threads 1.57
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / lib / Text / Balanced.pm
CommitLineData
3270c621 1# EXTRACT VARIOUSLY DELIMITED TEXT SEQUENCES FROM STRINGS.
2# FOR FULL DOCUMENTATION SEE Balanced.pod
3
4use 5.005;
5use strict;
6
7package Text::Balanced;
8
9use Exporter;
dd6316a9 10use SelfLoader;
3270c621 11use vars qw { $VERSION @ISA %EXPORT_TAGS };
12
aa10195b 13use version; $VERSION = qv('1.99.1_1');
3270c621 14@ISA = qw ( Exporter );
15
16%EXPORT_TAGS = ( ALL => [ qw(
17 &extract_delimited
18 &extract_bracketed
19 &extract_quotelike
20 &extract_codeblock
21 &extract_variable
22 &extract_tagged
23 &extract_multiple
24
25 &gen_delimited_pat
26 &gen_extract_tagged
27
28 &delimited_pat
29 ) ] );
30
31Exporter::export_ok_tags('ALL');
32
33# PROTOTYPES
34
35sub _match_bracketed($$$$$$);
36sub _match_variable($$);
37sub _match_codeblock($$$$$$$);
38sub _match_quotelike($$$$);
39
40# HANDLE RETURN VALUES IN VARIOUS CONTEXTS
41
42sub _failmsg {
43 my ($message, $pos) = @_;
44 $@ = bless { error=>$message, pos=>$pos }, "Text::Balanced::ErrorMsg";
45}
46
47sub _fail
48{
49 my ($wantarray, $textref, $message, $pos) = @_;
50 _failmsg $message, $pos if $message;
49c03c89 51 return (undef,$$textref,undef) if $wantarray;
3270c621 52 return undef;
53}
54
55sub _succeed
56{
57 $@ = undef;
58 my ($wantarray,$textref) = splice @_, 0, 2;
59 my ($extrapos, $extralen) = @_>18 ? splice(@_, -2, 2) : (0,0);
dd6316a9 60 my ($startlen, $oppos) = @_[5,6];
3270c621 61 my $remainderpos = $_[2];
62 if ($wantarray)
63 {
64 my @res;
65 while (my ($from, $len) = splice @_, 0, 2)
66 {
67 push @res, substr($$textref,$from,$len);
68 }
69 if ($extralen) { # CORRECT FILLET
ce3ac4b6 70 my $extra = substr($res[0], $extrapos-$oppos, $extralen, "\n");
3270c621 71 $res[1] = "$extra$res[1]";
72 eval { substr($$textref,$remainderpos,0) = $extra;
73 substr($$textref,$extrapos,$extralen,"\n")} ;
74 #REARRANGE HERE DOC AND FILLET IF POSSIBLE
75 pos($$textref) = $remainderpos-$extralen+1; # RESET \G
76 }
77 else {
78 pos($$textref) = $remainderpos; # RESET \G
79 }
80 return @res;
81 }
82 else
83 {
84 my $match = substr($$textref,$_[0],$_[1]);
85 substr($match,$extrapos-$_[0]-$startlen,$extralen,"") if $extralen;
86 my $extra = $extralen
87 ? substr($$textref, $extrapos, $extralen)."\n" : "";
88 eval {substr($$textref,$_[4],$_[1]+$_[5])=$extra} ; #CHOP OUT PREFIX & MATCH, IF POSSIBLE
89 pos($$textref) = $_[4]; # RESET \G
90 return $match;
91 }
92}
93
94# BUILD A PATTERN MATCHING A SIMPLE DELIMITED STRING
95
96sub gen_delimited_pat($;$) # ($delimiters;$escapes)
97{
98 my ($dels, $escs) = @_;
99 return "" unless $dels =~ /\S/;
100 $escs = '\\' unless $escs;
101 $escs .= substr($escs,-1) x (length($dels)-length($escs));
102 my @pat = ();
103 my $i;
104 for ($i=0; $i<length $dels; $i++)
105 {
106 my $del = quotemeta substr($dels,$i,1);
107 my $esc = quotemeta substr($escs,$i,1);
108 if ($del eq $esc)
109 {
110 push @pat, "$del(?:[^$del]*(?:(?:$del$del)[^$del]*)*)$del";
111 }
112 else
113 {
114 push @pat, "$del(?:[^$esc$del]*(?:$esc.[^$esc$del]*)*)$del";
115 }
116 }
117 my $pat = join '|', @pat;
118 return "(?:$pat)";
119}
120
121*delimited_pat = \&gen_delimited_pat;
122
123
124# THE EXTRACTION FUNCTIONS
125
126sub extract_delimited (;$$$$)
127{
128 my $textref = defined $_[0] ? \$_[0] : \$_;
129 my $wantarray = wantarray;
130 my $del = defined $_[1] ? $_[1] : qq{\'\"\`};
131 my $pre = defined $_[2] ? $_[2] : '\s*';
132 my $esc = defined $_[3] ? $_[3] : qq{\\};
133 my $pat = gen_delimited_pat($del, $esc);
134 my $startpos = pos $$textref || 0;
135 return _fail($wantarray, $textref, "Not a delimited pattern", 0)
136 unless $$textref =~ m/\G($pre)($pat)/gc;
137 my $prelen = length($1);
138 my $matchpos = $startpos+$prelen;
139 my $endpos = pos $$textref;
140 return _succeed $wantarray, $textref,
141 $matchpos, $endpos-$matchpos, # MATCH
142 $endpos, length($$textref)-$endpos, # REMAINDER
143 $startpos, $prelen; # PREFIX
144}
145
146sub extract_bracketed (;$$$)
147{
148 my $textref = defined $_[0] ? \$_[0] : \$_;
149 my $ldel = defined $_[1] ? $_[1] : '{([<';
150 my $pre = defined $_[2] ? $_[2] : '\s*';
151 my $wantarray = wantarray;
152 my $qdel = "";
153 my $quotelike;
154 $ldel =~ s/'//g and $qdel .= q{'};
155 $ldel =~ s/"//g and $qdel .= q{"};
156 $ldel =~ s/`//g and $qdel .= q{`};
157 $ldel =~ s/q//g and $quotelike = 1;
158 $ldel =~ tr/[](){}<>\0-\377/[[(({{<</ds;
159 my $rdel = $ldel;
160 unless ($rdel =~ tr/[({</])}>/)
161 {
162 return _fail $wantarray, $textref,
163 "Did not find a suitable bracket in delimiter: \"$_[1]\"",
164 0;
165 }
166 my $posbug = pos;
167 $ldel = join('|', map { quotemeta $_ } split('', $ldel));
168 $rdel = join('|', map { quotemeta $_ } split('', $rdel));
169 pos = $posbug;
170
171 my $startpos = pos $$textref || 0;
172 my @match = _match_bracketed($textref,$pre, $ldel, $qdel, $quotelike, $rdel);
173
174 return _fail ($wantarray, $textref) unless @match;
175
176 return _succeed ( $wantarray, $textref,
177 $match[2], $match[5]+2, # MATCH
178 @match[8,9], # REMAINDER
179 @match[0,1], # PREFIX
180 );
181}
182
183sub _match_bracketed($$$$$$) # $textref, $pre, $ldel, $qdel, $quotelike, $rdel
184{
185 my ($textref, $pre, $ldel, $qdel, $quotelike, $rdel) = @_;
186 my ($startpos, $ldelpos, $endpos) = (pos $$textref = pos $$textref||0);
187 unless ($$textref =~ m/\G$pre/gc)
188 {
189 _failmsg "Did not find prefix: /$pre/", $startpos;
190 return;
191 }
192
193 $ldelpos = pos $$textref;
194
195 unless ($$textref =~ m/\G($ldel)/gc)
196 {
197 _failmsg "Did not find opening bracket after prefix: \"$pre\"",
198 pos $$textref;
199 pos $$textref = $startpos;
200 return;
201 }
202
203 my @nesting = ( $1 );
204 my $textlen = length $$textref;
205 while (pos $$textref < $textlen)
206 {
207 next if $$textref =~ m/\G\\./gcs;
208
209 if ($$textref =~ m/\G($ldel)/gc)
210 {
211 push @nesting, $1;
212 }
213 elsif ($$textref =~ m/\G($rdel)/gc)
214 {
215 my ($found, $brackettype) = ($1, $1);
216 if ($#nesting < 0)
217 {
218 _failmsg "Unmatched closing bracket: \"$found\"",
219 pos $$textref;
220 pos $$textref = $startpos;
221 return;
222 }
223 my $expected = pop(@nesting);
224 $expected =~ tr/({[</)}]>/;
225 if ($expected ne $brackettype)
226 {
227 _failmsg qq{Mismatched closing bracket: expected "$expected" but found "$found"},
228 pos $$textref;
229 pos $$textref = $startpos;
230 return;
231 }
232 last if $#nesting < 0;
233 }
234 elsif ($qdel && $$textref =~ m/\G([$qdel])/gc)
235 {
9686a75b 236 $$textref =~ m/\G[^\\$1]*(?:\\.[^\\$1]*)*(\Q$1\E)/gsc and next;
3270c621 237 _failmsg "Unmatched embedded quote ($1)",
238 pos $$textref;
239 pos $$textref = $startpos;
240 return;
241 }
242 elsif ($quotelike && _match_quotelike($textref,"",1,0))
243 {
244 next;
245 }
246
247 else { $$textref =~ m/\G(?:[a-zA-Z0-9]+|.)/gcs }
248 }
249 if ($#nesting>=0)
250 {
251 _failmsg "Unmatched opening bracket(s): "
252 . join("..",@nesting)."..",
253 pos $$textref;
254 pos $$textref = $startpos;
255 return;
256 }
257
258 $endpos = pos $$textref;
259
260 return (
261 $startpos, $ldelpos-$startpos, # PREFIX
262 $ldelpos, 1, # OPENING BRACKET
263 $ldelpos+1, $endpos-$ldelpos-2, # CONTENTS
264 $endpos-1, 1, # CLOSING BRACKET
265 $endpos, length($$textref)-$endpos, # REMAINDER
266 );
267}
268
49c03c89 269sub _revbracket($)
3270c621 270{
271 my $brack = reverse $_[0];
272 $brack =~ tr/[({</])}>/;
273 return $brack;
274}
275
276my $XMLNAME = q{[a-zA-Z_:][a-zA-Z0-9_:.-]*};
277
278sub extract_tagged (;$$$$$) # ($text, $opentag, $closetag, $pre, \%options)
279{
280 my $textref = defined $_[0] ? \$_[0] : \$_;
281 my $ldel = $_[1];
282 my $rdel = $_[2];
283 my $pre = defined $_[3] ? $_[3] : '\s*';
284 my %options = defined $_[4] ? %{$_[4]} : ();
285 my $omode = defined $options{fail} ? $options{fail} : '';
286 my $bad = ref($options{reject}) eq 'ARRAY' ? join('|', @{$options{reject}})
287 : defined($options{reject}) ? $options{reject}
288 : ''
289 ;
290 my $ignore = ref($options{ignore}) eq 'ARRAY' ? join('|', @{$options{ignore}})
291 : defined($options{ignore}) ? $options{ignore}
292 : ''
293 ;
294
295 if (!defined $ldel) { $ldel = '<\w+(?:' . gen_delimited_pat(q{'"}) . '|[^>])*>'; }
296 $@ = undef;
297
298 my @match = _match_tagged($textref, $pre, $ldel, $rdel, $omode, $bad, $ignore);
299
300 return _fail(wantarray, $textref) unless @match;
301 return _succeed wantarray, $textref,
302 $match[2], $match[3]+$match[5]+$match[7], # MATCH
303 @match[8..9,0..1,2..7]; # REM, PRE, BITS
304}
305
306sub _match_tagged # ($$$$$$$)
307{
308 my ($textref, $pre, $ldel, $rdel, $omode, $bad, $ignore) = @_;
309 my $rdelspec;
310
311 my ($startpos, $opentagpos, $textpos, $parapos, $closetagpos, $endpos) = ( pos($$textref) = pos($$textref)||0 );
312
313 unless ($$textref =~ m/\G($pre)/gc)
314 {
315 _failmsg "Did not find prefix: /$pre/", pos $$textref;
316 goto failed;
317 }
318
319 $opentagpos = pos($$textref);
320
321 unless ($$textref =~ m/\G$ldel/gc)
322 {
323 _failmsg "Did not find opening tag: /$ldel/", pos $$textref;
324 goto failed;
325 }
326
327 $textpos = pos($$textref);
328
329 if (!defined $rdel)
330 {
dd6316a9 331 $rdelspec = substr($$textref, $-[0], $+[0] - $-[0]);
49c03c89 332 unless ($rdelspec =~ s/\A([[(<{]+)($XMLNAME).*/ quotemeta "$1\/$2". _revbracket($1) /oes)
3270c621 333 {
334 _failmsg "Unable to construct closing tag to match: $rdel",
335 pos $$textref;
336 goto failed;
337 }
338 }
339 else
340 {
48f821bf 341 $rdelspec = eval "qq{$rdel}" || do {
342 my $del;
343 for (qw,~ ! ^ & * ) _ + - = } ] : " ; ' > . ? / | ',)
344 { next if $rdel =~ /\Q$_/; $del = $_; last }
345 unless ($del) {
dd6316a9 346 use Carp;
347 croak "Can't interpolate right delimiter $rdel"
48f821bf 348 }
349 eval "qq$del$rdel$del";
350 };
3270c621 351 }
352
353 while (pos($$textref) < length($$textref))
354 {
355 next if $$textref =~ m/\G\\./gc;
356
357 if ($$textref =~ m/\G(\n[ \t]*\n)/gc )
358 {
359 $parapos = pos($$textref) - length($1)
360 unless defined $parapos;
361 }
362 elsif ($$textref =~ m/\G($rdelspec)/gc )
363 {
364 $closetagpos = pos($$textref)-length($1);
365 goto matched;
366 }
367 elsif ($ignore && $$textref =~ m/\G(?:$ignore)/gc)
368 {
369 next;
370 }
371 elsif ($bad && $$textref =~ m/\G($bad)/gcs)
372 {
373 pos($$textref) -= length($1); # CUT OFF WHATEVER CAUSED THE SHORTNESS
374 goto short if ($omode eq 'PARA' || $omode eq 'MAX');
375 _failmsg "Found invalid nested tag: $1", pos $$textref;
376 goto failed;
377 }
378 elsif ($$textref =~ m/\G($ldel)/gc)
379 {
380 my $tag = $1;
381 pos($$textref) -= length($tag); # REWIND TO NESTED TAG
382 unless (_match_tagged(@_)) # MATCH NESTED TAG
383 {
384 goto short if $omode eq 'PARA' || $omode eq 'MAX';
385 _failmsg "Found unbalanced nested tag: $tag",
386 pos $$textref;
387 goto failed;
388 }
389 }
390 else { $$textref =~ m/./gcs }
391 }
392
393short:
394 $closetagpos = pos($$textref);
395 goto matched if $omode eq 'MAX';
396 goto failed unless $omode eq 'PARA';
397
398 if (defined $parapos) { pos($$textref) = $parapos }
399 else { $parapos = pos($$textref) }
400
401 return (
402 $startpos, $opentagpos-$startpos, # PREFIX
403 $opentagpos, $textpos-$opentagpos, # OPENING TAG
404 $textpos, $parapos-$textpos, # TEXT
405 $parapos, 0, # NO CLOSING TAG
406 $parapos, length($$textref)-$parapos, # REMAINDER
407 );
408
409matched:
410 $endpos = pos($$textref);
411 return (
412 $startpos, $opentagpos-$startpos, # PREFIX
413 $opentagpos, $textpos-$opentagpos, # OPENING TAG
414 $textpos, $closetagpos-$textpos, # TEXT
415 $closetagpos, $endpos-$closetagpos, # CLOSING TAG
416 $endpos, length($$textref)-$endpos, # REMAINDER
417 );
418
419failed:
420 _failmsg "Did not find closing tag", pos $$textref unless $@;
421 pos($$textref) = $startpos;
422 return;
423}
424
425sub extract_variable (;$$)
426{
427 my $textref = defined $_[0] ? \$_[0] : \$_;
428 return ("","","") unless defined $$textref;
429 my $pre = defined $_[1] ? $_[1] : '\s*';
430
431 my @match = _match_variable($textref,$pre);
432
433 return _fail wantarray, $textref unless @match;
434
435 return _succeed wantarray, $textref,
436 @match[2..3,4..5,0..1]; # MATCH, REMAINDER, PREFIX
437}
438
439sub _match_variable($$)
440{
a7602084 441# $#
442# $^
443# $$
3270c621 444 my ($textref, $pre) = @_;
445 my $startpos = pos($$textref) = pos($$textref)||0;
446 unless ($$textref =~ m/\G($pre)/gc)
447 {
448 _failmsg "Did not find prefix: /$pre/", pos $$textref;
449 return;
450 }
451 my $varpos = pos($$textref);
48f821bf 452 unless ($$textref =~ m{\G\$\s*(?!::)(\d+|[][&`'+*./|,";%=~:?!\@<>()-]|\^[a-z]?)}gci)
3270c621 453 {
a7602084 454 unless ($$textref =~ m/\G((\$#?|[*\@\%]|\\&)+)/gc)
455 {
3270c621 456 _failmsg "Did not find leading dereferencer", pos $$textref;
457 pos $$textref = $startpos;
458 return;
a7602084 459 }
460 my $deref = $1;
3270c621 461
a7602084 462 unless ($$textref =~ m/\G\s*(?:::|')?(?:[_a-z]\w*(?:::|'))*[_a-z]\w*/gci
463 or _match_codeblock($textref, "", '\{', '\}', '\{', '\}', 0)
464 or $deref eq '$#' or $deref eq '$$' )
465 {
3270c621 466 _failmsg "Bad identifier after dereferencer", pos $$textref;
467 pos $$textref = $startpos;
468 return;
a7602084 469 }
3270c621 470 }
471
472 while (1)
473 {
48f821bf 474 next if $$textref =~ m/\G\s*(?:->)?\s*[{]\w+[}]/gc;
3270c621 475 next if _match_codeblock($textref,
2f250b7c 476 qr/\s*->\s*(?:[_a-zA-Z]\w+\s*)?/,
3270c621 477 qr/[({[]/, qr/[)}\]]/,
478 qr/[({[]/, qr/[)}\]]/, 0);
479 next if _match_codeblock($textref,
480 qr/\s*/, qr/[{[]/, qr/[}\]]/,
481 qr/[{[]/, qr/[}\]]/, 0);
482 next if _match_variable($textref,'\s*->\s*');
483 next if $$textref =~ m/\G\s*->\s*\w+(?![{([])/gc;
484 last;
485 }
486
487 my $endpos = pos($$textref);
488 return ($startpos, $varpos-$startpos,
489 $varpos, $endpos-$varpos,
490 $endpos, length($$textref)-$endpos
491 );
492}
493
494sub extract_codeblock (;$$$$$)
495{
496 my $textref = defined $_[0] ? \$_[0] : \$_;
497 my $wantarray = wantarray;
498 my $ldel_inner = defined $_[1] ? $_[1] : '{';
499 my $pre = defined $_[2] ? $_[2] : '\s*';
500 my $ldel_outer = defined $_[3] ? $_[3] : $ldel_inner;
501 my $rd = $_[4];
502 my $rdel_inner = $ldel_inner;
503 my $rdel_outer = $ldel_outer;
504 my $posbug = pos;
505 for ($ldel_inner, $ldel_outer) { tr/[]()<>{}\0-\377/[[((<<{{/ds }
506 for ($rdel_inner, $rdel_outer) { tr/[]()<>{}\0-\377/]]))>>}}/ds }
507 for ($ldel_inner, $ldel_outer, $rdel_inner, $rdel_outer)
508 {
509 $_ = '('.join('|',map { quotemeta $_ } split('',$_)).')'
510 }
511 pos = $posbug;
512
513 my @match = _match_codeblock($textref, $pre,
514 $ldel_outer, $rdel_outer,
515 $ldel_inner, $rdel_inner,
516 $rd);
517 return _fail($wantarray, $textref) unless @match;
518 return _succeed($wantarray, $textref,
519 @match[2..3,4..5,0..1] # MATCH, REMAINDER, PREFIX
520 );
521
522}
523
524sub _match_codeblock($$$$$$$)
525{
526 my ($textref, $pre, $ldel_outer, $rdel_outer, $ldel_inner, $rdel_inner, $rd) = @_;
527 my $startpos = pos($$textref) = pos($$textref) || 0;
528 unless ($$textref =~ m/\G($pre)/gc)
529 {
530 _failmsg qq{Did not match prefix /$pre/ at"} .
531 substr($$textref,pos($$textref),20) .
532 q{..."},
533 pos $$textref;
534 return;
535 }
536 my $codepos = pos($$textref);
537 unless ($$textref =~ m/\G($ldel_outer)/gc) # OUTERMOST DELIMITER
538 {
539 _failmsg qq{Did not find expected opening bracket at "} .
540 substr($$textref,pos($$textref),20) .
541 q{..."},
542 pos $$textref;
543 pos $$textref = $startpos;
544 return;
545 }
546 my $closing = $1;
547 $closing =~ tr/([<{/)]>}/;
548 my $matched;
549 my $patvalid = 1;
550 while (pos($$textref) < length($$textref))
551 {
552 $matched = '';
553 if ($rd && $$textref =~ m#\G(\Q(?)\E|\Q(s?)\E|\Q(s)\E)#gc)
554 {
555 $patvalid = 0;
556 next;
557 }
558
559 if ($$textref =~ m/\G\s*#.*/gc)
560 {
561 next;
562 }
563
564 if ($$textref =~ m/\G\s*($rdel_outer)/gc)
565 {
566 unless ($matched = ($closing && $1 eq $closing) )
567 {
568 next if $1 eq '>'; # MIGHT BE A "LESS THAN"
569 _failmsg q{Mismatched closing bracket at "} .
570 substr($$textref,pos($$textref),20) .
571 qq{...". Expected '$closing'},
572 pos $$textref;
573 }
574 last;
575 }
576
577 if (_match_variable($textref,'\s*') ||
578 _match_quotelike($textref,'\s*',$patvalid,$patvalid) )
579 {
580 $patvalid = 0;
581 next;
582 }
583
584
585 # NEED TO COVER MANY MORE CASES HERE!!!
48f821bf 586 if ($$textref =~ m#\G\s*(?!$ldel_inner)
587 ( [-+*x/%^&|.]=?
55a1c97c 588 | [!=]~
3270c621 589 | =(?!>)
590 | (\*\*|&&|\|\||<<|>>)=?
dd6316a9 591 | split|grep|map|return
48f821bf 592 | [([]
3270c621 593 )#gcx)
594 {
595 $patvalid = 1;
596 next;
597 }
598
599 if ( _match_codeblock($textref, '\s*', $ldel_inner, $rdel_inner, $ldel_inner, $rdel_inner, $rd) )
600 {
601 $patvalid = 1;
602 next;
603 }
604
605 if ($$textref =~ m/\G\s*$ldel_outer/gc)
606 {
607 _failmsg q{Improperly nested codeblock at "} .
608 substr($$textref,pos($$textref),20) .
609 q{..."},
610 pos $$textref;
611 last;
612 }
613
614 $patvalid = 0;
615 $$textref =~ m/\G\s*(\w+|[-=>]>|.|\Z)/gc;
616 }
617 continue { $@ = undef }
618
619 unless ($matched)
620 {
621 _failmsg 'No match found for opening bracket', pos $$textref
622 unless $@;
623 return;
624 }
625
626 my $endpos = pos($$textref);
627 return ( $startpos, $codepos-$startpos,
628 $codepos, $endpos-$codepos,
629 $endpos, length($$textref)-$endpos,
630 );
631}
632
633
634my %mods = (
635 'none' => '[cgimsox]*',
636 'm' => '[cgimsox]*',
637 's' => '[cegimsox]*',
638 'tr' => '[cds]*',
639 'y' => '[cds]*',
640 'qq' => '',
641 'qx' => '',
642 'qw' => '',
643 'qr' => '[imsx]*',
644 'q' => '',
645 );
646
647sub extract_quotelike (;$$)
648{
649 my $textref = $_[0] ? \$_[0] : \$_;
650 my $wantarray = wantarray;
651 my $pre = defined $_[1] ? $_[1] : '\s*';
652
653 my @match = _match_quotelike($textref,$pre,1,0);
654 return _fail($wantarray, $textref) unless @match;
655 return _succeed($wantarray, $textref,
656 $match[2], $match[18]-$match[2], # MATCH
657 @match[18,19], # REMAINDER
658 @match[0,1], # PREFIX
659 @match[2..17], # THE BITS
660 @match[20,21], # ANY FILLET?
661 );
662};
663
664sub _match_quotelike($$$$) # ($textref, $prepat, $allow_raw_match)
665{
666 my ($textref, $pre, $rawmatch, $qmark) = @_;
667
668 my ($textlen,$startpos,
669 $oppos,
670 $preld1pos,$ld1pos,$str1pos,$rd1pos,
671 $preld2pos,$ld2pos,$str2pos,$rd2pos,
672 $modpos) = ( length($$textref), pos($$textref) = pos($$textref) || 0 );
673
674 unless ($$textref =~ m/\G($pre)/gc)
675 {
676 _failmsg qq{Did not find prefix /$pre/ at "} .
677 substr($$textref, pos($$textref), 20) .
678 q{..."},
679 pos $$textref;
680 return;
681 }
682 $oppos = pos($$textref);
683
684 my $initial = substr($$textref,$oppos,1);
685
686 if ($initial && $initial =~ m|^[\"\'\`]|
687 || $rawmatch && $initial =~ m|^/|
688 || $qmark && $initial =~ m|^\?|)
689 {
9686a75b 690 unless ($$textref =~ m/ \Q$initial\E [^\\$initial]* (\\.[^\\$initial]*)* \Q$initial\E /gcsx)
3270c621 691 {
692 _failmsg qq{Did not find closing delimiter to match '$initial' at "} .
693 substr($$textref, $oppos, 20) .
694 q{..."},
695 pos $$textref;
696 pos $$textref = $startpos;
697 return;
698 }
699 $modpos= pos($$textref);
700 $rd1pos = $modpos-1;
701
702 if ($initial eq '/' || $initial eq '?')
703 {
704 $$textref =~ m/\G$mods{none}/gc
705 }
706
707 my $endpos = pos($$textref);
708 return (
709 $startpos, $oppos-$startpos, # PREFIX
710 $oppos, 0, # NO OPERATOR
711 $oppos, 1, # LEFT DEL
712 $oppos+1, $rd1pos-$oppos-1, # STR/PAT
713 $rd1pos, 1, # RIGHT DEL
714 $modpos, 0, # NO 2ND LDEL
715 $modpos, 0, # NO 2ND STR
716 $modpos, 0, # NO 2ND RDEL
717 $modpos, $endpos-$modpos, # MODIFIERS
718 $endpos, $textlen-$endpos, # REMAINDER
719 );
720 }
721
aa10195b 722 unless ($$textref =~ m{\G(\b(?:m|s|qq|qx|qw|q|qr|tr|y)\b(?=\s*\S)|<<)}gc)
3270c621 723 {
724 _failmsg q{No quotelike operator found after prefix at "} .
725 substr($$textref, pos($$textref), 20) .
726 q{..."},
727 pos $$textref;
728 pos $$textref = $startpos;
729 return;
730 }
731
732 my $op = $1;
733 $preld1pos = pos($$textref);
734 if ($op eq '<<') {
735 $ld1pos = pos($$textref);
736 my $label;
737 if ($$textref =~ m{\G([A-Za-z_]\w*)}gc) {
738 $label = $1;
739 }
740 elsif ($$textref =~ m{ \G ' ([^'\\]* (?:\\.[^'\\]*)*) '
741 | \G " ([^"\\]* (?:\\.[^"\\]*)*) "
742 | \G ` ([^`\\]* (?:\\.[^`\\]*)*) `
9686a75b 743 }gcsx) {
3270c621 744 $label = $+;
745 }
746 else {
747 $label = "";
748 }
749 my $extrapos = pos($$textref);
750 $$textref =~ m{.*\n}gc;
ce3ac4b6 751 $str1pos = pos($$textref)--;
752 unless ($$textref =~ m{.*?\n(?=\Q$label\E\n)}gc) {
3270c621 753 _failmsg qq{Missing here doc terminator ('$label') after "} .
754 substr($$textref, $startpos, 20) .
755 q{..."},
756 pos $$textref;
757 pos $$textref = $startpos;
758 return;
759 }
760 $rd1pos = pos($$textref);
dd6316a9 761 $$textref =~ m{\Q$label\E\n}gc;
3270c621 762 $ld2pos = pos($$textref);
763 return (
764 $startpos, $oppos-$startpos, # PREFIX
765 $oppos, length($op), # OPERATOR
766 $ld1pos, $extrapos-$ld1pos, # LEFT DEL
767 $str1pos, $rd1pos-$str1pos, # STR/PAT
768 $rd1pos, $ld2pos-$rd1pos, # RIGHT DEL
769 $ld2pos, 0, # NO 2ND LDEL
770 $ld2pos, 0, # NO 2ND STR
771 $ld2pos, 0, # NO 2ND RDEL
772 $ld2pos, 0, # NO MODIFIERS
773 $ld2pos, $textlen-$ld2pos, # REMAINDER
774 $extrapos, $str1pos-$extrapos, # FILLETED BIT
775 );
776 }
777
778 $$textref =~ m/\G\s*/gc;
779 $ld1pos = pos($$textref);
780 $str1pos = $ld1pos+1;
781
782 unless ($$textref =~ m/\G(\S)/gc) # SHOULD USE LOOKAHEAD
783 {
784 _failmsg "No block delimiter found after quotelike $op",
785 pos $$textref;
786 pos $$textref = $startpos;
787 return;
788 }
789 pos($$textref) = $ld1pos; # HAVE TO DO THIS BECAUSE LOOKAHEAD BROKEN
790 my ($ldel1, $rdel1) = ("\Q$1","\Q$1");
791 if ($ldel1 =~ /[[(<{]/)
792 {
793 $rdel1 =~ tr/[({</])}>/;
ce3ac4b6 794 defined(_match_bracketed($textref,"",$ldel1,"","",$rdel1))
3270c621 795 || do { pos $$textref = $startpos; return };
796 }
797 else
798 {
9686a75b 799 $$textref =~ /$ldel1[^\\$ldel1]*(\\.[^\\$ldel1]*)*$ldel1/gcs
3270c621 800 || do { pos $$textref = $startpos; return };
801 }
802 $ld2pos = $rd1pos = pos($$textref)-1;
803
804 my $second_arg = $op =~ /s|tr|y/ ? 1 : 0;
805 if ($second_arg)
806 {
807 my ($ldel2, $rdel2);
808 if ($ldel1 =~ /[[(<{]/)
809 {
810 unless ($$textref =~ /\G\s*(\S)/gc) # SHOULD USE LOOKAHEAD
811 {
812 _failmsg "Missing second block for quotelike $op",
813 pos $$textref;
814 pos $$textref = $startpos;
815 return;
816 }
817 $ldel2 = $rdel2 = "\Q$1";
818 $rdel2 =~ tr/[({</])}>/;
819 }
820 else
821 {
822 $ldel2 = $rdel2 = $ldel1;
823 }
824 $str2pos = $ld2pos+1;
825
826 if ($ldel2 =~ /[[(<{]/)
827 {
828 pos($$textref)--; # OVERCOME BROKEN LOOKAHEAD
ce3ac4b6 829 defined(_match_bracketed($textref,"",$ldel2,"","",$rdel2))
3270c621 830 || do { pos $$textref = $startpos; return };
831 }
832 else
833 {
9686a75b 834 $$textref =~ /[^\\$ldel2]*(\\.[^\\$ldel2]*)*$ldel2/gcs
3270c621 835 || do { pos $$textref = $startpos; return };
836 }
837 $rd2pos = pos($$textref)-1;
838 }
839 else
840 {
841 $ld2pos = $str2pos = $rd2pos = $rd1pos;
842 }
843
844 $modpos = pos $$textref;
845
846 $$textref =~ m/\G($mods{$op})/gc;
847 my $endpos = pos $$textref;
848
849 return (
850 $startpos, $oppos-$startpos, # PREFIX
851 $oppos, length($op), # OPERATOR
852 $ld1pos, 1, # LEFT DEL
853 $str1pos, $rd1pos-$str1pos, # STR/PAT
854 $rd1pos, 1, # RIGHT DEL
855 $ld2pos, $second_arg, # 2ND LDEL (MAYBE)
856 $str2pos, $rd2pos-$str2pos, # 2ND STR (MAYBE)
857 $rd2pos, $second_arg, # 2ND RDEL (MAYBE)
858 $modpos, $endpos-$modpos, # MODIFIERS
859 $endpos, $textlen-$endpos, # REMAINDER
860 );
861}
862
863my $def_func =
864[
865 sub { extract_variable($_[0], '') },
866 sub { extract_quotelike($_[0],'') },
867 sub { extract_codeblock($_[0],'{}','') },
868];
869
870sub extract_multiple (;$$$$) # ($text, $functions_ref, $max_fields, $ignoreunknown)
871{
872 my $textref = defined($_[0]) ? \$_[0] : \$_;
873 my $posbug = pos;
874 my ($lastpos, $firstpos);
875 my @fields = ();
876
a7602084 877 #for ($$textref)
3270c621 878 {
879 my @func = defined $_[1] ? @{$_[1]} : @{$def_func};
880 my $max = defined $_[2] && $_[2]>0 ? $_[2] : 1_000_000_000;
881 my $igunk = $_[3];
882
a7602084 883 pos $$textref ||= 0;
3270c621 884
885 unless (wantarray)
886 {
dd6316a9 887 use Carp;
888 carp "extract_multiple reset maximal count to 1 in scalar context"
3270c621 889 if $^W && defined($_[2]) && $max > 1;
890 $max = 1
891 }
892
893 my $unkpos;
894 my $func;
895 my $class;
896
897 my @class;
898 foreach $func ( @func )
899 {
900 if (ref($func) eq 'HASH')
901 {
902 push @class, (keys %$func)[0];
903 $func = (values %$func)[0];
904 }
905 else
906 {
907 push @class, undef;
908 }
909 }
910
a7602084 911 FIELD: while (pos($$textref) < length($$textref))
3270c621 912 {
48f821bf 913 my ($field, $rem);
a7602084 914 my @bits;
3270c621 915 foreach my $i ( 0..$#func )
916 {
a7602084 917 my $pref;
3270c621 918 $func = $func[$i];
919 $class = $class[$i];
a7602084 920 $lastpos = pos $$textref;
3270c621 921 if (ref($func) eq 'CODE')
49c03c89 922 { ($field,$rem,$pref) = @bits = $func->($$textref) }
3270c621 923 elsif (ref($func) eq 'Text::Balanced::Extractor')
a7602084 924 { @bits = $field = $func->extract($$textref) }
925 elsif( $$textref =~ m/\G$func/gc )
dd6316a9 926 { @bits = $field = defined($1)
927 ? $1
928 : substr($$textref, $-[0], $+[0] - $-[0])
929 }
a7602084 930 $pref ||= "";
3270c621 931 if (defined($field) && length($field))
932 {
a7602084 933 if (!$igunk) {
ce3ac4b6 934 $unkpos = $lastpos
a7602084 935 if length($pref) && !defined($unkpos);
936 if (defined $unkpos)
937 {
938 push @fields, substr($$textref, $unkpos, $lastpos-$unkpos).$pref;
939 $firstpos = $unkpos unless defined $firstpos;
940 undef $unkpos;
941 last FIELD if @fields == $max;
942 }
3270c621 943 }
a7602084 944 push @fields, $class
945 ? bless (\$field, $class)
3270c621 946 : $field;
947 $firstpos = $lastpos unless defined $firstpos;
a7602084 948 $lastpos = pos $$textref;
3270c621 949 last FIELD if @fields == $max;
950 next FIELD;
951 }
952 }
a7602084 953 if ($$textref =~ /\G(.)/gcs)
3270c621 954 {
a7602084 955 $unkpos = pos($$textref)-1
3270c621 956 unless $igunk || defined $unkpos;
957 }
958 }
959
960 if (defined $unkpos)
961 {
a7602084 962 push @fields, substr($$textref, $unkpos);
3270c621 963 $firstpos = $unkpos unless defined $firstpos;
a7602084 964 $lastpos = length $$textref;
3270c621 965 }
966 last;
967 }
968
969 pos $$textref = $lastpos;
970 return @fields if wantarray;
971
972 $firstpos ||= 0;
973 eval { substr($$textref,$firstpos,$lastpos-$firstpos)="";
974 pos $$textref = $firstpos };
975 return $fields[0];
976}
977
978
979sub gen_extract_tagged # ($opentag, $closetag, $pre, \%options)
980{
981 my $ldel = $_[0];
982 my $rdel = $_[1];
983 my $pre = defined $_[2] ? $_[2] : '\s*';
984 my %options = defined $_[3] ? %{$_[3]} : ();
985 my $omode = defined $options{fail} ? $options{fail} : '';
986 my $bad = ref($options{reject}) eq 'ARRAY' ? join('|', @{$options{reject}})
987 : defined($options{reject}) ? $options{reject}
988 : ''
989 ;
990 my $ignore = ref($options{ignore}) eq 'ARRAY' ? join('|', @{$options{ignore}})
991 : defined($options{ignore}) ? $options{ignore}
992 : ''
993 ;
994
995 if (!defined $ldel) { $ldel = '<\w+(?:' . gen_delimited_pat(q{'"}) . '|[^>])*>'; }
996
997 my $posbug = pos;
998 for ($ldel, $pre, $bad, $ignore) { $_ = qr/$_/ if $_ }
999 pos = $posbug;
1000
1001 my $closure = sub
1002 {
1003 my $textref = defined $_[0] ? \$_[0] : \$_;
1004 my @match = Text::Balanced::_match_tagged($textref, $pre, $ldel, $rdel, $omode, $bad, $ignore);
1005
1006 return _fail(wantarray, $textref) unless @match;
1007 return _succeed wantarray, $textref,
1008 $match[2], $match[3]+$match[5]+$match[7], # MATCH
1009 @match[8..9,0..1,2..7]; # REM, PRE, BITS
1010 };
1011
1012 bless $closure, 'Text::Balanced::Extractor';
1013}
1014
1015package Text::Balanced::Extractor;
1016
1017sub extract($$) # ($self, $text)
1018{
1019 &{$_[0]}($_[1]);
1020}
1021
1022package Text::Balanced::ErrorMsg;
1023
1024use overload '""' => sub { "$_[0]->{error}, detected at offset $_[0]->{pos}" };
1025
10261;
55a1c97c 1027
1028__END__
1029
1030=head1 NAME
1031
1032Text::Balanced - Extract delimited text sequences from strings.
1033
1034
1035=head1 SYNOPSIS
1036
1037 use Text::Balanced qw (
1038 extract_delimited
1039 extract_bracketed
1040 extract_quotelike
1041 extract_codeblock
1042 extract_variable
1043 extract_tagged
1044 extract_multiple
1045
1046 gen_delimited_pat
1047 gen_extract_tagged
1048 );
1049
1050 # Extract the initial substring of $text that is delimited by
1051 # two (unescaped) instances of the first character in $delim.
1052
1053 ($extracted, $remainder) = extract_delimited($text,$delim);
1054
1055
1056 # Extract the initial substring of $text that is bracketed
1057 # with a delimiter(s) specified by $delim (where the string
1058 # in $delim contains one or more of '(){}[]<>').
1059
1060 ($extracted, $remainder) = extract_bracketed($text,$delim);
1061
1062
1063 # Extract the initial substring of $text that is bounded by
48f821bf 1064 # an XML tag.
55a1c97c 1065
1066 ($extracted, $remainder) = extract_tagged($text);
1067
1068
1069 # Extract the initial substring of $text that is bounded by
1070 # a C<BEGIN>...C<END> pair. Don't allow nested C<BEGIN> tags
1071
1072 ($extracted, $remainder) =
1073 extract_tagged($text,"BEGIN","END",undef,{bad=>["BEGIN"]});
1074
1075
1076 # Extract the initial substring of $text that represents a
1077 # Perl "quote or quote-like operation"
1078
1079 ($extracted, $remainder) = extract_quotelike($text);
1080
1081
1082 # Extract the initial substring of $text that represents a block
1083 # of Perl code, bracketed by any of character(s) specified by $delim
1084 # (where the string $delim contains one or more of '(){}[]<>').
1085
1086 ($extracted, $remainder) = extract_codeblock($text,$delim);
1087
1088
1089 # Extract the initial substrings of $text that would be extracted by
1090 # one or more sequential applications of the specified functions
1091 # or regular expressions
1092
1093 @extracted = extract_multiple($text,
1094 [ \&extract_bracketed,
1095 \&extract_quotelike,
1096 \&some_other_extractor_sub,
1097 qr/[xyz]*/,
1098 'literal',
1099 ]);
1100
1101# Create a string representing an optimized pattern (a la Friedl)
1102# that matches a substring delimited by any of the specified characters
1103# (in this case: any type of quote or a slash)
1104
1105 $patstring = gen_delimited_pat(q{'"`/});
1106
1107
1108# Generate a reference to an anonymous sub that is just like extract_tagged
1109# but pre-compiled and optimized for a specific pair of tags, and consequently
1110# much faster (i.e. 3 times faster). It uses qr// for better performance on
1111# repeated calls, so it only works under Perl 5.005 or later.
1112
1113 $extract_head = gen_extract_tagged('<HEAD>','</HEAD>');
1114
1115 ($extracted, $remainder) = $extract_head->($text);
1116
1117
1118=head1 DESCRIPTION
1119
48f821bf 1120The various C<extract_...> subroutines may be used to
1121extract a delimited substring, possibly after skipping a
1122specified prefix string. By default, that prefix is
1123optional whitespace (C</\s*/>), but you can change it to whatever
1124you wish (see below).
1125
1126The substring to be extracted must appear at the
1127current C<pos> location of the string's variable
1128(or at index zero, if no C<pos> position is defined).
1129In other words, the C<extract_...> subroutines I<don't>
aa10195b 1130extract the first occurrence of a substring anywhere
48f821bf 1131in a string (like an unanchored regex would). Rather,
aa10195b 1132they extract an occurrence of the substring appearing
48f821bf 1133immediately at the current matching position in the
1134string (like a C<\G>-anchored regex would).
1135
1136
55a1c97c 1137
1138=head2 General behaviour in list contexts
1139
1140In a list context, all the subroutines return a list, the first three
1141elements of which are always:
1142
1143=over 4
1144
1145=item [0]
1146
1147The extracted string, including the specified delimiters.
49c03c89 1148If the extraction fails C<undef> is returned.
55a1c97c 1149
1150=item [1]
1151
1152The remainder of the input string (i.e. the characters after the
1153extracted string). On failure, the entire string is returned.
1154
1155=item [2]
1156
1157The skipped prefix (i.e. the characters before the extracted string).
49c03c89 1158On failure, C<undef> is returned.
55a1c97c 1159
1160=back
1161
1162Note that in a list context, the contents of the original input text (the first
1163argument) are not modified in any way.
1164
1165However, if the input text was passed in a variable, that variable's
1166C<pos> value is updated to point at the first character after the
1167extracted text. That means that in a list context the various
1168subroutines can be used much like regular expressions. For example:
1169
1170 while ( $next = (extract_quotelike($text))[0] )
1171 {
1172 # process next quote-like (in $next)
1173 }
1174
1175
1176=head2 General behaviour in scalar and void contexts
1177
1178In a scalar context, the extracted string is returned, having first been
1179removed from the input text. Thus, the following code also processes
1180each quote-like operation, but actually removes them from $text:
1181
1182 while ( $next = extract_quotelike($text) )
1183 {
1184 # process next quote-like (in $next)
1185 }
1186
1187Note that if the input text is a read-only string (i.e. a literal),
1188no attempt is made to remove the extracted text.
1189
1190In a void context the behaviour of the extraction subroutines is
1191exactly the same as in a scalar context, except (of course) that the
1192extracted substring is not returned.
1193
1194=head2 A note about prefixes
1195
1196Prefix patterns are matched without any trailing modifiers (C</gimsox> etc.)
1197This can bite you if you're expecting a prefix specification like
1198'.*?(?=<H1>)' to skip everything up to the first <H1> tag. Such a prefix
1199pattern will only succeed if the <H1> tag is on the current line, since
1200. normally doesn't match newlines.
1201
1202To overcome this limitation, you need to turn on /s matching within
1203the prefix pattern, using the C<(?s)> directive: '(?s).*?(?=<H1>)'
1204
1205
1206=head2 C<extract_delimited>
1207
1208The C<extract_delimited> function formalizes the common idiom
1209of extracting a single-character-delimited substring from the start of
1210a string. For example, to extract a single-quote delimited string, the
1211following code is typically used:
1212
1213 ($remainder = $text) =~ s/\A('(\\.|[^'])*')//s;
1214 $extracted = $1;
1215
1216but with C<extract_delimited> it can be simplified to:
1217
1218 ($extracted,$remainder) = extract_delimited($text, "'");
1219
1220C<extract_delimited> takes up to four scalars (the input text, the
1221delimiters, a prefix pattern to be skipped, and any escape characters)
1222and extracts the initial substring of the text that
1223is appropriately delimited. If the delimiter string has multiple
1224characters, the first one encountered in the text is taken to delimit
1225the substring.
1226The third argument specifies a prefix pattern that is to be skipped
1227(but must be present!) before the substring is extracted.
1228The final argument specifies the escape character to be used for each
1229delimiter.
1230
1231All arguments are optional. If the escape characters are not specified,
1232every delimiter is escaped with a backslash (C<\>).
1233If the prefix is not specified, the
1234pattern C<'\s*'> - optional whitespace - is used. If the delimiter set
1235is also not specified, the set C</["'`]/> is used. If the text to be processed
1236is not specified either, C<$_> is used.
1237
48f821bf 1238In list context, C<extract_delimited> returns a array of three
55a1c97c 1239elements, the extracted substring (I<including the surrounding
1240delimiters>), the remainder of the text, and the skipped prefix (if
1241any). If a suitable delimited substring is not found, the first
1242element of the array is the empty string, the second is the complete
1243original text, and the prefix returned in the third element is an
1244empty string.
1245
1246In a scalar context, just the extracted substring is returned. In
1247a void context, the extracted substring (and any prefix) are simply
1248removed from the beginning of the first argument.
1249
1250Examples:
1251
1252 # Remove a single-quoted substring from the very beginning of $text:
1253
1254 $substring = extract_delimited($text, "'", '');
1255
1256 # Remove a single-quoted Pascalish substring (i.e. one in which
1257 # doubling the quote character escapes it) from the very
1258 # beginning of $text:
1259
1260 $substring = extract_delimited($text, "'", '', "'");
1261
1262 # Extract a single- or double- quoted substring from the
1263 # beginning of $text, optionally after some whitespace
1264 # (note the list context to protect $text from modification):
1265
1266 ($substring) = extract_delimited $text, q{"'};
1267
1268
1269 # Delete the substring delimited by the first '/' in $text:
1270
1271 $text = join '', (extract_delimited($text,'/','[^/]*')[2,1];
1272
1273Note that this last example is I<not> the same as deleting the first
1274quote-like pattern. For instance, if C<$text> contained the string:
1275
1276 "if ('./cmd' =~ m/$UNIXCMD/s) { $cmd = $1; }"
1277
1278then after the deletion it would contain:
1279
1280 "if ('.$UNIXCMD/s) { $cmd = $1; }"
1281
1282not:
1283
1284 "if ('./cmd' =~ ms) { $cmd = $1; }"
1285
1286
1287See L<"extract_quotelike"> for a (partial) solution to this problem.
1288
1289
1290=head2 C<extract_bracketed>
1291
1292Like C<"extract_delimited">, the C<extract_bracketed> function takes
1293up to three optional scalar arguments: a string to extract from, a delimiter
1294specifier, and a prefix pattern. As before, a missing prefix defaults to
1295optional whitespace and a missing text defaults to C<$_>. However, a missing
1296delimiter specifier defaults to C<'{}()[]E<lt>E<gt>'> (see below).
1297
1298C<extract_bracketed> extracts a balanced-bracket-delimited
1299substring (using any one (or more) of the user-specified delimiter
1300brackets: '(..)', '{..}', '[..]', or '<..>'). Optionally it will also
1301respect quoted unbalanced brackets (see below).
1302
1303A "delimiter bracket" is a bracket in list of delimiters passed as
1304C<extract_bracketed>'s second argument. Delimiter brackets are
1305specified by giving either the left or right (or both!) versions
1306of the required bracket(s). Note that the order in which
1307two or more delimiter brackets are specified is not significant.
1308
1309A "balanced-bracket-delimited substring" is a substring bounded by
1310matched brackets, such that any other (left or right) delimiter
1311bracket I<within> the substring is also matched by an opposite
1312(right or left) delimiter bracket I<at the same level of nesting>. Any
1313type of bracket not in the delimiter list is treated as an ordinary
1314character.
1315
1316In other words, each type of bracket specified as a delimiter must be
1317balanced and correctly nested within the substring, and any other kind of
1318("non-delimiter") bracket in the substring is ignored.
1319
1320For example, given the string:
1321
1322 $text = "{ an '[irregularly :-(] {} parenthesized >:-)' string }";
1323
1324then a call to C<extract_bracketed> in a list context:
1325
1326 @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '{}' );
1327
1328would return:
1329
1330 ( "{ an '[irregularly :-(] {} parenthesized >:-)' string }" , "" , "" )
1331
1332since both sets of C<'{..}'> brackets are properly nested and evenly balanced.
1333(In a scalar context just the first element of the array would be returned. In
1334a void context, C<$text> would be replaced by an empty string.)
1335
1336Likewise the call in:
1337
1338 @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '{[' );
1339
1340would return the same result, since all sets of both types of specified
1341delimiter brackets are correctly nested and balanced.
1342
1343However, the call in:
1344
1345 @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '{([<' );
1346
1347would fail, returning:
1348
1349 ( undef , "{ an '[irregularly :-(] {} parenthesized >:-)' string }" );
1350
1351because the embedded pairs of C<'(..)'>s and C<'[..]'>s are "cross-nested" and
1352the embedded C<'E<gt>'> is unbalanced. (In a scalar context, this call would
1353return an empty string. In a void context, C<$text> would be unchanged.)
1354
1355Note that the embedded single-quotes in the string don't help in this
1356case, since they have not been specified as acceptable delimiters and are
1357therefore treated as non-delimiter characters (and ignored).
1358
1359However, if a particular species of quote character is included in the
1360delimiter specification, then that type of quote will be correctly handled.
1361for example, if C<$text> is:
1362
1363 $text = '<A HREF=">>>>">link</A>';
1364
1365then
1366
1367 @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '<">' );
1368
1369returns:
1370
1371 ( '<A HREF=">>>>">', 'link</A>', "" )
1372
1373as expected. Without the specification of C<"> as an embedded quoter:
1374
1375 @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '<>' );
1376
1377the result would be:
1378
1379 ( '<A HREF=">', '>>>">link</A>', "" )
1380
1381In addition to the quote delimiters C<'>, C<">, and C<`>, full Perl quote-like
1382quoting (i.e. q{string}, qq{string}, etc) can be specified by including the
1383letter 'q' as a delimiter. Hence:
1384
1385 @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '<q>' );
1386
1387would correctly match something like this:
1388
1389 $text = '<leftop: conj /and/ conj>';
1390
1391See also: C<"extract_quotelike"> and C<"extract_codeblock">.
1392
1393
48f821bf 1394=head2 C<extract_variable>
1395
1396C<extract_variable> extracts any valid Perl variable or
1397variable-involved expression, including scalars, arrays, hashes, array
aa10195b 1398accesses, hash look-ups, method calls through objects, subroutine calls
48f821bf 1399through subroutine references, etc.
1400
1401The subroutine takes up to two optional arguments:
1402
1403=over 4
1404
1405=item 1.
1406
1407A string to be processed (C<$_> if the string is omitted or C<undef>)
1408
1409=item 2.
1410
1411A string specifying a pattern to be matched as a prefix (which is to be
1412skipped). If omitted, optional whitespace is skipped.
1413
1414=back
1415
1416On success in a list context, an array of 3 elements is returned. The
1417elements are:
1418
1419=over 4
1420
1421=item [0]
1422
1423the extracted variable, or variablish expression
1424
1425=item [1]
1426
1427the remainder of the input text,
1428
1429=item [2]
1430
1431the prefix substring (if any),
1432
1433=back
1434
1435On failure, all of these values (except the remaining text) are C<undef>.
1436
1437In a scalar context, C<extract_variable> returns just the complete
1438substring that matched a variablish expression. C<undef> is returned on
1439failure. In addition, the original input text has the returned substring
1440(and any prefix) removed from it.
1441
1442In a void context, the input text just has the matched substring (and
1443any specified prefix) removed.
1444
1445
55a1c97c 1446=head2 C<extract_tagged>
1447
1448C<extract_tagged> extracts and segments text between (balanced)
1449specified tags.
1450
1451The subroutine takes up to five optional arguments:
1452
1453=over 4
1454
1455=item 1.
1456
1457A string to be processed (C<$_> if the string is omitted or C<undef>)
1458
1459=item 2.
1460
1461A string specifying a pattern to be matched as the opening tag.
1462If the pattern string is omitted (or C<undef>) then a pattern
48f821bf 1463that matches any standard XML tag is used.
55a1c97c 1464
1465=item 3.
1466
1467A string specifying a pattern to be matched at the closing tag.
1468If the pattern string is omitted (or C<undef>) then the closing
1469tag is constructed by inserting a C</> after any leading bracket
1470characters in the actual opening tag that was matched (I<not> the pattern
1471that matched the tag). For example, if the opening tag pattern
1472is specified as C<'{{\w+}}'> and actually matched the opening tag
1473C<"{{DATA}}">, then the constructed closing tag would be C<"{{/DATA}}">.
1474
1475=item 4.
1476
1477A string specifying a pattern to be matched as a prefix (which is to be
1478skipped). If omitted, optional whitespace is skipped.
1479
1480=item 5.
1481
1482A hash reference containing various parsing options (see below)
1483
1484=back
1485
1486The various options that can be specified are:
1487
1488=over 4
1489
1490=item C<reject =E<gt> $listref>
1491
1492The list reference contains one or more strings specifying patterns
1493that must I<not> appear within the tagged text.
1494
1495For example, to extract
1496an HTML link (which should not contain nested links) use:
1497
48f821bf 1498 extract_tagged($text, '<A>', '</A>', undef, {reject => ['<A>']} );
55a1c97c 1499
1500=item C<ignore =E<gt> $listref>
1501
1502The list reference contains one or more strings specifying patterns
1503that are I<not> be be treated as nested tags within the tagged text
1504(even if they would match the start tag pattern).
1505
1506For example, to extract an arbitrary XML tag, but ignore "empty" elements:
1507
48f821bf 1508 extract_tagged($text, undef, undef, undef, {ignore => ['<[^>]*/>']} );
55a1c97c 1509
1510(also see L<"gen_delimited_pat"> below).
1511
1512
1513=item C<fail =E<gt> $str>
1514
1515The C<fail> option indicates the action to be taken if a matching end
1516tag is not encountered (i.e. before the end of the string or some
1517C<reject> pattern matches). By default, a failure to match a closing
1518tag causes C<extract_tagged> to immediately fail.
1519
1520However, if the string value associated with <reject> is "MAX", then
1521C<extract_tagged> returns the complete text up to the point of failure.
1522If the string is "PARA", C<extract_tagged> returns only the first paragraph
1523after the tag (up to the first line that is either empty or contains
1524only whitespace characters).
48f821bf 1525If the string is "", the the default behaviour (i.e. failure) is reinstated.
55a1c97c 1526
1527For example, suppose the start tag "/para" introduces a paragraph, which then
1528continues until the next "/endpara" tag or until another "/para" tag is
1529encountered:
1530
48f821bf 1531 $text = "/para line 1\n\nline 3\n/para line 4";
55a1c97c 1532
48f821bf 1533 extract_tagged($text, '/para', '/endpara', undef,
1534 {reject => '/para', fail => MAX );
55a1c97c 1535
48f821bf 1536 # EXTRACTED: "/para line 1\n\nline 3\n"
55a1c97c 1537
1538Suppose instead, that if no matching "/endpara" tag is found, the "/para"
1539tag refers only to the immediately following paragraph:
1540
48f821bf 1541 $text = "/para line 1\n\nline 3\n/para line 4";
55a1c97c 1542
48f821bf 1543 extract_tagged($text, '/para', '/endpara', undef,
1544 {reject => '/para', fail => MAX );
55a1c97c 1545
48f821bf 1546 # EXTRACTED: "/para line 1\n"
55a1c97c 1547
1548Note that the specified C<fail> behaviour applies to nested tags as well.
1549
1550=back
1551
1552On success in a list context, an array of 6 elements is returned. The elements are:
1553
1554=over 4
1555
1556=item [0]
1557
1558the extracted tagged substring (including the outermost tags),
1559
1560=item [1]
1561
1562the remainder of the input text,
1563
1564=item [2]
1565
1566the prefix substring (if any),
1567
1568=item [3]
1569
1570the opening tag
1571
1572=item [4]
1573
1574the text between the opening and closing tags
1575
1576=item [5]
1577
1578the closing tag (or "" if no closing tag was found)
1579
1580=back
1581
1582On failure, all of these values (except the remaining text) are C<undef>.
1583
1584In a scalar context, C<extract_tagged> returns just the complete
1585substring that matched a tagged text (including the start and end
1586tags). C<undef> is returned on failure. In addition, the original input
1587text has the returned substring (and any prefix) removed from it.
1588
1589In a void context, the input text just has the matched substring (and
1590any specified prefix) removed.
1591
1592
1593=head2 C<gen_extract_tagged>
1594
1595(Note: This subroutine is only available under Perl5.005)
1596
1597C<gen_extract_tagged> generates a new anonymous subroutine which
1598extracts text between (balanced) specified tags. In other words,
1599it generates a function identical in function to C<extract_tagged>.
1600
1601The difference between C<extract_tagged> and the anonymous
1602subroutines generated by
1603C<gen_extract_tagged>, is that those generated subroutines:
1604
1605=over 4
1606
1607=item *
1608
1609do not have to reparse tag specification or parsing options every time
1610they are called (whereas C<extract_tagged> has to effectively rebuild
1611its tag parser on every call);
1612
1613=item *
1614
1615make use of the new qr// construct to pre-compile the regexes they use
1616(whereas C<extract_tagged> uses standard string variable interpolation
1617to create tag-matching patterns).
1618
1619=back
1620
1621The subroutine takes up to four optional arguments (the same set as
1622C<extract_tagged> except for the string to be processed). It returns
1623a reference to a subroutine which in turn takes a single argument (the text to
1624be extracted from).
1625
1626In other words, the implementation of C<extract_tagged> is exactly
1627equivalent to:
1628
48f821bf 1629 sub extract_tagged
1630 {
1631 my $text = shift;
1632 $extractor = gen_extract_tagged(@_);
1633 return $extractor->($text);
1634 }
55a1c97c 1635
1636(although C<extract_tagged> is not currently implemented that way, in order
1637to preserve pre-5.005 compatibility).
1638
1639Using C<gen_extract_tagged> to create extraction functions for specific tags
1640is a good idea if those functions are going to be called more than once, since
1641their performance is typically twice as good as the more general-purpose
1642C<extract_tagged>.
1643
1644
1645=head2 C<extract_quotelike>
1646
1647C<extract_quotelike> attempts to recognize, extract, and segment any
1648one of the various Perl quotes and quotelike operators (see
1649L<perlop(3)>) Nested backslashed delimiters, embedded balanced bracket
1650delimiters (for the quotelike operators), and trailing modifiers are
1651all caught. For example, in:
1652
48f821bf 1653 extract_quotelike 'q # an octothorpe: \# (not the end of the q!) #'
1654
1655 extract_quotelike ' "You said, \"Use sed\"." '
55a1c97c 1656
48f821bf 1657 extract_quotelike ' s{([A-Z]{1,8}\.[A-Z]{3})} /\L$1\E/; '
55a1c97c 1658
48f821bf 1659 extract_quotelike ' tr/\\\/\\\\/\\\//ds; '
55a1c97c 1660
1661the full Perl quotelike operations are all extracted correctly.
1662
1663Note too that, when using the /x modifier on a regex, any comment
1664containing the current pattern delimiter will cause the regex to be
1665immediately terminated. In other words:
1666
48f821bf 1667 'm /
1668 (?i) # CASE INSENSITIVE
1669 [a-z_] # LEADING ALPHABETIC/UNDERSCORE
1670 [a-z0-9]* # FOLLOWED BY ANY NUMBER OF ALPHANUMERICS
1671 /x'
55a1c97c 1672
1673will be extracted as if it were:
1674
48f821bf 1675 'm /
1676 (?i) # CASE INSENSITIVE
1677 [a-z_] # LEADING ALPHABETIC/'
55a1c97c 1678
1679This behaviour is identical to that of the actual compiler.
1680
1681C<extract_quotelike> takes two arguments: the text to be processed and
1682a prefix to be matched at the very beginning of the text. If no prefix
1683is specified, optional whitespace is the default. If no text is given,
1684C<$_> is used.
1685
1686In a list context, an array of 11 elements is returned. The elements are:
1687
1688=over 4
1689
1690=item [0]
1691
1692the extracted quotelike substring (including trailing modifiers),
1693
1694=item [1]
1695
1696the remainder of the input text,
1697
1698=item [2]
1699
1700the prefix substring (if any),
1701
1702=item [3]
1703
1704the name of the quotelike operator (if any),
1705
1706=item [4]
1707
1708the left delimiter of the first block of the operation,
1709
1710=item [5]
1711
1712the text of the first block of the operation
1713(that is, the contents of
1714a quote, the regex of a match or substitution or the target list of a
1715translation),
1716
1717=item [6]
1718
1719the right delimiter of the first block of the operation,
1720
1721=item [7]
1722
1723the left delimiter of the second block of the operation
48f821bf 1724(that is, if it is a C<s>, C<tr>, or C<y>),
55a1c97c 1725
1726=item [8]
1727
1728the text of the second block of the operation
1729(that is, the replacement of a substitution or the translation list
1730of a translation),
1731
1732=item [9]
1733
1734the right delimiter of the second block of the operation (if any),
1735
1736=item [10]
1737
1738the trailing modifiers on the operation (if any).
1739
1740=back
1741
1742For each of the fields marked "(if any)" the default value on success is
1743an empty string.
1744On failure, all of these values (except the remaining text) are C<undef>.
1745
1746
1747In a scalar context, C<extract_quotelike> returns just the complete substring
1748that matched a quotelike operation (or C<undef> on failure). In a scalar or
1749void context, the input text has the same substring (and any specified
1750prefix) removed.
1751
1752Examples:
1753
48f821bf 1754 # Remove the first quotelike literal that appears in text
55a1c97c 1755
48f821bf 1756 $quotelike = extract_quotelike($text,'.*?');
55a1c97c 1757
48f821bf 1758 # Replace one or more leading whitespace-separated quotelike
1759 # literals in $_ with "<QLL>"
55a1c97c 1760
48f821bf 1761 do { $_ = join '<QLL>', (extract_quotelike)[2,1] } until $@;
55a1c97c 1762
1763
48f821bf 1764 # Isolate the search pattern in a quotelike operation from $text
55a1c97c 1765
48f821bf 1766 ($op,$pat) = (extract_quotelike $text)[3,5];
1767 if ($op =~ /[ms]/)
1768 {
1769 print "search pattern: $pat\n";
1770 }
1771 else
1772 {
1773 print "$op is not a pattern matching operation\n";
1774 }
55a1c97c 1775
1776
1777=head2 C<extract_quotelike> and "here documents"
1778
1779C<extract_quotelike> can successfully extract "here documents" from an input
1780string, but with an important caveat in list contexts.
1781
1782Unlike other types of quote-like literals, a here document is rarely
1783a contiguous substring. For example, a typical piece of code using
1784here document might look like this:
1785
1786 <<'EOMSG' || die;
1787 This is the message.
1788 EOMSG
48f821bf 1789 exit;
55a1c97c 1790
1791Given this as an input string in a scalar context, C<extract_quotelike>
1792would correctly return the string "<<'EOMSG'\nThis is the message.\nEOMSG",
1793leaving the string " || die;\nexit;" in the original variable. In other words,
1794the two separate pieces of the here document are successfully extracted and
1795concatenated.
1796
1797In a list context, C<extract_quotelike> would return the list
1798
1799=over 4
1800
1801=item [0]
1802
1803"<<'EOMSG'\nThis is the message.\nEOMSG\n" (i.e. the full extracted here document,
1804including fore and aft delimiters),
1805
1806=item [1]
1807
1808" || die;\nexit;" (i.e. the remainder of the input text, concatenated),
1809
1810=item [2]
1811
1812"" (i.e. the prefix substring -- trivial in this case),
1813
1814=item [3]
1815
1816"<<" (i.e. the "name" of the quotelike operator)
1817
1818=item [4]
1819
1820"'EOMSG'" (i.e. the left delimiter of the here document, including any quotes),
1821
1822=item [5]
1823
1824"This is the message.\n" (i.e. the text of the here document),
1825
1826=item [6]
1827
1828"EOMSG" (i.e. the right delimiter of the here document),
1829
1830=item [7..10]
1831
1832"" (a here document has no second left delimiter, second text, second right
1833delimiter, or trailing modifiers).
1834
1835=back
1836
1837However, the matching position of the input variable would be set to
1838"exit;" (i.e. I<after> the closing delimiter of the here document),
1839which would cause the earlier " || die;\nexit;" to be skipped in any
1840sequence of code fragment extractions.
1841
48f821bf 1842To avoid this problem, when it encounters a here document whilst
55a1c97c 1843extracting from a modifiable string, C<extract_quotelike> silently
1844rearranges the string to an equivalent piece of Perl:
1845
1846 <<'EOMSG'
1847 This is the message.
1848 EOMSG
1849 || die;
48f821bf 1850 exit;
55a1c97c 1851
1852in which the here document I<is> contiguous. It still leaves the
1853matching position after the here document, but now the rest of the line
1854on which the here document starts is not skipped.
1855
1856To prevent <extract_quotelike> from mucking about with the input in this way
1857(this is the only case where a list-context C<extract_quotelike> does so),
1858you can pass the input variable as an interpolated literal:
1859
1860 $quotelike = extract_quotelike("$var");
1861
1862
1863=head2 C<extract_codeblock>
1864
1865C<extract_codeblock> attempts to recognize and extract a balanced
1866bracket delimited substring that may contain unbalanced brackets
1867inside Perl quotes or quotelike operations. That is, C<extract_codeblock>
1868is like a combination of C<"extract_bracketed"> and
1869C<"extract_quotelike">.
1870
1871C<extract_codeblock> takes the same initial three parameters as C<extract_bracketed>:
1872a text to process, a set of delimiter brackets to look for, and a prefix to
1873match first. It also takes an optional fourth parameter, which allows the
1874outermost delimiter brackets to be specified separately (see below).
1875
1876Omitting the first argument (input text) means process C<$_> instead.
1877Omitting the second argument (delimiter brackets) indicates that only C<'{'> is to be used.
1878Omitting the third argument (prefix argument) implies optional whitespace at the start.
1879Omitting the fourth argument (outermost delimiter brackets) indicates that the
1880value of the second argument is to be used for the outermost delimiters.
1881
48f821bf 1882Once the prefix an dthe outermost opening delimiter bracket have been
55a1c97c 1883recognized, code blocks are extracted by stepping through the input text and
1884trying the following alternatives in sequence:
1885
1886=over 4
1887
1888=item 1.
1889
1890Try and match a closing delimiter bracket. If the bracket was the same
1891species as the last opening bracket, return the substring to that
1892point. If the bracket was mismatched, return an error.
1893
1894=item 2.
1895
1896Try to match a quote or quotelike operator. If found, call
1897C<extract_quotelike> to eat it. If C<extract_quotelike> fails, return
1898the error it returned. Otherwise go back to step 1.
1899
1900=item 3.
1901
1902Try to match an opening delimiter bracket. If found, call
1903C<extract_codeblock> recursively to eat the embedded block. If the
1904recursive call fails, return an error. Otherwise, go back to step 1.
1905
1906=item 4.
1907
1908Unconditionally match a bareword or any other single character, and
1909then go back to step 1.
1910
1911=back
1912
1913
1914Examples:
1915
1916 # Find a while loop in the text
1917
1918 if ($text =~ s/.*?while\s*\{/{/)
1919 {
1920 $loop = "while " . extract_codeblock($text);
1921 }
1922
1923 # Remove the first round-bracketed list (which may include
1924 # round- or curly-bracketed code blocks or quotelike operators)
1925
1926 extract_codeblock $text, "(){}", '[^(]*';
1927
1928
1929The ability to specify a different outermost delimiter bracket is useful
1930in some circumstances. For example, in the Parse::RecDescent module,
1931parser actions which are to be performed only on a successful parse
1932are specified using a C<E<lt>defer:...E<gt>> directive. For example:
1933
1934 sentence: subject verb object
1935 <defer: {$::theVerb = $item{verb}} >
1936
1937Parse::RecDescent uses C<extract_codeblock($text, '{}E<lt>E<gt>')> to extract the code
1938within the C<E<lt>defer:...E<gt>> directive, but there's a problem.
1939
1940A deferred action like this:
1941
1942 <defer: {if ($count>10) {$count--}} >
1943
1944will be incorrectly parsed as:
1945
1946 <defer: {if ($count>
1947
1948because the "less than" operator is interpreted as a closing delimiter.
1949
1950But, by extracting the directive using
1951S<C<extract_codeblock($text, '{}', undef, 'E<lt>E<gt>')>>
1952the '>' character is only treated as a delimited at the outermost
1953level of the code block, so the directive is parsed correctly.
1954
1955=head2 C<extract_multiple>
1956
1957The C<extract_multiple> subroutine takes a string to be processed and a
1958list of extractors (subroutines or regular expressions) to apply to that string.
1959
1960In an array context C<extract_multiple> returns an array of substrings
1961of the original string, as extracted by the specified extractors.
1962In a scalar context, C<extract_multiple> returns the first
1963substring successfully extracted from the original string. In both
1964scalar and void contexts the original string has the first successfully
1965extracted substring removed from it. In all contexts
1966C<extract_multiple> starts at the current C<pos> of the string, and
1967sets that C<pos> appropriately after it matches.
1968
48f821bf 1969Hence, the aim of of a call to C<extract_multiple> in a list context
55a1c97c 1970is to split the processed string into as many non-overlapping fields as
1971possible, by repeatedly applying each of the specified extractors
1972to the remainder of the string. Thus C<extract_multiple> is
1973a generalized form of Perl's C<split> subroutine.
1974
1975The subroutine takes up to four optional arguments:
1976
1977=over 4
1978
1979=item 1.
1980
1981A string to be processed (C<$_> if the string is omitted or C<undef>)
1982
1983=item 2.
1984
1985A reference to a list of subroutine references and/or qr// objects and/or
1986literal strings and/or hash references, specifying the extractors
1987to be used to split the string. If this argument is omitted (or
1988C<undef>) the list:
1989
1990 [
1991 sub { extract_variable($_[0], '') },
1992 sub { extract_quotelike($_[0],'') },
1993 sub { extract_codeblock($_[0],'{}','') },
1994 ]
1995
1996is used.
1997
1998
1999=item 3.
2000
48f821bf 2001An number specifying the maximum number of fields to return. If this
55a1c97c 2002argument is omitted (or C<undef>), split continues as long as possible.
2003
2004If the third argument is I<N>, then extraction continues until I<N> fields
2005have been successfully extracted, or until the string has been completely
2006processed.
2007
2008Note that in scalar and void contexts the value of this argument is
2009automatically reset to 1 (under C<-w>, a warning is issued if the argument
2010has to be reset).
2011
2012=item 4.
2013
2014A value indicating whether unmatched substrings (see below) within the
2015text should be skipped or returned as fields. If the value is true,
2016such substrings are skipped. Otherwise, they are returned.
2017
2018=back
2019
2020The extraction process works by applying each extractor in
a7602084 2021sequence to the text string.
2022
2023If the extractor is a subroutine it is called in a list context and is
2024expected to return a list of a single element, namely the extracted
2025text. It may optionally also return two further arguments: a string
2026representing the text left after extraction (like $' for a pattern
2027match), and a string representing any prefix skipped before the
2028extraction (like $` in a pattern match). Note that this is designed
2029to facilitate the use of other Text::Balanced subroutines with
2030C<extract_multiple>. Note too that the value returned by an extractor
2031subroutine need not bear any relationship to the corresponding substring
2032of the original text (see examples below).
55a1c97c 2033
2034If the extractor is a precompiled regular expression or a string,
2035it is matched against the text in a scalar context with a leading
2036'\G' and the gc modifiers enabled. The extracted value is either
2037$1 if that variable is defined after the match, or else the
2038complete match (i.e. $&).
2039
2040If the extractor is a hash reference, it must contain exactly one element.
2041The value of that element is one of the
2042above extractor types (subroutine reference, regular expression, or string).
2043The key of that element is the name of a class into which the successful
2044return value of the extractor will be blessed.
2045
2046If an extractor returns a defined value, that value is immediately
2047treated as the next extracted field and pushed onto the list of fields.
2048If the extractor was specified in a hash reference, the field is also
2049blessed into the appropriate class,
2050
2051If the extractor fails to match (in the case of a regex extractor), or returns an empty list or an undefined value (in the case of a subroutine extractor), it is
2052assumed to have failed to extract.
2053If none of the extractor subroutines succeeds, then one
2054character is extracted from the start of the text and the extraction
2055subroutines reapplied. Characters which are thus removed are accumulated and
2056eventually become the next field (unless the fourth argument is true, in which
aa10195b 2057case they are discarded).
55a1c97c 2058
2059For example, the following extracts substrings that are valid Perl variables:
2060
2061 @fields = extract_multiple($text,
2062 [ sub { extract_variable($_[0]) } ],
2063 undef, 1);
2064
2065This example separates a text into fields which are quote delimited,
2066curly bracketed, and anything else. The delimited and bracketed
2067parts are also blessed to identify them (the "anything else" is unblessed):
2068
2069 @fields = extract_multiple($text,
2070 [
2071 { Delim => sub { extract_delimited($_[0],q{'"}) } },
2072 { Brack => sub { extract_bracketed($_[0],'{}') } },
2073 ]);
2074
2075This call extracts the next single substring that is a valid Perl quotelike
2076operator (and removes it from $text):
2077
2078 $quotelike = extract_multiple($text,
2079 [
2080 sub { extract_quotelike($_[0]) },
2081 ], undef, 1);
2082
2083Finally, here is yet another way to do comma-separated value parsing:
2084
2085 @fields = extract_multiple($csv_text,
2086 [
2087 sub { extract_delimited($_[0],q{'"}) },
2088 qr/([^,]+)(.*)/,
2089 ],
2090 undef,1);
2091
2092The list in the second argument means:
2093I<"Try and extract a ' or " delimited string, otherwise extract anything up to a comma...">.
2094The undef third argument means:
2095I<"...as many times as possible...">,
2096and the true value in the fourth argument means
2097I<"...discarding anything else that appears (i.e. the commas)">.
2098
2099If you wanted the commas preserved as separate fields (i.e. like split
2100does if your split pattern has capturing parentheses), you would
2101just make the last parameter undefined (or remove it).
2102
2103
2104=head2 C<gen_delimited_pat>
2105
2106The C<gen_delimited_pat> subroutine takes a single (string) argument and
2107 > builds a Friedl-style optimized regex that matches a string delimited
2108by any one of the characters in the single argument. For example:
2109
2110 gen_delimited_pat(q{'"})
2111
2112returns the regex:
2113
2114 (?:\"(?:\\\"|(?!\").)*\"|\'(?:\\\'|(?!\').)*\')
2115
2116Note that the specified delimiters are automatically quotemeta'd.
2117
2118A typical use of C<gen_delimited_pat> would be to build special purpose tags
2119for C<extract_tagged>. For example, to properly ignore "empty" XML elements
2120(which might contain quoted strings):
2121
2122 my $empty_tag = '<(' . gen_delimited_pat(q{'"}) . '|.)+/>';
2123
2124 extract_tagged($text, undef, undef, undef, {ignore => [$empty_tag]} );
2125
2126
2127C<gen_delimited_pat> may also be called with an optional second argument,
2128which specifies the "escape" character(s) to be used for each delimiter.
2129For example to match a Pascal-style string (where ' is the delimiter
2130and '' is a literal ' within the string):
2131
2132 gen_delimited_pat(q{'},q{'});
2133
2134Different escape characters can be specified for different delimiters.
2135For example, to specify that '/' is the escape for single quotes
2136and '%' is the escape for double quotes:
2137
2138 gen_delimited_pat(q{'"},q{/%});
2139
2140If more delimiters than escape chars are specified, the last escape char
2141is used for the remaining delimiters.
2142If no escape char is specified for a given specified delimiter, '\' is used.
2143
49c03c89 2144=head2 C<delimited_pat>
2145
2146Note that C<gen_delimited_pat> was previously called C<delimited_pat>.
2147That name may still be used, but is now deprecated.
55a1c97c 2148
2149
2150=head1 DIAGNOSTICS
2151
2152In a list context, all the functions return C<(undef,$original_text)>
2153on failure. In a scalar context, failure is indicated by returning C<undef>
2154(in this case the input text is not modified in any way).
2155
2156In addition, on failure in I<any> context, the C<$@> variable is set.
2157Accessing C<$@-E<gt>{error}> returns one of the error diagnostics listed
2158below.
2159Accessing C<$@-E<gt>{pos}> returns the offset into the original string at
2160which the error was detected (although not necessarily where it occurred!)
2161Printing C<$@> directly produces the error message, with the offset appended.
2162On success, the C<$@> variable is guaranteed to be C<undef>.
2163
2164The available diagnostics are:
2165
2166=over 4
2167
2168=item C<Did not find a suitable bracket: "%s">
2169
2170The delimiter provided to C<extract_bracketed> was not one of
2171C<'()[]E<lt>E<gt>{}'>.
2172
2173=item C<Did not find prefix: /%s/>
2174
2175A non-optional prefix was specified but wasn't found at the start of the text.
2176
2177=item C<Did not find opening bracket after prefix: "%s">
2178
2179C<extract_bracketed> or C<extract_codeblock> was expecting a
2180particular kind of bracket at the start of the text, and didn't find it.
2181
2182=item C<No quotelike operator found after prefix: "%s">
2183
2184C<extract_quotelike> didn't find one of the quotelike operators C<q>,
2185C<qq>, C<qw>, C<qx>, C<s>, C<tr> or C<y> at the start of the substring
2186it was extracting.
2187
2188=item C<Unmatched closing bracket: "%c">
2189
2190C<extract_bracketed>, C<extract_quotelike> or C<extract_codeblock> encountered
2191a closing bracket where none was expected.
2192
2193=item C<Unmatched opening bracket(s): "%s">
2194
2195C<extract_bracketed>, C<extract_quotelike> or C<extract_codeblock> ran
2196out of characters in the text before closing one or more levels of nested
2197brackets.
2198
2199=item C<Unmatched embedded quote (%s)>
2200
2201C<extract_bracketed> attempted to match an embedded quoted substring, but
2202failed to find a closing quote to match it.
2203
2204=item C<Did not find closing delimiter to match '%s'>
2205
2206C<extract_quotelike> was unable to find a closing delimiter to match the
2207one that opened the quote-like operation.
2208
2209=item C<Mismatched closing bracket: expected "%c" but found "%s">
2210
2211C<extract_bracketed>, C<extract_quotelike> or C<extract_codeblock> found
2212a valid bracket delimiter, but it was the wrong species. This usually
2213indicates a nesting error, but may indicate incorrect quoting or escaping.
2214
2215=item C<No block delimiter found after quotelike "%s">
2216
2217C<extract_quotelike> or C<extract_codeblock> found one of the
2218quotelike operators C<q>, C<qq>, C<qw>, C<qx>, C<s>, C<tr> or C<y>
2219without a suitable block after it.
2220
2221=item C<Did not find leading dereferencer>
2222
2223C<extract_variable> was expecting one of '$', '@', or '%' at the start of
2224a variable, but didn't find any of them.
2225
2226=item C<Bad identifier after dereferencer>
2227
2228C<extract_variable> found a '$', '@', or '%' indicating a variable, but that
2229character was not followed by a legal Perl identifier.
2230
2231=item C<Did not find expected opening bracket at %s>
2232
2233C<extract_codeblock> failed to find any of the outermost opening brackets
2234that were specified.
2235
2236=item C<Improperly nested codeblock at %s>
2237
2238A nested code block was found that started with a delimiter that was specified
2239as being only to be used as an outermost bracket.
2240
2241=item C<Missing second block for quotelike "%s">
2242
2243C<extract_codeblock> or C<extract_quotelike> found one of the
2244quotelike operators C<s>, C<tr> or C<y> followed by only one block.
2245
2246=item C<No match found for opening bracket>
2247
2248C<extract_codeblock> failed to find a closing bracket to match the outermost
2249opening bracket.
2250
2251=item C<Did not find opening tag: /%s/>
2252
2253C<extract_tagged> did not find a suitable opening tag (after any specified
2254prefix was removed).
2255
2256=item C<Unable to construct closing tag to match: /%s/>
2257
2258C<extract_tagged> matched the specified opening tag and tried to
2259modify the matched text to produce a matching closing tag (because
2260none was specified). It failed to generate the closing tag, almost
2261certainly because the opening tag did not start with a
2262bracket of some kind.
2263
2264=item C<Found invalid nested tag: %s>
2265
2266C<extract_tagged> found a nested tag that appeared in the "reject" list
2267(and the failure mode was not "MAX" or "PARA").
2268
2269=item C<Found unbalanced nested tag: %s>
2270
2271C<extract_tagged> found a nested opening tag that was not matched by a
2272corresponding nested closing tag (and the failure mode was not "MAX" or "PARA").
2273
2274=item C<Did not find closing tag>
2275
2276C<extract_tagged> reached the end of the text without finding a closing tag
2277to match the original opening tag (and the failure mode was not
2278"MAX" or "PARA").
2279
2280
2281
2282
2283=back
2284
2285
2286=head1 AUTHOR
2287
2288Damian Conway (damian@conway.org)
2289
2290
2291=head1 BUGS AND IRRITATIONS
2292
2293There are undoubtedly serious bugs lurking somewhere in this code, if
2294only because parts of it give the impression of understanding a great deal
2295more about Perl than they really do.
2296
2297Bug reports and other feedback are most welcome.
2298
2299
2300=head1 COPYRIGHT
2301
2302 Copyright (c) 1997-2001, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved.
2303 This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed
2304 and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself.