Breaks the string on the pattern, and returns an array of
the tokens. If the pattern contains capturing parentheses,
then the text for each of the substrings will also be returned.
If the pattern does not match anywhere in the string, then the
whole string is returned as the first token.
This function is equivalent to g_regex_split() but it does
not require to compile the pattern with g_regex_new(), avoiding
some lines of code when you need just to do a split without
extracting substrings, capture counts, and so on.
If this function is to be called on the same @pattern more than
once, it's more efficient to compile the pattern once with
g_regex_new() and then use g_regex_split().
As a special case, the result of splitting the empty string ""
is an empty vector, not a vector containing a single string.
The reason for this special case is that being able to represent
an empty vector is typically more useful than consistent handling
of empty elements. If you do need to represent empty elements,
you'll need to check for the empty string before calling this
function.
A pattern that can match empty strings splits @string into
separate characters wherever it matches the empty string between
characters. For example splitting "ab c" using as a separator
"\s*", you will get "a", "b" and "c".
Breaks the string on the pattern, and returns an array of the tokens. If the pattern contains capturing parentheses, then the text for each of the substrings will also be returned. If the pattern does not match anywhere in the string, then the whole string is returned as the first token.
This function is equivalent to g_regex_split() but it does not require to compile the pattern with g_regex_new(), avoiding some lines of code when you need just to do a split without extracting substrings, capture counts, and so on.
If this function is to be called on the same @pattern more than once, it's more efficient to compile the pattern once with g_regex_new() and then use g_regex_split().
As a special case, the result of splitting the empty string "" is an empty vector, not a vector containing a single string. The reason for this special case is that being able to represent an empty vector is typically more useful than consistent handling of empty elements. If you do need to represent empty elements, you'll need to check for the empty string before calling this function.
A pattern that can match empty strings splits @string into separate characters wherever it matches the empty string between characters. For example splitting "ab c" using as a separator "\s*", you will get "a", "b" and "c".