dginev / CorTeX

A general purpose processing framework for corpora of scientific documents
https://corpora.mathweb.org/
MIT License
58 stars 6 forks source link

Bump regex from 1.9.6 to 1.10.1 #261

Closed dependabot[bot] closed 1 year ago

dependabot[bot] commented 1 year ago

Bumps regex from 1.9.6 to 1.10.1.

Changelog

Sourced from regex's changelog.

1.10.1 (2023-10-14)

This is a new patch release with a minor increase in the number of valid patterns and a broadening of some literal optimizations.

New features:

  • FEATURE 04f5d7be: Loosen ASCII-compatible rules such that regexes like (?-u:☃) are now allowed.

Performance improvements:

  • PERF 8a8d599f: Broader the reverse suffix optimization to apply in more cases.

1.10.0 (2023-10-09)

This is a new minor release of regex that adds support for start and end word boundary assertions. That is, \< and \>. The minimum supported Rust version has also been raised to 1.65, which was released about one year ago.

The new word boundary assertions are:

  • \< or \b{start}: a Unicode start-of-word boundary (\W|\A on the left, \w on the right).
  • \> or \b{end}: a Unicode end-of-word boundary (\w on the left, \W|\z on the right)).
  • \b{start-half}: half of a Unicode start-of-word boundary (\W|\A on the left).
  • \b{end-half}: half of a Unicode end-of-word boundary (\W|\z on the right).

The \< and \> are GNU extensions to POSIX regexes. They have been added to the regex crate because they enjoy somewhat broad support in other regex engines as well (for example, vim). The \b{start} and \b{end} assertions are aliases for \< and \>, respectively.

The \b{start-half} and \b{end-half} assertions are not found in any other regex engine (although regex engines with general look-around support can certainly express them). They were added principally to support the implementation of word matching in grep programs, where one generally wants to be a bit more flexible in what is considered a word boundary.

New features:

... (truncated)

Commits
  • 5dff4bd 1.10.1
  • d242ede deps: bump regex-automata to 0.4.2
  • 488604d regex-automata-0.4.2
  • ee01ec2 deps: bump regex-syntax to 0.8.2
  • 1dbeee7 regex-syntax-0.8.2
  • 049d063 changelog: 1.10.1
  • 8a8d599 automata/meta: tweak reverse suffix prefilter strategy
  • 04f5d7b syntax: loosen ASCII compatible rules
  • cfd0ca2 automata/meta: force some prefilter inlining
  • 25ad29f bench: add a redirect
  • Additional commits viewable in compare view


Dependabot compatibility score

Dependabot will resolve any conflicts with this PR as long as you don't alter it yourself. You can also trigger a rebase manually by commenting @dependabot rebase.


Dependabot commands and options
You can trigger Dependabot actions by commenting on this PR: - `@dependabot rebase` will rebase this PR - `@dependabot recreate` will recreate this PR, overwriting any edits that have been made to it - `@dependabot merge` will merge this PR after your CI passes on it - `@dependabot squash and merge` will squash and merge this PR after your CI passes on it - `@dependabot cancel merge` will cancel a previously requested merge and block automerging - `@dependabot reopen` will reopen this PR if it is closed - `@dependabot close` will close this PR and stop Dependabot recreating it. You can achieve the same result by closing it manually - `@dependabot show ignore conditions` will show all of the ignore conditions of the specified dependency - `@dependabot ignore this major version` will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this major version (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself) - `@dependabot ignore this minor version` will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this minor version (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself) - `@dependabot ignore this dependency` will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this dependency (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself)