You've currently chosen the 1.86.0 version. If a newer release comes out, you will continue to view the 1.86.0 version, not the new latest release.
Regular expression library.
This Release
Boost Regex Library
The Boost Regex library provides regular expression support for C++, this library is the ancestor to std::regex and still goes beyond and offers some advantages to, the standard version.
The full documentation is available on boost.org.
Standalone Mode
This library may now be used in "standalone" mode without the rest of the Boost C++ libraries, in order to do this you must either:
- Have a C++17 compiler that supports __has_include, in this case if <boost/config.hpp> is not present then the library will automoatically enter standalone mode. Or:
- Define BOOST_REGEX_STANDALONE when building.
The main difference between the 2 modes, is that when Boost.Config is present the library will automatically configure itself around various compiler defects. In particular in order to use the library with exception support turned off, you will either need a copy of Boost.Config in your include path, or else manually define BOOST_NO_EXCEPTIONS when building.
In any event, to obtain a standalone version of this library, simply download a .zip of the "master" branch of this repository.
Support, bugs and feature requests
Bugs and feature requests can be reported through the Gitub issue tracker (see open issues and closed issues).
You can submit your changes through a pull request.
There is no mailing-list specific to Boost Regex, although you can use the general-purpose Boost mailing-list using the tag [regex].
Development
Clone the whole boost project, which includes the individual Boost projects as submodules (see boost+git doc):
git clone https://github.com/boostorg/boost
cd boost
git submodule update --init
The Boost Regex Library is located in libs/regex/
.
Running tests
First, make sure you are in libs/regex/test
.
You can either run all the tests listed in Jamfile.v2
or run a single test:
../../../b2 <- run all tests
../../../b2 regex_regress <- single test