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=head1 NAME
perlre - Perl regular expressions
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This page describes the syntax of regular expressions in Perl. For a
description of how to I<use> regular expressions in matching
operations, plus various examples of the same, see discussion
of C<m//>, C<s///>, C<qr//> and C<??> in L<perlop/"Regexp Quote-Like Operators">.
The matching operations can have various modifiers. The modifiers
that relate to the interpretation of the regular expression inside
are listed below. For the modifiers that alter the way a regular expression
is used by Perl, see L<perlop/"Regexp Quote-Like Operators"> and
L<perlop/"Gory details of parsing quoted constructs">.
=over 4
=item i
Do case-insensitive pattern matching.
If C<use locale> is in effect, the case map is taken from the current
locale. See L<perllocale>.
=item m
Treat string as multiple lines. That is, change "^" and "$" from matching
at only the very start or end of the string to the start or end of any
line anywhere within the string,
=item s
Treat string as single line. That is, change "." to match any character
whatsoever, even a newline, which it normally would not match.
The C</s> and C</m> modifiers both override the C<$*> setting. That is, no matter
what C<$*> contains, C</s> without C</m> will force "^" to match only at the
beginning of the string and "$" to match only at the end (or just before a
newline at the end) of the string. Together, as /ms, they let the "." match
any character whatsoever, while yet allowing "^" and "$" to match,
respectively, just after and just before newlines within the string.
=item x
Extend your pattern's legibility by permitting whitespace and comments.
=back
These are usually written as "the C</x> modifier", even though the delimiter
in question might not actually be a slash. In fact, any of these
modifiers may also be embedded within the regular expression itself using
the new C<(?...)> construct. See below.
The C</x> modifier itself needs a little more explanation. It tells
the regular expression parser to ignore whitespace that is neither
backslashed nor within a character class. You can use this to break up
your regular expression into (slightly) more readable parts. The C<#>
character is also treated as a metacharacter introducing a comment,
just as in ordinary Perl code. This also means that if you want real
whitespace or C<#> characters in the pattern (outside of a character
class, where they are unaffected by C</x>), that you'll either have to
escape them or encode them using octal or hex escapes. Taken together,
these features go a long way towards making Perl's regular expressions
more readable. Note that you have to be careful not to include the
pattern delimiter in the comment--perl has no way of knowing you did
not intend to close the pattern early. See the C-comment deletion code
in L<perlop>.
=head2 Regular Expressions
The patterns used in pattern matching are regular expressions such as
those supplied in the Version 8 regex routines. (In fact, the
routines are derived (distantly) from Henry Spencer's freely
redistributable reimplementation of the V8 routines.)
See L<Version 8 Regular Expressions> for details.
In particular the following metacharacters have their standard I<egrep>-ish
meanings:
\ Quote the next metacharacter
^ Match the beginning of the line
. Match any character (except newline)
$ Match the end of the line (or before newline at the end)
| Alternation
() Grouping
[] Character class
By default, the "^" character is guaranteed to match at only the
beginning of the string, the "$" character at only the end (or before the
newline at the end) and Perl does certain optimizations with the
assumption that the string contains only one line. Embedded newlines
will not be matched by "^" or "$". You may, however, wish to treat a
string as a multi-line buffer, such that the "^" will match after any
newline within the string, and "$" will match before any newline. At the
cost of a little more overhead, you can do this by using the /m modifier
on the pattern match operator. (Older programs did this by setting C<$*>,
but this practice is now deprecated.)
To facilitate multi-line substitutions, the "." character never matches a
newline unless you use the C</s> modifier, which in effect tells Perl to pretend
the string is a single line--even if it isn't. The C</s> modifier also
overrides the setting of C<$*>, in case you have some (badly behaved) older
code that sets it in another module.
The following standard quantifiers are recognized:
* Match 0 or more times
+ Match 1 or more times
? Match 1 or 0 times
{n} Match exactly n times
{n,} Match at least n times
{n,m} Match at least n but not more than m times
(If a curly bracket occurs in any other context, it is treated
as a regular character.) The "*" modifier is equivalent to C<{0,}>, the "+"
modifier to C<{1,}>, and the "?" modifier to C<{0,1}>. n and m are limited
to integral values less than a preset limit defined when perl is built.
This is usually 32766 on the most common platforms. The actual limit can
be seen in the error message generated by code such as this:
$_ **= $_ , / {$_} / for 2 .. 42;
By default, a quantified subpattern is "greedy", that is, it will match as
many times as possible (given a particular starting location) while still
allowing the rest of the pattern to match. If you want it to match the
minimum number of times possible, follow the quantifier with a "?". Note
that the meanings don't change, just the "greediness":
*? Match 0 or more times
+? Match 1 or more times
?? Match 0 or 1 time
{n}? Match exactly n times
{n,}? Match at least n times
{n,m}? Match at least n but not more than m times
Because patterns are processed as double quoted strings, the following
also work:
\t tab (HT, TAB)
\n newline (LF, NL)
\r return (CR)
\f form feed (FF)
\a alarm (bell) (BEL)
\e escape (think troff) (ESC)
\033 octal char (think of a PDP-11)
\x1B hex char
\c[ control char
\l lowercase next char (think vi)
\u uppercase next char (think vi)
\L lowercase till \E (think vi)
\U uppercase till \E (think vi)
\E end case modification (think vi)
\Q quote (disable) pattern metacharacters till \E
If C<use locale> is in effect, the case map used by C<\l>, C<\L>, C<\u>
and C<\U> is taken from the current locale. See L<perllocale>.
You cannot include a literal C<$> or C<@> within a C<\Q> sequence.
An unescaped C<$> or C<@> interpolates the corresponding variable,
while escaping will cause the literal string C<\$> to be matched.
You'll need to write something like C<m/\Quser\E\@\Qhost/>.
In addition, Perl defines the following:
\w Match a "word" character (alphanumeric plus "_")
\W Match a non-word character
\s Match a whitespace character
\S Match a non-whitespace character
\d Match a digit character
\D Match a non-digit character
A C<\w> matches a single alphanumeric character, not a whole
word. To match a word you'd need to say C<\w+>. If C<use locale> is in
effect, the list of alphabetic characters generated by C<\w> is taken
from the current locale. See L<perllocale>. You may use C<\w>, C<\W>,
C<\s>, C<\S>, C<\d>, and C<\D> within character classes (though not as
either end of a range).
Perl defines the following zero-width assertions:
\b Match a word boundary
\B Match a non-(word boundary)
\A Match only at beginning of string
\Z Match only at end of string, or before newline at the end
\z Match only at end of string
\G Match only where previous m//g left off (works only with /g)
A word boundary (C<\b>) is defined as a spot between two characters that
has a C<\w> on one side of it and a C<\W> on the other side of it (in
either order), counting the imaginary characters off the beginning and
end of the string as matching a C<\W>. (Within character classes C<\b>
represents backspace rather than a word boundary.) The C<\A> and C<\Z> are
just like "^" and "$", except that they won't match multiple times when the
C</m> modifier is used, while "^" and "$" will match at every internal line
boundary. To match the actual end of the string, not ignoring newline,
you can use C<\z>. The C<\G> assertion can be used to chain global
matches (using C<m//g>), as described in
L<perlop/"Regexp Quote-Like Operators">.
It is also useful when writing C<lex>-like scanners, when you have several
patterns that you want to match against consequent substrings of your
string, see the previous reference.
The actual location where C<\G> will match can also be influenced
by using C<pos()> as an lvalue. See L<perlfunc/pos>.
When the bracketing construct C<( ... )> is used, \E<lt>digitE<gt> matches the
digit'th substring. Outside of the pattern, always use "$" instead of "\"
in front of the digit. (While the \E<lt>digitE<gt> notation can on rare occasion work
outside the current pattern, this should not be relied upon. See the
WARNING below.) The scope of $E<lt>digitE<gt> (and C<$`>, C<$&>, and C<$'>)
extends to the end of the enclosing BLOCK or eval string, or to the next
successful pattern match, whichever comes first. If you want to use
parentheses to delimit a subpattern (e.g., a set of alternatives) without
saving it as a subpattern, follow the ( with a ?:.
You may have as many parentheses as you wish. If you have more
than 9 substrings, the variables $10, $11, ... refer to the
corresponding substring. Within the pattern, \10, \11, etc. refer back
to substrings if there have been at least that many left parentheses before
the backreference. Otherwise (for backward compatibility) \10 is the
same as \010, a backspace, and \11 the same as \011, a tab. And so
on. (\1 through \9 are always backreferences.)
C<$+> returns whatever the last bracket match matched. C<$&> returns the
entire matched string. (C<$0> used to return the same thing, but not any
more.) C<$`> returns everything before the matched string. C<$'> returns
everything after the matched string. Examples:
s/^([^ ]*) *([^ ]*)/$2 $1/; # swap first two words
if (/Time: (..):(..):(..)/) {
$hours = $1;
$minutes = $2;
$seconds = $3;
}
Once perl sees that you need one of C<$&>, C<$`> or C<$'> anywhere in
the program, it has to provide them on each and every pattern match.
This can slow your program down. The same mechanism that handles
these provides for the use of $1, $2, etc., so you pay the same price
for each pattern that contains capturing parentheses. But if you never
use $&, etc., in your script, then patterns I<without> capturing
parentheses won't be penalized. So avoid $&, $', and $` if you can,
but if you can't (and some algorithms really appreciate them), once
you've used them once, use them at will, because you've already paid
the price. As of 5.005, $& is not so costly as the other two.
Backslashed metacharacters in Perl are
alphanumeric, such as C<\b>, C<\w>, C<\n>. Unlike some other regular
expression languages, there are no backslashed symbols that aren't
alphanumeric. So anything that looks like \\, \(, \), \E<lt>, \E<gt>,
\{, or \} is always interpreted as a literal character, not a
metacharacter. This was once used in a common idiom to disable or
quote the special meanings of regular expression metacharacters in a
string that you want to use for a pattern. Simply quote all
non-alphanumeric characters:
$pattern =~ s/(\W)/\\$1/g;
Now it is much more common to see either the quotemeta() function or
the C<\Q> escape sequence used to disable all metacharacters' special
meanings like this:
/$unquoted\Q$quoted\E$unquoted/
Perl defines a consistent extension syntax for regular expressions.
The syntax is a pair of parentheses with a question mark as the first
thing within the parentheses (this was a syntax error in older
versions of Perl). The character after the question mark gives the
function of the extension. Several extensions are already supported:
=over 10
=item C<(?#text)>
A comment. The text is ignored. If the C</x> switch is used to enable
whitespace formatting, a simple C<#> will suffice. Note that perl closes
the comment as soon as it sees a C<)>, so there is no way to put a literal
C<)> in the comment.
=item C<(?:pattern)>
=item C<(?imsx-imsx:pattern)>
This is for clustering, not capturing; it groups subexpressions like
"()", but doesn't make backreferences as "()" does. So
@fields = split(/\b(?:a|b|c)\b/)
is like
@fields = split(/\b(a|b|c)\b/)
but doesn't spit out extra fields.
The letters between C<?> and C<:> act as flags modifiers, see
L<C<(?imsx-imsx)>>. In particular,
/(?s-i:more.*than).*million/i
is equivalent to more verbose
/(?:(?s-i)more.*than).*million/i
=item C<(?=pattern)>
A zero-width positive lookahead assertion. For example, C</\w+(?=\t)/>
matches a word followed by a tab, without including the tab in C<$&>.
=item C<(?!pattern)>
A zero-width negative lookahead assertion. For example C</foo(?!bar)/>
matches any occurrence of "foo" that isn't followed by "bar". Note
however that lookahead and lookbehind are NOT the same thing. You cannot
use this for lookbehind.
If you are looking for a "bar" that isn't preceded by a "foo", C</(?!foo)bar/>
will not do what you want. That's because the C<(?!foo)> is just saying that
the next thing cannot be "foo"--and it's not, it's a "bar", so "foobar" will
match. You would have to do something like C</(?!foo)...bar/> for that. We
say "like" because there's the case of your "bar" not having three characters
before it. You could cover that this way: C</(?:(?!foo)...|^.{0,2})bar/>.
Sometimes it's still easier just to say:
if (/bar/ && $` !~ /foo$/)
For lookbehind see below.
=item C<(?E<lt>=pattern)>
A zero-width positive lookbehind assertion. For example, C</(?E<lt>=\t)\w+/>
matches a word following a tab, without including the tab in C<$&>.
Works only for fixed-width lookbehind.
=item C<(?<!pattern)>
A zero-width negative lookbehind assertion. For example C</(?<!bar)foo/>
matches any occurrence of "foo" that isn't following "bar".
Works only for fixed-width lookbehind.
=item C<(?{ code })>
Experimental "evaluate any Perl code" zero-width assertion. Always
succeeds. C<code> is not interpolated. Currently the rules to
determine where the C<code> ends are somewhat convoluted.
The C<code> is properly scoped in the following sense: if the assertion
is backtracked (compare L<"Backtracking">), all the changes introduced after
C<local>isation are undone, so
$_ = 'a' x 8;
m<
(?{ $cnt = 0 }) # Initialize $cnt.
(
a
(?{
local $cnt = $cnt + 1; # Update $cnt, backtracking-safe.
})
)*
aaaa
(?{ $res = $cnt }) # On success copy to non-localized
# location.
>x;
will set C<$res = 4>. Note that after the match $cnt returns to the globally
introduced value 0, since the scopes which restrict C<local> statements
are unwound.
This assertion may be used as L<C<(?(condition)yes-pattern|no-pattern)>>
switch. If I<not> used in this way, the result of evaluation of C<code>
is put into variable $^R. This happens immediately, so $^R can be used from
other C<(?{ code })> assertions inside the same regular expression.
The above assignment to $^R is properly localized, thus the old value of $^R
is restored if the assertion is backtracked (compare L<"Backtracking">).
Due to security concerns, this construction is not allowed if the regular
expression involves run-time interpolation of variables, unless
C<use re 'eval'> pragma is used (see L<re>), or the variables contain
results of qr() operator (see L<perlop/"qr/STRING/imosx">).
This restriction is due to the wide-spread (questionable) practice of
using the construct
$re = <>;
chomp $re;
$string =~ /$re/;
without tainting. While this code is frowned upon from security point
of view, when C<(?{})> was introduced, it was considered bad to add
I<new> security holes to existing scripts.
B<NOTE:> Use of the above insecure snippet without also enabling taint mode
is to be severely frowned upon. C<use re 'eval'> does not disable tainting
checks, thus to allow $re in the above snippet to contain C<(?{})>
I<with tainting enabled>, one needs both C<use re 'eval'> and untaint
the $re.
=item C<(?E<gt>pattern)>
An "independent" subexpression. Matches the substring that a
I<standalone> C<pattern> would match if anchored at the given position,
B<and only this substring>.
Say, C<^(?E<gt>a*)ab> will never match, since C<(?E<gt>a*)> (anchored
at the beginning of string, as above) will match I<all> characters
C<a> at the beginning of string, leaving no C<a> for C<ab> to match.
In contrast, C<a*ab> will match the same as C<a+b>, since the match of
the subgroup C<a*> is influenced by the following group C<ab> (see
L<"Backtracking">). In particular, C<a*> inside C<a*ab> will match
fewer characters than a standalone C<a*>, since this makes the tail match.
An effect similar to C<(?E<gt>pattern)> may be achieved by
(?=(pattern))\1
since the lookahead is in I<"logical"> context, thus matches the same
substring as a standalone C<a+>. The following C<\1> eats the matched
string, thus making a zero-length assertion into an analogue of
C<(?E<gt>...)>. (The difference between these two constructs is that the
second one uses a catching group, thus shifting ordinals of
backreferences in the rest of a regular expression.)
This construct is useful for optimizations of "eternal"
matches, because it will not backtrack (see L<"Backtracking">).
m{ \(
(
[^()]+
|
\( [^()]* \)
)+
\)
}x
That will efficiently match a nonempty group with matching
two-or-less-level-deep parentheses. However, if there is no such group,
it will take virtually forever on a long string. That's because there are
so many different ways to split a long string into several substrings.
This is what C<(.+)+> is doing, and C<(.+)+> is similar to a subpattern
of the above pattern. Consider that the above pattern detects no-match
on C<((()aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa> in several seconds, but that each extra
letter doubles this time. This exponential performance will make it
appear that your program has hung.
However, a tiny modification of this pattern
m{ \(
(
(?> [^()]+ )
|
\( [^()]* \)
)+
\)
}x
which uses C<(?E<gt>...)> matches exactly when the one above does (verifying
this yourself would be a productive exercise), but finishes in a fourth
the time when used on a similar string with 1000000 C<a>s. Be aware,
however, that this pattern currently triggers a warning message under
B<-w> saying it C<"matches the null string many times">):
On simple groups, such as the pattern C<(?E<gt> [^()]+ )>, a comparable
effect may be achieved by negative lookahead, as in C<[^()]+ (?! [^()] )>.
This was only 4 times slower on a string with 1000000 C<a>s.
=item C<(?(condition)yes-pattern|no-pattern)>
=item C<(?(condition)yes-pattern)>
Conditional expression. C<(condition)> should be either an integer in
parentheses (which is valid if the corresponding pair of parentheses
matched), or lookahead/lookbehind/evaluate zero-width assertion.
Say,
m{ ( \( )?
[^()]+
(?(1) \) )
}x
matches a chunk of non-parentheses, possibly included in parentheses
themselves.
=item C<(?imsx-imsx)>
One or more embedded pattern-match modifiers. This is particularly
useful for patterns that are specified in a table somewhere, some of
which want to be case sensitive, and some of which don't. The case
insensitive ones need to include merely C<(?i)> at the front of the
pattern. For example:
$pattern = "foobar";
if ( /$pattern/i ) { }
# more flexible:
$pattern = "(?i)foobar";
if ( /$pattern/ ) { }
Letters after C<-> switch modifiers off.
These modifiers are localized inside an enclosing group (if any). Say,
( (?i) blah ) \s+ \1
(assuming C<x> modifier, and no C<i> modifier outside of this group)
will match a repeated (I<including the case>!) word C<blah> in any
case.
=back
A question mark was chosen for this and for the new minimal-matching
construct because 1) question mark is pretty rare in older regular
expressions, and 2) whenever you see one, you should stop and "question"
exactly what is going on. That's psychology...
=head2 Backtracking
A fundamental feature of regular expression matching involves the
notion called I<backtracking>, which is currently used (when needed)
by all regular expression quantifiers, namely C<*>, C<*?>, C<+>,
C<+?>, C<{n,m}>, and C<{n,m}?>.
For a regular expression to match, the I<entire> regular expression must
match, not just part of it. So if the beginning of a pattern containing a
quantifier succeeds in a way that causes later parts in the pattern to
fail, the matching engine backs up and recalculates the beginning
part--that's why it's called backtracking.
Here is an example of backtracking: Let's say you want to find the
word following "foo" in the string "Food is on the foo table.":
$_ = "Food is on the foo table.";
if ( /\b(foo)\s+(\w+)/i ) {
print "$2 follows $1.\n";
}
When the match runs, the first part of the regular expression (C<\b(foo)>)
finds a possible match right at the beginning of the string, and loads up
$1 with "Foo". However, as soon as the matching engine sees that there's
no whitespace following the "Foo" that it had saved in $1, it realizes its
mistake and starts over again one character after where it had the
tentative match. This time it goes all the way until the next occurrence
of "foo". The complete regular expression matches this time, and you get
the expected output of "table follows foo."
Sometimes minimal matching can help a lot. Imagine you'd like to match
everything between "foo" and "bar". Initially, you write something
like this:
$_ = "The food is under the bar in the barn.";
if ( /foo(.*)bar/ ) {
print "got <$1>\n";
}
Which perhaps unexpectedly yields:
got <d is under the bar in the >
That's because C<.*> was greedy, so you get everything between the
I<first> "foo" and the I<last> "bar". In this case, it's more effective
to use minimal matching to make sure you get the text between a "foo"
and the first "bar" thereafter.
if ( /foo(.*?)bar/ ) { print "got <$1>\n" }
got <d is under the >
Here's another example: let's say you'd like to match a number at the end
of a string, and you also want to keep the preceding part the match.
So you write this:
$_ = "I have 2 numbers: 53147";
if ( /(.*)(\d*)/ ) { # Wrong!
print "Beginning is <$1>, number is <$2>.\n";
}
That won't work at all, because C<.*> was greedy and gobbled up the
whole string. As C<\d*> can match on an empty string the complete
regular expression matched successfully.
Beginning is <I have 2 numbers: 53147>, number is <>.
Here are some variants, most of which don't work:
$_ = "I have 2 numbers: 53147";
@pats = qw{
(.*)(\d*)
(.*)(\d+)
(.*?)(\d*)
(.*?)(\d+)
(.*)(\d+)$
(.*?)(\d+)$
(.*)\b(\d+)$
(.*\D)(\d+)$
};
for $pat (@pats) {
printf "%-12s ", $pat;
if ( /$pat/ ) {
print "<$1> <$2>\n";
} else {
print "FAIL\n";
}
}
That will print out:
(.*)(\d*) <I have 2 numbers: 53147> <>
(.*)(\d+) <I have 2 numbers: 5314> <7>
(.*?)(\d*) <> <>
(.*?)(\d+) <I have > <2>
(.*)(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: 5314> <7>
(.*?)(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: > <53147>
(.*)\b(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: > <53147>
(.*\D)(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: > <53147>
As you see, this can be a bit tricky. It's important to realize that a
regular expression is merely a set of assertions that gives a definition
of success. There may be 0, 1, or several different ways that the
definition might succeed against a particular string. And if there are
multiple ways it might succeed, you need to understand backtracking to
know which variety of success you will achieve.
When using lookahead assertions and negations, this can all get even
tricker. Imagine you'd like to find a sequence of non-digits not
followed by "123". You might try to write that as
$_ = "ABC123";
if ( /^\D*(?!123)/ ) { # Wrong!
print "Yup, no 123 in $_\n";
}
But that isn't going to match; at least, not the way you're hoping. It
claims that there is no 123 in the string. Here's a clearer picture of
why it that pattern matches, contrary to popular expectations:
$x = 'ABC123' ;
$y = 'ABC445' ;
print "1: got $1\n" if $x =~ /^(ABC)(?!123)/ ;
print "2: got $1\n" if $y =~ /^(ABC)(?!123)/ ;
print "3: got $1\n" if $x =~ /^(\D*)(?!123)/ ;
print "4: got $1\n" if $y =~ /^(\D*)(?!123)/ ;
This prints
2: got ABC
3: got AB
4: got ABC
You might have expected test 3 to fail because it seems to a more
general purpose version of test 1. The important difference between
them is that test 3 contains a quantifier (C<\D*>) and so can use
backtracking, whereas test 1 will not. What's happening is
that you've asked "Is it true that at the start of $x, following 0 or more
non-digits, you have something that's not 123?" If the pattern matcher had
let C<\D*> expand to "ABC", this would have caused the whole pattern to
fail.
The search engine will initially match C<\D*> with "ABC". Then it will
try to match C<(?!123> with "123", which of course fails. But because
a quantifier (C<\D*>) has been used in the regular expression, the
search engine can backtrack and retry the match differently
in the hope of matching the complete regular expression.
The pattern really, I<really> wants to succeed, so it uses the
standard pattern back-off-and-retry and lets C<\D*> expand to just "AB" this
time. Now there's indeed something following "AB" that is not
"123". It's in fact "C123", which suffices.
We can deal with this by using both an assertion and a negation. We'll
say that the first part in $1 must be followed by a digit, and in fact, it
must also be followed by something that's not "123". Remember that the
lookaheads are zero-width expressions--they only look, but don't consume
any of the string in their match. So rewriting this way produces what
you'd expect; that is, case 5 will fail, but case 6 succeeds:
print "5: got $1\n" if $x =~ /^(\D*)(?=\d)(?!123)/ ;
print "6: got $1\n" if $y =~ /^(\D*)(?=\d)(?!123)/ ;
6: got ABC
In other words, the two zero-width assertions next to each other work as though
they're ANDed together, just as you'd use any builtin assertions: C</^$/>
matches only if you're at the beginning of the line AND the end of the
line simultaneously. The deeper underlying truth is that juxtaposition in
regular expressions always means AND, except when you write an explicit OR
using the vertical bar. C</ab/> means match "a" AND (then) match "b",
although the attempted matches are made at different positions because "a"
is not a zero-width assertion, but a one-width assertion.
One warning: particularly complicated regular expressions can take
exponential time to solve due to the immense number of possible ways they
can use backtracking to try match. For example this will take a very long
time to run
/((a{0,5}){0,5}){0,5}/
And if you used C<*>'s instead of limiting it to 0 through 5 matches, then
it would take literally forever--or until you ran out of stack space.
A powerful tool for optimizing such beasts is "independent" groups,
which do not backtrace (see L<C<(?E<gt>pattern)>>). Note also that
zero-length lookahead/lookbehind assertions will not backtrace to make
the tail match, since they are in "logical" context: only the fact
whether they match or not is considered relevant. For an example
where side-effects of a lookahead I<might> have influenced the
following match, see L<C<(?E<gt>pattern)>>.
=head2 Version 8 Regular Expressions
In case you're not familiar with the "regular" Version 8 regex
routines, here are the pattern-matching rules not described above.
Any single character matches itself, unless it is a I<metacharacter>
with a special meaning described here or above. You can cause
characters that normally function as metacharacters to be interpreted
literally by prefixing them with a "\" (e.g., "\." matches a ".", not any
character; "\\" matches a "\"). A series of characters matches that
series of characters in the target string, so the pattern C<blurfl>
would match "blurfl" in the target string.
You can specify a character class, by enclosing a list of characters
in C<[]>, which will match any one character from the list. If the
first character after the "[" is "^", the class matches any character not
in the list. Within a list, the "-" character is used to specify a
range, so that C<a-z> represents all characters between "a" and "z",
inclusive. If you want "-" itself to be a member of a class, put it
at the start or end of the list, or escape it with a backslash. (The
following all specify the same class of three characters: C<[-az]>,
C<[az-]>, and C<[a\-z]>. All are different from C<[a-z]>, which
specifies a class containing twenty-six characters.)
Note also that the whole range idea is rather unportable between
character sets--and even within character sets they may cause results
you probably didn't expect. A sound principle is to use only ranges
that begin from and end at either alphabets of equal case ([a-e],
[A-E]), or digits ([0-9]). Anything else is unsafe. If in doubt,
spell out the character sets in full.
Characters may be specified using a metacharacter syntax much like that
used in C: "\n" matches a newline, "\t" a tab, "\r" a carriage return,
"\f" a form feed, etc. More generally, \I<nnn>, where I<nnn> is a string
of octal digits, matches the character whose ASCII value is I<nnn>.
Similarly, \xI<nn>, where I<nn> are hexadecimal digits, matches the
character whose ASCII value is I<nn>. The expression \cI<x> matches the
ASCII character control-I<x>. Finally, the "." metacharacter matches any
character except "\n" (unless you use C</s>).
You can specify a series of alternatives for a pattern using "|" to
separate them, so that C<fee|fie|foe> will match any of "fee", "fie",
or "foe" in the target string (as would C<f(e|i|o)e>). The
first alternative includes everything from the last pattern delimiter
("(", "[", or the beginning of the pattern) up to the first "|", and
the last alternative contains everything from the last "|" to the next
pattern delimiter. For this reason, it's common practice to include
alternatives in parentheses, to minimize confusion about where they
start and end.
Alternatives are tried from left to right, so the first
alternative found for which the entire expression matches, is the one that
is chosen. This means that alternatives are not necessarily greedy. For
example: when matching C<foo|foot> against "barefoot", only the "foo"
part will match, as that is the first alternative tried, and it successfully
matches the target string. (This might not seem important, but it is
important when you are capturing matched text using parentheses.)
Also remember that "|" is interpreted as a literal within square brackets,
so if you write C<[fee|fie|foe]> you're really only matching C<[feio|]>.
Within a pattern, you may designate subpatterns for later reference by
enclosing them in parentheses, and you may refer back to the I<n>th
subpattern later in the pattern using the metacharacter \I<n>.
Subpatterns are numbered based on the left to right order of their
opening parenthesis. A backreference matches whatever
actually matched the subpattern in the string being examined, not the
rules for that subpattern. Therefore, C<(0|0x)\d*\s\1\d*> will
match "0x1234 0x4321", but not "0x1234 01234", because subpattern 1
actually matched "0x", even though the rule C<0|0x> could
potentially match the leading 0 in the second number.
=head2 WARNING on \1 vs $1
Some people get too used to writing things like:
$pattern =~ s/(\W)/\\\1/g;
This is grandfathered for the RHS of a substitute to avoid shocking the
B<sed> addicts, but it's a dirty habit to get into. That's because in
PerlThink, the righthand side of a C<s///> is a double-quoted string. C<\1> in
the usual double-quoted string means a control-A. The customary Unix
meaning of C<\1> is kludged in for C<s///>. However, if you get into the habit
of doing that, you get yourself into trouble if you then add an C</e>
modifier.
s/(\d+)/ \1 + 1 /eg; # causes warning under -w
Or if you try to do
s/(\d+)/\1000/;
You can't disambiguate that by saying C<\{1}000>, whereas you can fix it with
C<${1}000>. Basically, the operation of interpolation should not be confused
with the operation of matching a backreference. Certainly they mean two
different things on the I<left> side of the C<s///>.
=head2 Repeated patterns matching zero-length substring
WARNING: Difficult material (and prose) ahead. This section needs a rewrite.
Regular expressions provide a terse and powerful programming language. As
with most other power tools, power comes together with the ability
to wreak havoc.
A common abuse of this power stems from the ability to make infinite
loops using regular expressions, with something as innocuous as:
'foo' =~ m{ ( o? )* }x;
The C<o?> can match at the beginning of C<'foo'>, and since the position
in the string is not moved by the match, C<o?> would match again and again
due to the C<*> modifier. Another common way to create a similar cycle
is with the looping modifier C<//g>:
@matches = ( 'foo' =~ m{ o? }xg );
or
print "match: <$&>\n" while 'foo' =~ m{ o? }xg;
or the loop implied by split().
However, long experience has shown that many programming tasks may
be significantly simplified by using repeated subexpressions which
may match zero-length substrings, with a simple example being:
@chars = split //, $string; # // is not magic in split
($whitewashed = $string) =~ s/()/ /g; # parens avoid magic s// /
Thus Perl allows the C</()/> construct, which I<forcefully breaks
the infinite loop>. The rules for this are different for lower-level
loops given by the greedy modifiers C<*+{}>, and for higher-level
ones like the C</g> modifier or split() operator.
The lower-level loops are I<interrupted> when it is detected that a
repeated expression did match a zero-length substring, thus
m{ (?: NON_ZERO_LENGTH | ZERO_LENGTH )* }x;
is made equivalent to
m{ (?: NON_ZERO_LENGTH )*
|
(?: ZERO_LENGTH )?
}x;
The higher level-loops preserve an additional state between iterations:
whether the last match was zero-length. To break the loop, the following
match after a zero-length match is prohibited to have a length of zero.
This prohibition interacts with backtracking (see L<"Backtracking">),
and so the I<second best> match is chosen if the I<best> match is of
zero length.
Say,
$_ = 'bar';
s/\w??/<$&>/g;
results in C<"<><b><><a><><r><>">. At each position of the string the best
match given by non-greedy C<??> is the zero-length match, and the I<second
best> match is what is matched by C<\w>. Thus zero-length matches
alternate with one-character-long matches.
Similarly, for repeated C<m/()/g> the second-best match is the match at the
position one notch further in the string.
The additional state of being I<matched with zero-length> is associated to
the matched string, and is reset by each assignment to pos().
=head2 Creating custom RE engines
Overloaded constants (see L<overload>) provide a simple way to extend
the functionality of the RE engine.
Suppose that we want to enable a new RE escape-sequence C<\Y|> which
matches at boundary between white-space characters and non-whitespace
characters. Note that C<(?=\S)(?<!\S)|(?!\S)(?<=\S)> matches exactly
at these positions, so we want to have each C<\Y|> in the place of the
more complicated version. We can create a module C<customre> to do
this:
package customre;
use overload;
sub import {
shift;
die "No argument to customre::import allowed" if @_;
overload::constant 'qr' => \&convert;
}
sub invalid { die "/$_[0]/: invalid escape '\\$_[1]'"}
my %rules = ( '\\' => '\\',
'Y|' => qr/(?=\S)(?<!\S)|(?!\S)(?<=\S)/ );
sub convert {
my $re = shift;
$re =~ s{
\\ ( \\ | Y . )
}
{ $rules{$1} or invalid($re,$1) }sgex;
return $re;
}
Now C<use customre> enables the new escape in constant regular
expressions, i.e., those without any runtime variable interpolations.
As documented in L<overload>, this conversion will work only over
literal parts of regular expressions. For C<\Y|$re\Y|> the variable
part of this regular expression needs to be converted explicitly
(but only if the special meaning of C<\Y|> should be enabled inside $re):
use customre;
$re = <>;
chomp $re;
$re = customre::convert $re;
/\Y|$re\Y|/;
=head2 SEE ALSO
L<perlop/"Regexp Quote-Like Operators">.
L<perlop/"Gory details of parsing quoted constructs">.
L<perlfunc/pos>.
L<perllocale>.
I<Mastering Regular Expressions> (see L<perlbook>) by Jeffrey Friedl.