_. Here is an example of using `basic_regex<>::compile()`: sregex re = sregex::compile( "this|that", regex_constants::icase ); Here is the same example using _regex_compiler_: sregex_compiler compiler; sregex re = compiler.compile( "this|that", regex_constants::icase ); _regex_compile_ is implemented in terms of _regex_compiler_. [h2 Dynamic xpressive Syntax] Since the dynamic syntax is not constrained by the rules for valid C++ expressions, we are free to use familiar syntax for dynamic regexes. For this reason, the syntax used by xpressive for dynamic regexes follows the lead set by John Maddock's [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2003/n1429.htm proposal] to add regular expressions to the Standard Library. It is essentially the syntax standardized by [@http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/files/ECMA-ST/Ecma-262.pdf ECMAScript], with minor changes in support of internationalization. Since the syntax is documented exhaustively elsewhere, I will simply refer you to the existing standards, rather than duplicate the specification here. [h2 Internationalization] As with static regexes, dynamic regexes support internationalization by allowing you to specify a different `std::locale`. To do this, you must use _regex_compiler_. The _regex_compiler_ class has an `imbue()` function. After you have imbued a _regex_compiler_ object with a custom `std::locale`, all regex objects compiled by that _regex_compiler_ will use that locale. For example: std::locale my_locale = /* initialize your locale object here */; sregex_compiler compiler; compiler.imbue( my_locale ); sregex re = compiler.compile( "\\w+|\\d+" ); This regex will use `my_locale` when evaluating the intrinsic character sets `"\\w"` and `"\\d"`. [endsect]