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Rosie Rust Interface Overview

This crate implements a high-level interface to the Rosie matching engine for the Rosie Pattern Language(rpl).

Complete reference documentation for rpl is here, and additional examples can be found here.

In Cargo.toml

To build Rosie as part of your project, add the following line to your Cargo.toml [dependencies] section:

rosie = { features = ["build_static_librosie"] }

To build Rosie to link against a shared librosie, already installed on the system, add the following line instead:

rosie = { features = ["link_shared_librosie"] }

Deployment

Rosie depends on a rosie_home directory, containing support files including the Standard Pattern Library. See the Installation & Deployment section of the [rosie_sys] crate's README for deployment instructions.

Usage

There are 3 levels of depth at which you may access Rosie.

High-Level: With Rosie::match_str()

Just one-line to check for a match

use rosie::*;

if Rosie::match_str("{ [H][^]* }", "Hello, Rosie!") {
    println!("It Matches!");
}

Or to get the matched substring

use rosie::*;

let result : MatchResult = Rosie::match_str("date.any", "Nov 5, 1955! That was the day");
println!("Matched Substring = {}", result.matched_str());
assert_eq!(result.matched_str(), "Nov 5, 1955");

Mid-Level: With compiled Patterns

Explicit compilation reduces overhead because you can manage compiled patterns yourself, dropping the patterns you don't need and avoiding unnecessary recompilation.

use rosie::*;

let date_pat = Rosie::compile("date.us_long").unwrap();
let result : MatchResult = date_pat.match_str("Saturday, Nov 5, 1955").unwrap();
println!("did_match = {}", result.did_match());
println!("matched_str = {}", result.matched_str());

Low-Level: With a RosieEngine

See [engine] for details.