c语言正则表达式库pcre使用例子

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <pcre.h>
#include <string.h>


#define OVECCOUNT 30 /* should be a multiple of 3 */
#define EBUFLEN 128
#define BUFLEN 1024

int main_adfs()
{
    pcre *reCM, *reUN, *reTC, *reCDMA;
    const char *error;
    int erroffset;
    int ovector[OVECCOUNT];
    int rcCM, rcUN, rcTC, rcCDMA, i;

    /*
            yidong:134.135.136.137.138.139.150.151.152.157.158.159.187.188,147
            liandong:130.131.132.155.156.185.186
            dianxin:133.153.180.189
            CDMA :133,153
         */
    char src[22];
    char pattern_CM[] = "^1(3[4-9]|5[012789]|8[78])\\d{8}$";
    char pattern_UN[] = "^1(3[0-2]|5[56]|8[56])\\d{8}$";
    char pattern_TC[] = "^18[09]\\d{8}$";
    char pattern_CDMA[] = "^1[35]3\\d{8}$";

    printf("please input your telephone number \n");
    scanf("%s", src);
    printf("String : %s\n", src);
    printf("Pattern_CM: \"%s\"\n", pattern_CM);
    printf("Pattern_UN: \"%s\"\n", pattern_UN);
    printf("Pattern_TC: \"%s\"\n", pattern_TC);
    printf("Pattern_CDMA: \"%s\"\n", pattern_CDMA);

    reCM = pcre_compile(pattern_CM, 0, &error, &erroffset, NULL);
    reUN = pcre_compile(pattern_UN, 0, &error, &erroffset, NULL);
    reTC = pcre_compile(pattern_TC, 0, &error, &erroffset, NULL);
    reCDMA = pcre_compile(pattern_CDMA, 0, &error, &erroffset, NULL);

    if (reCM==NULL && reUN==NULL && reTC==NULL && reCDMA==NULL) {
        printf("PCRE compilation telephone failed at offset %d: %s\n", erroffset, error);
        return 1;
    }

    rcCM = pcre_exec(reCM, NULL, src, strlen(src), 0, 0, ovector, OVECCOUNT);
    rcUN = pcre_exec(reUN, NULL, src, strlen(src), 0, 0, ovector, OVECCOUNT);
    rcTC = pcre_exec(reTC, NULL, src, strlen(src), 0, 0, ovector, OVECCOUNT);
    rcCDMA = pcre_exec(reCDMA, NULL, src, strlen(src), 0, 0, ovector, OVECCOUNT);

    if (rcCM<0 && rcUN<0 && rcTC<0 && rcCDMA<0) {
        if (rcCM==PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH && rcUN==PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH &&
                rcTC==PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH && rcTC==PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH) {
            printf("Sorry, no match ...\n");
        }
        else {
            printf("Matching error %d\n", rcCM);
            printf("Matching error %d\n", rcUN);
            printf("Matching error %d\n", rcTC);
            printf("Matching error %d\n", rcCDMA);
        }
        free(reCM);
        free(reUN);
        free(reTC);
        free(reCDMA);
        return 1;
    }
    printf("\nOK, has matched ...\n\n");
    if (rcCM > 0) {
        printf("Pattern_CM: \"%s\"\n", pattern_CM);
        printf("String : %s\n", src);
    }
    if (rcUN > 0) {
        printf("Pattern_UN: \"%s\"\n", pattern_UN);
        printf("String : %s\n", src);
    }
    if (rcTC > 0) {
        printf("Pattern_TC: \"%s\"\n", pattern_TC);
        printf("String : %s\n", src);
    }
    if (rcCDMA > 0) {
        printf("Pattern_CDMA: \"%s\"\n", pattern_CDMA);
        printf("String : %s\n", src);
    }
    free(reCM);
    free(reUN);
    free(reTC);
    free(reCDMA);
    return 0;
}

#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <pcre.h>
#define OVECCOUNT 30 /* should be a multiple of 3 */
#define EBUFLEN 128
#define BUFLEN 1024

int main(int argc, char **argv)
{


    pcre *re;
    const char *error;
    int  erroffset;
    int  ovector[OVECCOUNT];
    int  rc, i;

    char src[] = "123.123.123.123:80|1.1.1.1:88";
    char pattern[] = "(\\d*.\\d*.\\d*.\\d*):(\\d*)";

    printf("String : %s\n", src);
    printf("Pattern: \"%s\"\n", pattern);


    re = pcre_compile(pattern, 0, &error, &erroffset, NULL);
    if (re == NULL) {
        printf("PCRE compilation failed at offset %d: %s\n", erroffset, error);
        return 1;
    }

    char *p = src;
    while ( ( rc = pcre_exec(re, NULL, p, strlen(p), 0, 0, ovector, OVECCOUNT)) != PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH )
    {
        printf("\nOK, has matched ...\n\n");

        for (i = 0; i < rc; i++)
        {
            char *substring_start = p + ovector[2*i];
            int substring_length = ovector[2*i+1] - ovector[2*i];
            char matched[1024];
            memset( matched, 0, 1024 );
            strncpy( matched, substring_start, substring_length );

            printf( "match:%s\n", matched );
        }

        p += ovector[1];
        if ( !p )
        {
            break;
        }
    }
    pcre_free(re);

    return 0;
}

/*************************************************
*           PCRE DEMONSTRATION PROGRAM           *
*************************************************/

/* This is a demonstration program to illustrate the most straightforward ways
of calling the PCRE regular expression library from a C program. See the
pcresample documentation for a short discussion ("man pcresample" if you have
the PCRE man pages installed).

In Unix-like environments, if PCRE is installed in your standard system
libraries, you should be able to compile this program using this command:

gcc -Wall pcredemo.c -lpcre -o pcredemo

If PCRE is not installed in a standard place, it is likely to be installed with
support for the pkg-config mechanism. If you have pkg-config, you can compile
this program using this command:

gcc -Wall pcredemo.c `pkg-config --cflags --libs libpcre` -o pcredemo

If you do not have pkg-config, you may have to use this:

gcc -Wall pcredemo.c -I/usr/local/include -L/usr/local/lib \
  -R/usr/local/lib -lpcre -o pcredemo

Replace "/usr/local/include" and "/usr/local/lib" with wherever the include and
library files for PCRE are installed on your system. Only some operating
systems (e.g. Solaris) use the -R option.

Building under Windows:

If you want to statically link this program against a non-dll .a file, you must
define PCRE_STATIC before including pcre.h, otherwise the pcre_malloc() and
pcre_free() exported functions will be declared __declspec(dllimport), with
unwanted results. So in this environment, uncomment the following line. */

/* #define PCRE_STATIC */

#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <pcre.h>

#define OVECCOUNT 30    /* should be a multiple of 3 */


//http://tool.chinaz.com/regex/
int main2(int argc, char **argv)
{
    pcre *re;
    const char *error;
    char *pattern;
    char *subject;
    unsigned char *name_table;
    unsigned int option_bits;
    int erroffset;
    int find_all;
    int crlf_is_newline;
    int namecount;
    int name_entry_size;
    int ovector[OVECCOUNT];
    int subject_length;
    int rc, i;
    int utf8;


    /**************************************************************************
* First, sort out the command line. There is only one possible option at  *
* the moment, "-g" to request repeated matching to find all occurrences,  *
* like Perl's /g option. We set the variable find_all to a non-zero value *
* if the -g option is present. Apart from that, there must be exactly two *
* arguments.                                                              *
**************************************************************************/

    find_all = 0;
    for (i = 1; i < argc; i++)
    {
        if (strcmp(argv[i], "-g") == 0) find_all = 1;
        else break;
    }

    /* After the options, we require exactly two arguments, which are the pattern,
and the subject string. */

    if (argc - i != 2)
    {
        printf("Two arguments required: a regex and a subject string\n");
        return 1;
    }

    pattern = argv[i];
    subject = argv[i+1];
    subject_length = (int)strlen(subject);


    /*************************************************************************
* Now we are going to compile the regular expression pattern, and handle *
* and errors that are detected.                                          *
*************************************************************************/

    re = pcre_compile(
                pattern,              /* the pattern */
                0,                    /* default options */
                &error,               /* for error message */
                &erroffset,           /* for error offset */
                NULL);                /* use default character tables */

    /* Compilation failed: print the error message and exit */

    if (re == NULL)
    {
        printf("PCRE compilation failed at offset %d: %s\n", erroffset, error);
        return 1;
    }


    /*************************************************************************
* If the compilation succeeded, we call PCRE again, in order to do a     *
* pattern match against the subject string. This does just ONE match. If *
* further matching is needed, it will be done below.                     *
*************************************************************************/

    rc = pcre_exec(
                re,                   /* the compiled pattern */
                NULL,                 /* no extra data - we didn't study the pattern */
                subject,              /* the subject string */
                subject_length,       /* the length of the subject */
                0,                    /* start at offset 0 in the subject */
                0,                    /* default options */
                ovector,              /* output vector for substring information */
                OVECCOUNT);           /* number of elements in the output vector */

    /* Matching failed: handle error cases */

    if (rc < 0)
    {
        switch(rc)
        {
        case PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH: printf("No match\n"); break;
            /*
    Handle other special cases if you like
    */
        default: printf("Matching error %d\n", rc); break;
        }
        pcre_free(re);     /* Release memory used for the compiled pattern */
        return 1;
    }

    /* Match succeded */

    printf("\nMatch succeeded at offset %d\n", ovector[0]);


    /*************************************************************************
* We have found the first match within the subject string. If the output *
* vector wasn't big enough, say so. Then output any substrings that were *
* captured.                                                              *
*************************************************************************/

    /* The output vector wasn't big enough */

    if (rc == 0)
    {
        rc = OVECCOUNT/3;
        printf("ovector only has room for %d captured substrings\n", rc - 1);
    }

    /* Show substrings stored in the output vector by number. Obviously, in a real
application you might want to do things other than print them. */

    for (i = 0; i < rc; i++)
    {
        char *substring_start = subject + ovector[2*i];
        int substring_length = ovector[2*i+1] - ovector[2*i];
        printf("%2d: %.*s\n", i, substring_length, substring_start);
    }


    /**************************************************************************
* That concludes the basic part of this demonstration program. We have    *
* compiled a pattern, and performed a single match. The code that follows *
* shows first how to access named substrings, and then how to code for    *
* repeated matches on the same subject.                                   *
**************************************************************************/

    /* See if there are any named substrings, and if so, show them by name. First
we have to extract the count of named parentheses from the pattern. */

    (void)pcre_fullinfo(
                re,                   /* the compiled pattern */
                NULL,                 /* no extra data - we didn't study the pattern */
                PCRE_INFO_NAMECOUNT,  /* number of named substrings */
                &namecount);          /* where to put the answer */

    if (namecount <= 0) printf("No named substrings\n"); else
    {
        unsigned char *tabptr;
        printf("Named substrings\n");

        /* Before we can access the substrings, we must extract the table for
  translating names to numbers, and the size of each entry in the table. */

        (void)pcre_fullinfo(
                    re,                       /* the compiled pattern */
                    NULL,                     /* no extra data - we didn't study the pattern */
                    PCRE_INFO_NAMETABLE,      /* address of the table */
                    &name_table);             /* where to put the answer */

        (void)pcre_fullinfo(
                    re,                       /* the compiled pattern */
                    NULL,                     /* no extra data - we didn't study the pattern */
                    PCRE_INFO_NAMEENTRYSIZE,  /* size of each entry in the table */
                    &name_entry_size);        /* where to put the answer */

        /* Now we can scan the table and, for each entry, print the number, the name,
  and the substring itself. */

        tabptr = name_table;
        for (i = 0; i < namecount; i++)
        {
            int n = (tabptr[0] << 8) | tabptr[1];
            printf("(%d) %*s: %.*s\n", n, name_entry_size - 3, tabptr + 2,
                   ovector[2*n+1] - ovector[2*n], subject + ovector[2*n]);
            tabptr += name_entry_size;
        }
    }


    /*************************************************************************
* If the "-g" option was given on the command line, we want to continue  *
* to search for additional matches in the subject string, in a similar   *
* way to the /g option in Perl. This turns out to be trickier than you   *
* might think because of the possibility of matching an empty string.    *
* What happens is as follows:                                            *
*                                                                        *
* If the previous match was NOT for an empty string, we can just start   *
* the next match at the end of the previous one.                         *
*                                                                        *
* If the previous match WAS for an empty string, we can't do that, as it *
* would lead to an infinite loop. Instead, a special call of pcre_exec() *
* is made with the PCRE_NOTEMPTY_ATSTART and PCRE_ANCHORED flags set.    *
* The first of these tells PCRE that an empty string at the start of the *
* subject is not a valid match; other possibilities must be tried. The   *
* second flag restricts PCRE to one match attempt at the initial string  *
* position. If this match succeeds, an alternative to the empty string   *
* match has been found, and we can print it and proceed round the loop,  *
* advancing by the length of whatever was found. If this match does not  *
* succeed, we still stay in the loop, advancing by just one character.   *
* In UTF-8 mode, which can be set by (*UTF8) in the pattern, this may be *
* more than one byte.                                                    *
*                                                                        *
* However, there is a complication concerned with newlines. When the     *
* newline convention is such that CRLF is a valid newline, we want must  *
* advance by two characters rather than one. The newline convention can  *
* be set in the regex by (*CR), etc.; if not, we must find the default.  *
*************************************************************************/

    if (!find_all)     /* Check for -g */
    {
        pcre_free(re);   /* Release the memory used for the compiled pattern */
        return 0;        /* Finish unless -g was given */
    }

    /* Before running the loop, check for UTF-8 and whether CRLF is a valid newline
sequence. First, find the options with which the regex was compiled; extract
the UTF-8 state, and mask off all but the newline options. */

    (void)pcre_fullinfo(re, NULL, PCRE_INFO_OPTIONS, &option_bits);
    utf8 = option_bits & PCRE_UTF8;
    option_bits &= PCRE_NEWLINE_CR|PCRE_NEWLINE_LF|PCRE_NEWLINE_CRLF|
            PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY|PCRE_NEWLINE_ANYCRLF;

    /* If no newline options were set, find the default newline convention from the
build configuration. */

    if (option_bits == 0)
    {
        int d;
        (void)pcre_config(PCRE_CONFIG_NEWLINE, &d);
        /* Note that these values are always the ASCII ones, even in
  EBCDIC environments. CR = 13, NL = 10. */
        option_bits = (d == 13)? PCRE_NEWLINE_CR :
                                 (d == 10)? PCRE_NEWLINE_LF :
                                            (d == (13<<8 | 10))? PCRE_NEWLINE_CRLF :
                                                                 (d == -2)? PCRE_NEWLINE_ANYCRLF :
                                                                            (d == -1)? PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY : 0;
    }

    /* See if CRLF is a valid newline sequence. */

    crlf_is_newline =
            option_bits == PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY ||
            option_bits == PCRE_NEWLINE_CRLF ||
            option_bits == PCRE_NEWLINE_ANYCRLF;

    /* Loop for second and subsequent matches */

    for (;;)
    {
        int options = 0;                 /* Normally no options */
        int start_offset = ovector[1];   /* Start at end of previous match */

        /* If the previous match was for an empty string, we are finished if we are
  at the end of the subject. Otherwise, arrange to run another match at the
  same point to see if a non-empty match can be found. */

        if (ovector[0] == ovector[1])
        {
            if (ovector[0] == subject_length) break;
            options = PCRE_NOTEMPTY_ATSTART | PCRE_ANCHORED;
        }

        /* Run the next matching operation */

        rc = pcre_exec(
                    re,                   /* the compiled pattern */
                    NULL,                 /* no extra data - we didn't study the pattern */
                    subject,              /* the subject string */
                    subject_length,       /* the length of the subject */
                    start_offset,         /* starting offset in the subject */
                    options,              /* options */
                    ovector,              /* output vector for substring information */
                    OVECCOUNT);           /* number of elements in the output vector */

        /* This time, a result of NOMATCH isn't an error. If the value in "options"
  is zero, it just means we have found all possible matches, so the loop ends.
  Otherwise, it means we have failed to find a non-empty-string match at a
  point where there was a previous empty-string match. In this case, we do what
  Perl does: advance the matching position by one character, and continue. We
  do this by setting the "end of previous match" offset, because that is picked
  up at the top of the loop as the point at which to start again.

  There are two complications: (a) When CRLF is a valid newline sequence, and
  the current position is just before it, advance by an extra byte. (b)
  Otherwise we must ensure that we skip an entire UTF-8 character if we are in
  UTF-8 mode. */

        if (rc == PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH)
        {
            if (options == 0) break;                    /* All matches found */
            ovector[1] = start_offset + 1;              /* Advance one byte */
            if (crlf_is_newline &&                      /* If CRLF is newline & */
                    start_offset < subject_length - 1 &&    /* we are at CRLF, */
                    subject[start_offset] == '\r' &&
                    subject[start_offset + 1] == '\n')
                ovector[1] += 1;                          /* Advance by one more. */
            else if (utf8)                              /* Otherwise, ensure we */
            {                                         /* advance a whole UTF-8 */
                while (ovector[1] < subject_length)       /* character. */
                {
                    if ((subject[ovector[1]] & 0xc0) != 0x80) break;
                    ovector[1] += 1;
                }
            }
            continue;    /* Go round the loop again */
        }

        /* Other matching errors are not recoverable. */

        if (rc < 0)
        {
            printf("Matching error %d\n", rc);
            pcre_free(re);    /* Release memory used for the compiled pattern */
            return 1;
        }

        /* Match succeded */

        printf("\nMatch succeeded again at offset %d\n", ovector[0]);

        /* The match succeeded, but the output vector wasn't big enough. */

        if (rc == 0)
        {
            rc = OVECCOUNT/3;
            printf("ovector only has room for %d captured substrings\n", rc - 1);
        }

        /* As before, show substrings stored in the output vector by number, and then
  also any named substrings. */

        for (i = 0; i < rc; i++)
        {
            char *substring_start = subject + ovector[2*i];
            int substring_length = ovector[2*i+1] - ovector[2*i];
            printf("%2d: %.*s\n", i, substring_length, substring_start);
        }

        if (namecount <= 0) printf("No named substrings\n"); else
        {
            unsigned char *tabptr = name_table;
            printf("Named substrings\n");
            for (i = 0; i < namecount; i++)
            {
                int n = (tabptr[0] << 8) | tabptr[1];
                printf("(%d) %*s: %.*s\n", n, name_entry_size - 3, tabptr + 2,
                       ovector[2*n+1] - ovector[2*n], subject + ovector[2*n]);
                tabptr += name_entry_size;
            }
        }
    }      /* End of loop to find second and subsequent matches */

    printf("\n");
    pcre_free(re);       /* Release memory used for the compiled pattern */
    return 0;
}

/* End of pcredemo.c */

#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <pcre.h>

int main_split(int argc, char **argv)
{
    pcre *re;
    const char *error;
    int errorOffset, i = 0;
    /**
     * pcre_exec匹配的结果
     * ovector的结构为
     * {匹配结果1的起始位置,匹配结果1的结束位置,匹配结果2的起始位置,...匹配结果N的结束位置}
     */
    int oveccount = 2;
    int ovector[2];

    /**
     * rc是pcre_exec匹配到的结果数量
     */
    int rc;
    /**
     * pcre_exec执行的偏移量
     * 从匹配到的结果的结束位置开始下一次匹配
     */
    int exec_offset = 0;


    const char *captured_string;
    char *subject = "1t  2t  3t  4t    5t  6t7t8t9t0ta tbtct f1024 t 96t";
    char *pattern = "[^ ]+[^ ]";

    re = pcre_compile( pattern, PCRE_CASELESS, &error, &errorOffset, NULL );

    if ( re == NULL ) {
        printf("compilation failed at offset%d: %s\n", errorOffset, error);
        return 0;
    }

    do {
        // exec_offset偏移量 默认从1开始,然后循环的时候从匹配到的结果开始
        rc = pcre_exec( re, NULL, subject, strlen(subject), exec_offset, 0, ovector, oveccount );
        if ( rc > 0 ) {
            // 获取到匹配的结果
            pcre_get_substring( subject, ovector, rc, 0, &captured_string );
            printf("captured string : [%s]\n", captured_string);
            // 设置偏移量
            exec_offset = ovector[1];
            i++;
        }
    } while ( rc > 0 );

    printf("match %d\n", i);

    return 0;
}

#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <pcre.h>
#define OVECCOUNT 30 /* should be a multiple of 3 */
#define EBUFLEN 128
#define BUFLEN 1024

int main002()
{
    pcre  *re;
    const char *error;
    int  erroffset;
    int  ovector[OVECCOUNT];
    int  rc, i;
    char  src [] = "111 <title>Hello World</title> 222";   // 要被用来匹配的字符串
    char  pattern [] = "<title>(.*)</(tit)le>";              // 将要被编译的字符串形式的正则表达式
    printf("String : %s\n", src);
    printf("Pattern: \"%s\"\n", pattern);
    re = pcre_compile(pattern,       // pattern, 输入参数,将要被编译的字符串形式的正则表达式
                      0,            // options, 输入参数,用来指定编译时的一些选项
                      &error,       // errptr, 输出参数,用来输出错误信息
                      &erroffset,   // erroffset, 输出参数,pattern中出错位置的偏移量
                      NULL);        // tableptr, 输入参数,用来指定字符表,一般情况用NULL
    // 返回值:被编译好的正则表达式的pcre内部表示结构
    if (re == NULL) {                 //如果编译失败,返回错误信息
        printf("PCRE compilation failed at offset %d: %s\n", erroffset, error);
        return 1;
    }
    rc = pcre_exec(re,            // code, 输入参数,用pcre_compile编译好的正则表达结构的指针
                   NULL,          // extra, 输入参数,用来向pcre_exec传一些额外的数据信息的结构的指针
                   src,           // subject, 输入参数,要被用来匹配的字符串
                   strlen(src),  // length, 输入参数, 要被用来匹配的字符串的指针
                   0,             // startoffset, 输入参数,用来指定subject从什么位置开始被匹配的偏移量
                   0,             // options, 输入参数, 用来指定匹配过程中的一些选项
                   ovector,       // ovector, 输出参数,用来返回匹配位置偏移量的数组
                   OVECCOUNT);    // ovecsize, 输入参数, 用来返回匹配位置偏移量的数组的最大大小
    // 返回值:匹配成功返回非负数,没有匹配返回负数
    if (rc < 0) {                     //如果没有匹配,返回错误信息
        if (rc == PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH)
            printf("Sorry, no match ...\n");
        else
            printf("Matching error %d\n", rc);
        pcre_free(re);
        return 1;
    }
    printf("\nOK, has matched ...\n\n");   //没有出错,已经匹配
    for (i = 0; i < rc; i++) {             //分别取出捕获分组 $0整个正则公式 $1第一个()
        char *substring_start = src + ovector[2*i];
        int substring_length = ovector[2*i+1] - ovector[2*i];

        printf("$%2d: %.*s\n", i, substring_length, substring_start);
    }

    pcre_free(re);                     // 编译正则表达式re 释放内存
    return 0;
}

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C语言本身并没有内置的正则表达式功能。但是你可以使用第三方来实现正则表达式的功能。在C语言中,常用的正则表达式PCRE(Perl Compatible Regular Expressions)和POSIX正则表达式PCRE是一个功能强大的正则表达式,提供了广泛的正则表达式功能。它支持Perl兼容的语法,并提供了多种函数来进行正则表达式匹配和替换。你可以在PCRE官方网站(https://www.pcre.org/)上找到详细的文档和使用示例。 POSIX正则表达式基于POSIX标准定义了一套正则表达式接口。C语言标准中的`regex.h`头文件提供了对POSIX正则表达式的支持。你可以使用`regcomp()`函数编译正则表达式模式,然后使用`regexec()`函数进行匹配。 下面是一个使用POSIX正则表达式的简单示例代码: ```c #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <regex.h> int main() { regex_t regex; int ret; // 编译正则表达式模式 ret = regcomp(&regex, "abc.*def", 0); if (ret != 0) { printf("Failed to compile regex\n"); exit(1); } // 进行匹配 ret = regexec(&regex, "abcdef", 0, NULL, 0); if (ret == 0) { printf("Matched\n"); } else if (ret == REG_NOMATCH) { printf("Not matched\n"); } else { printf("Error in matching\n"); } // 释放正则表达式资源 regfree(&regex); return 0; } ``` 上述代码中,`regcomp()`函数用于编译正则表达式模式,`regexec()`函数用于进行匹配。你可以根据需要自定义正则表达式模式,并根据匹配结果进行处理。 希望以上信息能对你有所帮助!如有更多问题,请

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