No, it isn't. I'm looking for an easy and universal method, one that I could actually implement. That's far more difficult than randomly generating passwords.
I want to create an application that takes a regular expression, and shows 10 randomly generated strings that match that expression. It's supposed to help people better understand their regexps, and to decide i.e. if they're secure enough for validation purposes. Does anyone know of an easy way to do that?
One obvious solution would be to write (or steal) a regexp parser, but that seems really over my head.
I repeat, I'm looking for an easy and universal way to do that.
Edit: Brute force approach is out of the question. Assuming the random strings would just be [a-z0-9]{10}
and 1 million iterations per second, it would take 65 years to iterate trough the space of all 10-char strings.
Parse your regular expression into a DFA, then traverse your DFA randomly until you end up in an accepting state, outputting a character for each transition. Each walk will yield a new string that matches the expression.
This doesn't work for "regular" expressions that aren't really regular, though, such as expressions with backreferences. It depends on what kind of expression you're after.