If I want to match DEF_23
using the following regexp:
expect {
-re \"DEF_\\[0-9]*\"
set result $expect_out(1,string)
}
why
You're looking for expect_out(0,string)
-- the array element 1,string
would be populated if you had capturing parentheses in your regular expression.
The expect manpage documents the use of expect_out in the documentation of the expect command:
Upon matching a pattern (or eof or full_buffer), any matching and previously unmatched output is saved in the variable expect_out(buffer). Up to 9 regexp substring matches are saved in the variables expect_out(1,string) through expect_out(9,string). If the -indices flag is used before a pattern, the starting and ending indices (in a form suitable for lrange) of the 10 strings are stored in the variables expect_out(X,start) and expect_out(X,end) where X is a digit, corresponds to the substring position in the buffer. 0 refers to strings which matched the entire pattern and is generated for glob patterns as well as regexp patterns.
There is an illustrative example in the manpage.