add regex and regexall functions (#10601)
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@ -82,6 +82,8 @@ func Functions(basedir string) map[string]function.Function {
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"range": stdlib.RangeFunc,
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"reverse": stdlib.ReverseListFunc,
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"replace": stdlib.ReplaceFunc,
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"regex": stdlib.RegexFunc,
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"regexall": stdlib.RegexAllFunc,
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"regex_replace": stdlib.RegexReplaceFunc,
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"rsadecrypt": crypto.RsaDecryptFunc,
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"setintersection": stdlib.SetIntersectionFunc,
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@ -0,0 +1,162 @@
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---
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page_title: regex - Functions - Configuration Language
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sidebar_title: regex
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description: |-
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The regex function applies a regular expression to a string and returns the
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matching substrings.
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---
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# `regex` Function
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`regex` applies a
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[regular expression](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression)
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to a string and returns the matching substrings.
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```hcl
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regex(pattern, string)
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```
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The return type of `regex` depends on the capture groups, if any, in the
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pattern:
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- If the pattern has no capture groups at all, the result is a single string
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covering the substring matched by the pattern as a whole.
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- If the pattern has one or more _unnamed_ capture groups, the result is a
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list of the captured substrings in the same order as the definition of
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the capture groups.
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- If the pattern has one or more _named_ capture groups, the result is a
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map of the captured substrings, using the capture group names as map keys.
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It's not valid to mix both named and unnamed capture groups in the same pattern.
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If the given pattern does not match at all, the `regex` raises an error. To
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_test_ whether a given pattern matches a string, use
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[`regexall`](./regexall.mdx) and test that the result has length greater than
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zero.
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The pattern is a string containing a mixture of literal characters and special
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matching operators as described in the following table. Note that when giving a
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regular expression pattern as a literal quoted string in the Packer
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language, the quoted string itself already uses backslash `\` as an escape
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character for the string, so any backslashes intended to be recognized as part
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of the pattern must be escaped as `\\`.
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| Sequence | Matches |
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| -------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| `.` | Any character except newline |
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| `[xyz]` | Any character listed between the brackets (`x`, `y`, and `z` in this example) |
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| `[a-z]` | Any character between `a` and `z`, inclusive |
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| `[^xyz]` | The opposite of `[xyz]` |
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| `\d` | ASCII digits (0 through 9, inclusive) |
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| `\D` | Anything except ASCII digits |
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| `\s` | ASCII spaces (space, tab, newline, carriage return, form feed) |
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| `\S` | Anything except ASCII spaces |
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| `\w` | The same as `[0-9A-Za-z_]` |
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| `\W` | Anything except the characters matched by `\w` |
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| `[[:alnum:]]` | The same as `[0-9A-Za-z]` |
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| `[[:alpha:]]` | The same as `[A-Za-z]` |
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| `[[:ascii:]]` | Any ASCII character |
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| `[[:blank:]]` | ASCII tab or space |
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| `[[:cntrl:]]` | ASCII/Unicode control characters |
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| `[[:digit:]]` | The same as `[0-9]` |
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| `[[:graph:]]` | All "graphical" (printable) ASCII characters |
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| `[[:lower:]]` | The same as `[a-z]` |
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| `[[:print:]]` | The same as `[[:graph:]]` |
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| `[[:punct:]]` | The same as `` [!-/:-@[-`{-~] `` |
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| `[[:space:]]` | The same as `[\t\n\v\f\r ]` |
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| `[[:upper:]]` | The same as `[A-Z]` |
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| `[[:word:]]` | The same as `\w` |
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| `[[:xdigit:]]` | The same as `[0-9A-Fa-f]` |
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| `\pN` | Unicode character class by using single-letter class names ("N" in this example) |
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| `\p{Greek}` | Unicode character class by unicode name ("Greek" in this example) |
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| `\PN` | The opposite of `\pN` |
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| `\P{Greek}` | The opposite of `\p{Greek}` |
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| `xy` | `x` followed immediately by `y` |
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| <code>x|y</code> | either `x` or `y`, preferring `x` |
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| `x*` | zero or more `x`, preferring more |
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| `x*?` | zero or more `x`, preferring fewer |
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| `x+` | one or more `x`, preferring more |
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| `x+?` | one or more `x`, preferring fewer |
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| `x?` | zero or one `x`, preferring one |
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| `x??` | zero or one `x`, preferring zero |
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| `x{n,m}` | between `n` and `m` repetitions of `x`, preferring more |
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| `x{n,m}?` | between `n` and `m` repetitions of `x`, preferring fewer |
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| `x{n,}` | at least `n` repetitions of `x`, preferring more |
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| `x{n,}?` | at least `n` repetitions of `x`, preferring fewer |
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| `x{n}` | exactly `n` repetitions of `x` |
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| `(x)` | unnamed capture group for sub-pattern `x` |
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| `(?P<name>x)` | named capture group, named `name`, for sub-pattern `x` |
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| `(?:x)` | non-capturing sub-pattern `x` |
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| `\*` | Literal `*` for any punctuation character `*` |
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| `\Q...\E` | Literal `...` for any text `...` as long as it does not include literally `\E` |
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In addition to the above matching operators that consume the characters they
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match, there are some additional operators that _only_ match, but consume
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no characters. These are "zero-width" matching operators:
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| Sequence | Matches |
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| -------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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| `^` | At the beginning of the given string |
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| `$` | At the end of the given string |
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| `\A` | At the beginning of the given string |
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| `\z` | At the end of the given string |
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| `\b` | At an ASCII word boundary (transition between `\w` and either `\W`, `\A` or `\z`, or vice-versa) |
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| `\B` | Not at an ASCII word boundary |
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Packer uses the
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[RE2](https://github.com/google/re2/wiki/Syntax) regular expression language.
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This engine does not support all of the features found in some other regular
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expression engines; in particular, it does not support backreferences.
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## Matching Flags
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Some of the matching behaviors described above can be modified by setting
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matching flags, activated using either the `(?flags)` operator (to activate
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within the current sub-pattern) or the `(?flags:x)` operator (to match `x` with
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the modified flags). Each flag is a single letter, and multiple flags can be
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set at once by listing multiple letters in the `flags` position.
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The available flags are listed in the table below:
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| Flag | Meaning |
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| ---- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| `i` | Case insensitive: a literal letter in the pattern matches both lowercase and uppercase versions of that letter |
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| `m` | The `^` and `$` operators also match the beginning and end of lines within the string, marked by newline characters; behavior of `\A` and `\z` is unchanged |
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| `s` | The `.` operator also matches newline |
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| `U` | The meaning of presence or absense `?` after a repetition operator is inverted. For example, `x*` is interpreted like `x*?` and vice-versa. |
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## Examples
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```
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> regex("[a-z]+", "53453453.345345aaabbbccc23454")
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aaabbbccc
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> regex("(\\d\\d\\d\\d)-(\\d\\d)-(\\d\\d)", "2019-02-01")
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[
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"2019",
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"02",
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"01",
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]
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> regex("^(?:(?P<scheme>[^:/?#]+):)?(?://(?P<authority>[^/?#]*))?", "https://packer.io/docs/")
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{
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"packer" = "packer.io"
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"scheme" = "https"
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}
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> regex("[a-z]+", "53453453.34534523454")
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Error: Error in function call
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Call to function "regex" failed: pattern did not match any part of the given
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string.
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```
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## Related Functions
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- [`regexall`](./regexall.mdx) searches for potentially multiple matches of a given pattern in a string.
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- [`replace`](./replace.mdx) replaces a substring of a string with another string, optionally matching using the same regular expression syntax as `regex`.
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If Packer already has a more specialized function to parse the syntax you
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are trying to match, prefer to use that function instead. Regular expressions
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can be hard to read and can obscure your intent, making a configuration harder
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to read and understand.
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@ -0,0 +1,57 @@
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---
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page_title: regexall - Functions - Configuration Language
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sidebar_title: regexall
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description: |-
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The regexall function applies a regular expression to a string and returns a list of all matches.
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---
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# `regexall` Function
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`regexall` applies a
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[regular expression](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression)
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to a string and returns a list of all matches.
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```hcl
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regexall(pattern, string)
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```
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`regexall` is a variant of [`regex`](./regex.mdx) and uses the same pattern
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syntax. For any given input to `regex`, `regexall` returns a list of whatever
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type `regex` would've returned, with one element per match. That is:
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- If the pattern has no capture groups at all, the result is a list of
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strings.
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- If the pattern has one or more _unnamed_ capture groups, the result is a
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list of lists.
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- If the pattern has one or more _named_ capture groups, the result is a
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list of maps.
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`regexall` can also be used to test whether a particular string matches a
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given pattern, by testing whether the length of the resulting list of matches
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is greater than zero.
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## Examples
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```
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> regexall("[a-z]+", "1234abcd5678efgh9")
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[
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"abcd",
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"efgh",
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]
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> length(regexall("[a-z]+", "1234abcd5678efgh9"))
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2
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> length(regexall("[a-z]+", "123456789")) > 0
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false
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```
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## Related Functions
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- [`regex`](./regex.mdx) searches for a single match of a given pattern, and
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returns an error if no match is found.
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If Packer already has a more specialized function to parse the syntax you
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are trying to match, prefer to use that function instead. Regular expressions
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can be hard to read and can obscure your intent, making a configuration harder
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to read and understand.
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@ -85,6 +85,8 @@ export default [
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'lower',
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'replace',
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'regex_replace',
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'regex',
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'regexall',
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'split',
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'strrev',
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'substr',
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