+ // NOTE: Move regExpMatchTime to a static regular expression if used anywhere that performance
+ // matters.
+
+ // Don't allow a runaway regular expression to loop for too long. This might not happen.. but
+ // when dealing with user input, better to be safe..?
+ int numIterations = 0;
+
+ // Find each group of %%text here%% starting from the beginning
+ int index = regExpMatchTime.indexIn(formattedStr);
+ int matchLength;
+ QString matchedFormat;
+ while (index >= 0 && numIterations < 512) {
+ // Get the total length of the matched expression
+ matchLength = regExpMatchTime.cap(0).length();
+ // Get the format string, e.g. "this text here" from "%%this text here%%"
+ matchedFormat = regExpMatchTime.cap(1);
+ // Check that there's actual characters inside. A quadruple % (%%%%) represents two %%
+ // signs.
+ if (matchedFormat.length() > 0) {
+ // Format the string according to the current date and time. Invalid time format
+ // strings are ignored.
+ formattedStr.replace(index, matchLength, QDateTime::currentDateTime().toString(matchedFormat));
+ // Subtract the length of the removed % signs
+ // E.g. "%%h:mm ap%%" turns into "h:mm ap", removing four % signs, thus -4. This is
+ // used below to determine how far to advance when looking for the next formatting code.
+ matchLength -= 4;
+ }
+ else if (matchLength == 4) {
+ // Remove two of the four percent signs, so '%%%%' escapes to '%%'
+ formattedStr.remove(index, 2);
+ // Subtract the length of the removed % signs, this time removing two % signs, thus -2.
+ matchLength -= 2;
+ }
+ else {
+ // If neither of these match, something went wrong. Don't modify it to be safe.
+ qDebug() << "Unexpected time format when parsing string, no matchedFormat, matchLength "
+ "should be 4, actually is"
+ << matchLength;
+ }
+
+ // Find the next group of %%text here%% starting from where the last group ended
+ index = regExpMatchTime.indexIn(formattedStr, index + matchLength);
+ numIterations++;
+ }
+
+ return formattedStr;