The Ruby %r{ } expression

With %r, you could use any delimiters.

You could use %r{} or %r[] or %r!! etc.

The benefit of using other delimeters is that you don't need to escape the / used in normal regex literal.


%r{} is equivalent to the /.../ notation, but allows you to have '/' in your regexp without having to escape them:

%r{/home/user}

is equivalent to:

/\/home\/user/

This is only a syntax commodity, for legibility.

Edit:

Note that you can use almost any non-alphabetic character pair instead of '{}'. These variants work just as well:

%r!/home/user!
%r'/home/user'
%r(/home/user)

Edit 2:

Note that the %r{}x variant ignores whitespace, making complex regexps more readable. Example from GitHub's Ruby style guide:

regexp = %r{
  start         # some text
  \s            # white space char
  (group)       # first group
  (?:alt1|alt2) # some alternation
  end
}x

this regexp matches all strings that ends with .gif, .jpg...

you could replace it with

/\.(gif|jpg|jpeg|png)$/i

\. => contains a dot
(gif|jpg|jpeg|png) => then, either one of these extensions
$ => the end, nothing after it
i => case insensitive

And it's the same as writing /\.(gif|jpg|jpeg|png)$/i.