MatchData encapsulates the result of matching a Regexp against string. It is returned by Regexp#match and String#match, and also stored in a global variable returned by Regexp.last_match.
Usage:
url = 'https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/2.5.0/MatchData.html' m = url.match(/(\d\.?)+/) # => #<MatchData "2.5.0" 1:"0"> m.string # => "https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/2.5.0/MatchData.html" m.regexp # => /(\d\.?)+/ # entire matched substring: m[0] # => "2.5.0" # Working with unnamed captures m = url.match(%r{([^/]+)/([^/]+)\.html$}) m.captures # => ["2.5.0", "MatchData"] m[1] # => "2.5.0" m.values_at(1, 2) # => ["2.5.0", "MatchData"] # Working with named captures m = url.match(%r{(?<version>[^/]+)/(?<module>[^/]+)\.html$}) m.captures # => ["2.5.0", "MatchData"] m.named_captures # => {"version"=>"2.5.0", "module"=>"MatchData"} m[:version] # => "2.5.0" m.values_at(:version, :module) # => ["2.5.0", "MatchData"] # Numerical indexes are working, too m[1] # => "2.5.0" m.values_at(1, 2) # => ["2.5.0", "MatchData"]
Global variables equivalence
Parts of last MatchData (returned by Regexp.last_match) are also aliased as global variables:
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$~ is Regexp.last_match;
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$& is Regexp.last_match[0];
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$1, $2, and so on are Regexp.last_match[i] (captures by number);
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$` is Regexp.last_match.pre_match;
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$‘ is Regexp.last_match.post_match;
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$+ is Regexp.last_match[-1] (the last capture).
See also “Special global variables” section in Regexp documentation.