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Julia 1.0 Programming Complete Reference Guide

You're reading from   Julia 1.0 Programming Complete Reference Guide Discover Julia, a high-performance language for technical computing

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Product type Course
Published in May 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781838822248
Length 466 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Ivo Balbaert Ivo Balbaert
Author Profile Icon Ivo Balbaert
Ivo Balbaert
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing the Julia Platform FREE CHAPTER 2. Variables, Types, and Operations 3. Functions 4. Control Flow 5. Collection Types 6. More on Types, Methods, and Modules 7. Metaprogramming in Julia 8. I/O, Networking, and Parallel Computing 9. Running External Programs 10. The Standard Library and Packages 11. Creating Our First Julia App 12. Setting Up the Wiki Game 13. Building the Wiki Game Web Crawler 14. Adding a Web UI for the Wiki Game 15. Implementing Recommender Systems with Julia 16. Machine Learning for Recommender Systems 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Regular expressions

Regular expressions are used for powerful pattern-matching of substrings within strings. They can be used to search for a substring in a string, based on patterns—and then to extract or replace the matches. Julia provides support for Perl-compatible regular expressions.

The most common way to input regular expressions is by using the so-called nonstandard string literals. These look like regular double-quoted strings, but carry a special prefix. In the case of regular expressions, this prefix is "r". The prefix provides for a different behavior, compared to a normal string literal.

For example, in order to define a regular string that matches all the letters, we can use r"[a-zA-Z]*".

Julia provides quite a few nonstandard string literals—and we can even define our own if we want to. The most widely used are for regular expressions...

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