// include the latest version of the regex crate in your Cargo.toml
extern crate regex;
use regex::Regex;
fn main() {
let regex = Regex::new(r"(?sm)(\d+) 0 obj[^>]+/Page$").unwrap();
let string = "%PDF-1.3
%¦¦¦¦
1 0 obj
<<
/Type /Catalog /AcroForm << /Fields [12 0 R 13 0 R] /NeedAppearances false /SigFlags 3 /Version /1.7 /Pages 3 0 R /Names << >> /ViewerPreferences << /Direction /L2R >> /PageLayout /SinglePage /PageMode /UseNone /OpenAction [0 0 R /FitH null] /DR << /Font << /F1 14 0 R >> >> /DA (/F1 0 Tf 0 g) /Q 0 >> /Perms << /DocMDP 11 0 R >>
/Outlines 2 0 R
/Pages 3 0 R
>>
endobj
2 0 obj
<<
/Type /Outlines
/Count 0
>>
endobj
3 0 obj
<<
/Type /Pages
/Count 2
/Kids [ 4 0 R 6 0 R ]
>>
endobj
4 0 obj
<<
/Type /Page
/Parent 3 0 R
/Resources <<
/Font <<
/F1 9 0 R
>>
/ProcSet 8 0 R
>>
/MediaBox [0 0 612.0000 792.0000]
/Contents 5 0 R
>>
endobj
5 0 obj
<< /Length 1074 >>
stream
2 J
BT
0 0 0 rg
/F1 0027 Tf
57.3750 722.2800 Td
( A Simple PDF File ) Tj
ET
BT
/F1 0010 Tf";
// result will be an iterator over tuples containing the start and end indices for each match in the string
let result = regex.captures_iter(string);
for mat in result {
println!("{:?}", mat);
}
}
Please keep in mind that these code samples are automatically generated and are not guaranteed to work. If you find any syntax errors, feel free to submit a bug report. For a full regex reference for Rust, please visit: https://docs.rs/regex/latest/regex/