rhino1.7.6.testsrc.tests.ecma_3.RegExp.regress-209919.js Maven / Gradle / Ivy
Go to download
Show more of this group Show more artifacts with this name
Show all versions of rhino Show documentation
Show all versions of rhino Show documentation
Rhino is an open-source implementation of JavaScript written entirely in Java. It is typically
embedded into Java applications to provide scripting to end users.
/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 2; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */
/* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
* License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
* file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */
/*
*
* Date: 19 June 2003
* SUMMARY: Testing regexp submatches with quantifiers
*
* See http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=209919
*
*/
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
var gTestfile = 'regress-209919.js';
var i = 0;
var BUGNUMBER = 209919;
var summary = 'Testing regexp submatches with quantifiers';
var status = '';
var statusmessages = new Array();
var pattern = '';
var patterns = new Array();
var string = '';
var strings = new Array();
var actualmatch = '';
var actualmatches = new Array();
var expectedmatch = '';
var expectedmatches = new Array();
/*
* Waldemar: "ECMA-262 15.10.2.5, third algorithm, step 2.1 states that
* once the minimum repeat count (which is 0 for *, 1 for +, etc.) has
* been satisfied, an atom being repeated must not match the empty string."
*
* In this example, the minimum repeat count is 0, so the last thing the
* capturing parens is permitted to contain is the 'a'. It may NOT go on
* to capture the '' at the $ position of 'a', even though '' satifies
* the condition b*
*
*/
status = inSection(1);
string = 'a';
pattern = /(a|b*)*/;
actualmatch = string.match(pattern);
expectedmatch = Array(string, 'a');
addThis();
/*
* In this example, the minimum repeat count is 5, so the capturing parens
* captures the 'a', then goes on to capture the '' at the $ position of 'a'
* 4 times before it has to stop. Therefore the last thing it contains is ''.
*/
status = inSection(2);
string = 'a';
pattern = /(a|b*){5,}/;
actualmatch = string.match(pattern);
expectedmatch = Array(string, '');
addThis();
/*
* Reduction of the above examples to contain only the condition b*
* inside the capturing parens. This can be even harder to grasp!
*
* The global match is the '' at the ^ position of 'a', but the parens
* is NOT permitted to capture it since the minimum repeat count is 0!
*/
status = inSection(3);
string = 'a';
pattern = /(b*)*/;
actualmatch = string.match(pattern);
expectedmatch = Array('', undefined);
addThis();
/*
* Here we have used the + quantifier (repeat count 1) outside the parens.
* Therefore the parens must capture at least once before stopping, so it
* does capture the '' this time -
*/
status = inSection(4);
string = 'a';
pattern = /(b*)+/;
actualmatch = string.match(pattern);
expectedmatch = Array('', '');
addThis();
/*
* More complex examples -
*/
pattern = /^\-?(\d{1,}|\.{0,})*(\,\d{1,})?$/;
status = inSection(5);
string = '100.00';
actualmatch = string.match(pattern);
expectedmatch = Array(string, '00', undefined);
addThis();
status = inSection(6);
string = '100,00';
actualmatch = string.match(pattern);
expectedmatch = Array(string, '100', ',00');
addThis();
status = inSection(7);
string = '1.000,00';
actualmatch = string.match(pattern);
expectedmatch = Array(string, '000', ',00');
addThis();
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
test();
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
function addThis()
{
statusmessages[i] = status;
patterns[i] = pattern;
strings[i] = string;
actualmatches[i] = actualmatch;
expectedmatches[i] = expectedmatch;
i++;
}
function test()
{
enterFunc ('test');
printBugNumber(BUGNUMBER);
printStatus (summary);
testRegExp(statusmessages, patterns, strings, actualmatches, expectedmatches);
exitFunc ('test');
}
© 2015 - 2024 Weber Informatics LLC | Privacy Policy