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regexp hell

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B. T. Raven

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Dec 28, 2012, 1:57:05 AM12/28/12
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I am trying to byte-compile my .emacs for the first time and I see the
complaint "replace-string is to be used interactively..." or something.
I am using the form:

(replace-string "\\" "\\\\" nil (point-min) (point-max))

in a function and it seems to work but I can't make any equivalent re's
work in re-search-forward (the suggested equivalent to be used in a
lisp programm). I can't get past the "trailing backslash" error. Is
there something kosher for the above replace-string form?

Thanks,

Ed

Filipp Gunbin

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Dec 28, 2012, 2:25:42 AM12/28/12
to B. T. Raven, help-gn...@gnu.org
You can use `search-forward' (which searches for string, not for regexp),
as it is suggested in documentation for `replace-string':

(while (search-forward FROM-STRING nil t)
(replace-match TO-STRING nil t))

Then with the above strings it should replace one backslash with two.

But if you still need to write a regexp, it seems that you need to
double the amount of backslashes. To include a backslash in a regexp you
need to prefix it with another backslash and each backslash should be
prefixed with another one when written in a lisp program (so, 4
backslashes in a program for a single one in regexp).

--
Filipp Gunbin

B. T. Raven

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Dec 28, 2012, 12:33:10 PM12/28/12
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> On 28/12/2012 10:57, B. T. Raven wrote:
>
>> I am trying to byte-compile my .emacs for the first time and I see the
>> complaint "replace-string is to be used interactively..." or something.
>> I am using the form:
>>
>> (replace-string "\\" "\\\\" nil (point-min) (point-max))
>>
>> in a function and it seems to work but I can't make any equivalent re's
>> work in re-search-forward (the suggested equivalent to be used in a
>> lisp programm). I can't get past the "trailing backslash" error. Is
>> there something kosher for the above replace-string form?
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Ed
>>
>
> You can use `search-forward' (which searches for string, not for regexp),
> as it is suggested in documentation for `replace-string':
>
> (while (search-forward FROM-STRING nil t)
> (replace-match TO-STRING nil t))
>
> Then with the above strings it should replace one backslash with two.

Thanks, Filipp. That's what I needed. Now the .emacs byte-compiles
without issuing a warning.
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