BookmarkSubscribeRSS Feed
🔒 This topic is solved and locked. Need further help from the community? Please sign in and ask a new question.
RajasekharReddy
Fluorite | Level 6

Hi,

 

Can any body explaine below code (PRXCHANGE) 

 

I don't understand why they are using '#' and 'S'

 

DIR=prxchange("s#/+#/#", -1, DIR);

 

DIR=prxchange("s#^(/project\d+/)#/projects/#", 1, cats(DIR));

 

Thank you in Advance

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
FriedEgg
SAS Employee

the 's' before the regular expression is referred to as a pattern-matching modifier, and denotes that the expression is a substition/replacement expression.

 

the '#' is just acting as a delimiter.  common delimiters are "/" or "#" or "{}" or "[]" typically

 

s#/+#/#

=

s/\/+/\//

When you use # instead of / as the delimiter, you make a pattern matching expression that would normally use the default delimiter, like the example, simpler, since you don't have to escape it

 

The patter above is simple:

 

match the "/" character 1 or more times, as many as possible without encounter some other token and replace that match with a single "/"

 

s#^(/project\d+/)#/projects/#

or

s#^/project\d+/#/projects/#

or 

s/^\/project\d+\//\/projects\//

matches a string where, at the beginning is starts with "/project" followed by 1 or more numbers and ending with "/" such as "/project1234/" and changes it to "/projects/"

View solution in original post

2 REPLIES 2
gamotte
Rhodochrosite | Level 12
Hello,

The search patterns contain slashes so the '#' are used in place of the '/' as patterns delimiters.
It avoids having to protect the '/'.
's' is the substitution operator.
So the first command, for instance, replaces several consecutive slashes by a unique slash in the DIR string.
FriedEgg
SAS Employee

the 's' before the regular expression is referred to as a pattern-matching modifier, and denotes that the expression is a substition/replacement expression.

 

the '#' is just acting as a delimiter.  common delimiters are "/" or "#" or "{}" or "[]" typically

 

s#/+#/#

=

s/\/+/\//

When you use # instead of / as the delimiter, you make a pattern matching expression that would normally use the default delimiter, like the example, simpler, since you don't have to escape it

 

The patter above is simple:

 

match the "/" character 1 or more times, as many as possible without encounter some other token and replace that match with a single "/"

 

s#^(/project\d+/)#/projects/#

or

s#^/project\d+/#/projects/#

or 

s/^\/project\d+\//\/projects\//

matches a string where, at the beginning is starts with "/project" followed by 1 or more numbers and ending with "/" such as "/project1234/" and changes it to "/projects/"

SAS Innovate 2025: Save the Date

 SAS Innovate 2025 is scheduled for May 6-9 in Orlando, FL. Sign up to be first to learn about the agenda and registration!

Save the date!

How to Concatenate Values

Learn how use the CAT functions in SAS to join values from multiple variables into a single value.

Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.

SAS Training: Just a Click Away

 Ready to level-up your skills? Choose your own adventure.

Browse our catalog!

Discussion stats
  • 2 replies
  • 1110 views
  • 2 likes
  • 3 in conversation