Leverages the Rust regex crate with PyO3 to create an interface similar to the Python
standard library re module.
pip install regex-rust>>> import regexrs as re
>>> pattern = re.compile(r'(\w+) (\w+)')
>>> m = pattern.match('hello rust')
>>> m.groups()
('hello', 'rust')
>>> m.pos
0
>>> m.endpos
10
>>> re.findall(r'\w+', 'hello rust')
['hello', 'rust']
>>> re.fullmatch(r'\w+', 'foo')
<regexrs.Match object; span=(0, 3), match="foo">benchmark.py is largely borrowed from the regex-benchmark project. You are expected to pass in a path to the file of the input-text.txt file to benchmark.py.
This simple benchmark suggests that regexrs may be significantly faster than the re module from the standard library or even the regex library, at least in some use cases.
Keep in mind that this benchmark tests just three simple use cases on a single large text input. Therefore, the insights we can infer from this benchmark are quite limited.
In some cases, regexrs may be up to 2x slower than regex, especially when creation of Match objects is necessary.
Results as tested on Windows AMD64 Python 3.12.2 - times in ms (lower is better):
| test | regexrs | re (stdlib) | regex | Compared to re |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12.51 | 354.53 | 690.15 | 28.34x faster | |
| URI | 4.82 | 282.69 | 430.26 | 58.65x faster |
| IP | 4.71 | 321.37 | 25.43 | 68.23x faster |
To run the benchmarks yourself:
# be sure to have run `pip install regex-rust` first
# to test regexrs:
python benchmark.py /path/to/input-text.txt
# to test stdlib re:
python benchmark.py /path/to/input-text.txt re
# be sure to have run `pip install regex` first
# to test regex library:
python benchmark.py /path/to/input-text.txt regexYou can use pip to build and install.
pip install .If you want to build manually:
pip install maturin
maturin build --releaseMostly incomplete and likely very buggy. I am using this mostly as an exercise in creating and distributing Python extensions using Rust and PyO3. It's unclear if this will ever be a particularly useful project or not. If you're looking for a complete and performant regex library for Python today, see the regex project on PyPI.
Differences compared to standard lib:
- The
endposargument normally found in theremodule is not supported inregexrsfor thematch/search/findall/finditermethods. - Some regex features are not supported (because they are not supported by the
regexcrate), such as lookarounds and backreferences. - Not all flags are supported. At present release, you may use the flags
IGNORECASE,MULTILINE,DOTALLandVERBOSE(or their shorthand equivalents). These are translated to inline flags and prepended to your given pattern. - Until a future release, there is no cache for avoiding re-compiling the same patterns multiple times