Replacing numerics in text using regular expressions.
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Hello, I am trying to figure out whether it is possible to dynamically replace numeric values in a long text block using regular expressions. Here is an example from a made-up xml file.
str = '<document><placemark><when>5</when><lat>41</lat></placemark><placemark><when>11</when></placemark></document>';
Now, I want to perform some numerical function on all of the outputs of <when>, lets say subtract 3 so that the string will read
'<document><placemark><when>2</when><lat>41</lat></placemark><placemark><when>8</when></placemark></document>';
I can already find the locations using
exp='<when>(\d+)</when>'
but I don't know how to
- extract the actual numerical value at that location,
- perform some arbitrary function on that value (subtraction, addition, division, anything)
- write that new value back into the string so it reads <when>newValue</when>
If I was certain that the number of characters would stay the same, I could do a for-loop with some pretty gross indexing. However, as in the above example the length of the charstring representing the numeric value might change as a result of my function (11 became 8).
I suspect there is either a really elegant regexp solution, or it is not possible at all. Hoping for the former. Cheers, Dan
3 Comments
D. Plotnick
on 28 Sep 2017
Walter Roberson
on 28 Sep 2017
Sometimes for presentation purposes here you need to change < to < which shows up like <
Cedric
on 28 Sep 2017
Please see my last edit with a more "classical" approach.
Accepted Answer
More Answers (1)
Walter Roberson
on 28 Sep 2017
Yes. If you can devise a regexp pattern to isolate the number, then you can use regexprep with the ${cmd} replacement. Arguments to the commands will be passed as strings. Values can be returned as strings or as integers that will be converted to strings.
For example,
str = '<document><placemark><when>5</when><lat>41</lat></placemark><placemark><when>11</when></placemark></document>';
regexprep(str, '\d+', '${$0 - 2}')
I did not test this code (my system is busy at the moment)
2 Comments
D. Plotnick
on 28 Sep 2017
Cedric
on 28 Sep 2017
You could have done it by coding the conversion to double as well. $0 refers to the match, which is a string. It must be converted to double before you can do math. Instead of loading the replacement string with commands, I created a function repFun that we call, and this function does the double conversion string-num-string.
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