Add sanity checks for far, far distant dates.
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / pod / perlre.pod
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a0d0e21e 1=head1 NAME
d74e8afc 2X<regular expression> X<regex> X<regexp>
a0d0e21e 3
4perlre - Perl regular expressions
5
6=head1 DESCRIPTION
7
5d458dd8 8This page describes the syntax of regular expressions in Perl.
91e0c79e 9
cc46d5f2 10If you haven't used regular expressions before, a quick-start
91e0c79e 11introduction is available in L<perlrequick>, and a longer tutorial
12introduction is available in L<perlretut>.
13
14For reference on how regular expressions are used in matching
15operations, plus various examples of the same, see discussions of
16C<m//>, C<s///>, C<qr//> and C<??> in L<perlop/"Regexp Quote-Like
17Operators">.
cb1a09d0 18
0d017f4d 19
20=head2 Modifiers
21
19799a22 22Matching operations can have various modifiers. Modifiers
5a964f20 23that relate to the interpretation of the regular expression inside
19799a22 24are listed below. Modifiers that alter the way a regular expression
5d458dd8 25is used by Perl are detailed in L<perlop/"Regexp Quote-Like Operators"> and
1e66bd83 26L<perlop/"Gory details of parsing quoted constructs">.
a0d0e21e 27
55497cff 28=over 4
29
54310121 30=item m
d74e8afc 31X</m> X<regex, multiline> X<regexp, multiline> X<regular expression, multiline>
55497cff 32
33Treat string as multiple lines. That is, change "^" and "$" from matching
14218588 34the start or end of the string to matching the start or end of any
7f761169 35line anywhere within the string.
55497cff 36
54310121 37=item s
d74e8afc 38X</s> X<regex, single-line> X<regexp, single-line>
39X<regular expression, single-line>
55497cff 40
41Treat string as single line. That is, change "." to match any character
19799a22 42whatsoever, even a newline, which normally it would not match.
55497cff 43
f02c194e 44Used together, as /ms, they let the "." match any character whatsoever,
fb55449c 45while still allowing "^" and "$" to match, respectively, just after
19799a22 46and just before newlines within the string.
7b8d334a 47
87e95b7f 48=item i
49X</i> X<regex, case-insensitive> X<regexp, case-insensitive>
50X<regular expression, case-insensitive>
51
52Do case-insensitive pattern matching.
53
54If C<use locale> is in effect, the case map is taken from the current
55locale. See L<perllocale>.
56
54310121 57=item x
d74e8afc 58X</x>
55497cff 59
60Extend your pattern's legibility by permitting whitespace and comments.
61
87e95b7f 62=item p
63X</p> X<regex, preserve> X<regexp, preserve>
64
632a1772 65Preserve the string matched such that ${^PREMATCH}, ${^MATCH}, and
87e95b7f 66${^POSTMATCH} are available for use after matching.
67
e2e6bec7 68=item g and c
69X</g> X</c>
70
71Global matching, and keep the Current position after failed matching.
72Unlike i, m, s and x, these two flags affect the way the regex is used
73rather than the regex itself. See
74L<perlretut/"Using regular expressions in Perl"> for further explanation
75of the g and c modifiers.
76
55497cff 77=back
a0d0e21e 78
79These are usually written as "the C</x> modifier", even though the delimiter
14218588 80in question might not really be a slash. Any of these
a0d0e21e 81modifiers may also be embedded within the regular expression itself using
14218588 82the C<(?...)> construct. See below.
a0d0e21e 83
4633a7c4 84The C</x> modifier itself needs a little more explanation. It tells
55497cff 85the regular expression parser to ignore whitespace that is neither
86backslashed nor within a character class. You can use this to break up
4633a7c4 87your regular expression into (slightly) more readable parts. The C<#>
54310121 88character is also treated as a metacharacter introducing a comment,
55497cff 89just as in ordinary Perl code. This also means that if you want real
14218588 90whitespace or C<#> characters in the pattern (outside a character
f9a3ff1a 91class, where they are unaffected by C</x>), then you'll either have to
92escape them (using backslashes or C<\Q...\E>) or encode them using octal
8933a740 93or hex escapes. Taken together, these features go a long way towards
94making Perl's regular expressions more readable. Note that you have to
95be careful not to include the pattern delimiter in the comment--perl has
96no way of knowing you did not intend to close the pattern early. See
97the C-comment deletion code in L<perlop>. Also note that anything inside
1031e5db 98a C<\Q...\E> stays unaffected by C</x>.
d74e8afc 99X</x>
a0d0e21e 100
101=head2 Regular Expressions
102
04838cea 103=head3 Metacharacters
104
384f06ae 105The patterns used in Perl pattern matching evolved from those supplied in
14218588 106the Version 8 regex routines. (The routines are derived
19799a22 107(distantly) from Henry Spencer's freely redistributable reimplementation
108of the V8 routines.) See L<Version 8 Regular Expressions> for
109details.
a0d0e21e 110
111In particular the following metacharacters have their standard I<egrep>-ish
112meanings:
d74e8afc 113X<metacharacter>
114X<\> X<^> X<.> X<$> X<|> X<(> X<()> X<[> X<[]>
115
a0d0e21e 116
54310121 117 \ Quote the next metacharacter
a0d0e21e 118 ^ Match the beginning of the line
119 . Match any character (except newline)
c07a80fd 120 $ Match the end of the line (or before newline at the end)
a0d0e21e 121 | Alternation
122 () Grouping
123 [] Character class
124
14218588 125By default, the "^" character is guaranteed to match only the
126beginning of the string, the "$" character only the end (or before the
127newline at the end), and Perl does certain optimizations with the
a0d0e21e 128assumption that the string contains only one line. Embedded newlines
129will not be matched by "^" or "$". You may, however, wish to treat a
4a6725af 130string as a multi-line buffer, such that the "^" will match after any
0d520e8e 131newline within the string (except if the newline is the last character in
132the string), and "$" will match before any newline. At the
a0d0e21e 133cost of a little more overhead, you can do this by using the /m modifier
134on the pattern match operator. (Older programs did this by setting C<$*>,
f02c194e 135but this practice has been removed in perl 5.9.)
d74e8afc 136X<^> X<$> X</m>
a0d0e21e 137
14218588 138To simplify multi-line substitutions, the "." character never matches a
55497cff 139newline unless you use the C</s> modifier, which in effect tells Perl to pretend
f02c194e 140the string is a single line--even if it isn't.
d74e8afc 141X<.> X</s>
a0d0e21e 142
04838cea 143=head3 Quantifiers
144
a0d0e21e 145The following standard quantifiers are recognized:
d74e8afc 146X<metacharacter> X<quantifier> X<*> X<+> X<?> X<{n}> X<{n,}> X<{n,m}>
a0d0e21e 147
148 * Match 0 or more times
149 + Match 1 or more times
150 ? Match 1 or 0 times
151 {n} Match exactly n times
152 {n,} Match at least n times
153 {n,m} Match at least n but not more than m times
154
155(If a curly bracket occurs in any other context, it is treated
b975c076 156as a regular character. In particular, the lower bound
527e91da 157is not optional.) The "*" quantifier is equivalent to C<{0,}>, the "+"
158quantifier to C<{1,}>, and the "?" quantifier to C<{0,1}>. n and m are limited
9c79236d 159to integral values less than a preset limit defined when perl is built.
160This is usually 32766 on the most common platforms. The actual limit can
161be seen in the error message generated by code such as this:
162
820475bd 163 $_ **= $_ , / {$_} / for 2 .. 42;
a0d0e21e 164
54310121 165By default, a quantified subpattern is "greedy", that is, it will match as
166many times as possible (given a particular starting location) while still
167allowing the rest of the pattern to match. If you want it to match the
168minimum number of times possible, follow the quantifier with a "?". Note
169that the meanings don't change, just the "greediness":
0d017f4d 170X<metacharacter> X<greedy> X<greediness>
d74e8afc 171X<?> X<*?> X<+?> X<??> X<{n}?> X<{n,}?> X<{n,m}?>
a0d0e21e 172
0d017f4d 173 *? Match 0 or more times, not greedily
174 +? Match 1 or more times, not greedily
175 ?? Match 0 or 1 time, not greedily
176 {n}? Match exactly n times, not greedily
177 {n,}? Match at least n times, not greedily
178 {n,m}? Match at least n but not more than m times, not greedily
a0d0e21e 179
b9b4dddf 180By default, when a quantified subpattern does not allow the rest of the
181overall pattern to match, Perl will backtrack. However, this behaviour is
0d017f4d 182sometimes undesirable. Thus Perl provides the "possessive" quantifier form
b9b4dddf 183as well.
184
0d017f4d 185 *+ Match 0 or more times and give nothing back
186 ++ Match 1 or more times and give nothing back
187 ?+ Match 0 or 1 time and give nothing back
b9b4dddf 188 {n}+ Match exactly n times and give nothing back (redundant)
04838cea 189 {n,}+ Match at least n times and give nothing back
190 {n,m}+ Match at least n but not more than m times and give nothing back
b9b4dddf 191
192For instance,
193
194 'aaaa' =~ /a++a/
195
196will never match, as the C<a++> will gobble up all the C<a>'s in the
197string and won't leave any for the remaining part of the pattern. This
198feature can be extremely useful to give perl hints about where it
199shouldn't backtrack. For instance, the typical "match a double-quoted
200string" problem can be most efficiently performed when written as:
201
202 /"(?:[^"\\]++|\\.)*+"/
203
0d017f4d 204as we know that if the final quote does not match, backtracking will not
b9b4dddf 205help. See the independent subexpression C<< (?>...) >> for more details;
206possessive quantifiers are just syntactic sugar for that construct. For
207instance the above example could also be written as follows:
208
209 /"(?>(?:(?>[^"\\]+)|\\.)*)"/
210
04838cea 211=head3 Escape sequences
212
5f05dabc 213Because patterns are processed as double quoted strings, the following
a0d0e21e 214also work:
0d017f4d 215X<\t> X<\n> X<\r> X<\f> X<\e> X<\a> X<\l> X<\u> X<\L> X<\U> X<\E> X<\Q>
d74e8afc 216X<\0> X<\c> X<\N> X<\x>
a0d0e21e 217
0f36ee90 218 \t tab (HT, TAB)
219 \n newline (LF, NL)
220 \r return (CR)
221 \f form feed (FF)
222 \a alarm (bell) (BEL)
223 \e escape (think troff) (ESC)
0d017f4d 224 \033 octal char (example: ESC)
225 \x1B hex char (example: ESC)
196ac2fc 226 \x{263a} long hex char (example: Unicode SMILEY)
0d017f4d 227 \cK control char (example: VT)
196ac2fc 228 \N{name} named Unicode character
cb1a09d0 229 \l lowercase next char (think vi)
230 \u uppercase next char (think vi)
231 \L lowercase till \E (think vi)
232 \U uppercase till \E (think vi)
233 \E end case modification (think vi)
5a964f20 234 \Q quote (disable) pattern metacharacters till \E
a0d0e21e 235
a034a98d 236If C<use locale> is in effect, the case map used by C<\l>, C<\L>, C<\u>
423cee85 237and C<\U> is taken from the current locale. See L<perllocale>. For
4a2d328f 238documentation of C<\N{name}>, see L<charnames>.
a034a98d 239
1d2dff63 240You cannot include a literal C<$> or C<@> within a C<\Q> sequence.
241An unescaped C<$> or C<@> interpolates the corresponding variable,
242while escaping will cause the literal string C<\$> to be matched.
243You'll need to write something like C<m/\Quser\E\@\Qhost/>.
244
e1d1eefb 245=head3 Character Classes and other Special Escapes
04838cea 246
a0d0e21e 247In addition, Perl defines the following:
d74e8afc 248X<\w> X<\W> X<\s> X<\S> X<\d> X<\D> X<\X> X<\p> X<\P> X<\C>
f7819f85 249X<\g> X<\k> X<\N> X<\K> X<\v> X<\V> X<\h> X<\H>
0d017f4d 250X<word> X<whitespace> X<character class> X<backreference>
a0d0e21e 251
81714fb9 252 \w Match a "word" character (alphanumeric plus "_")
253 \W Match a non-"word" character
254 \s Match a whitespace character
255 \S Match a non-whitespace character
256 \d Match a digit character
257 \D Match a non-digit character
258 \pP Match P, named property. Use \p{Prop} for longer names.
259 \PP Match non-P
0111a78f 260 \X Match Unicode "eXtended grapheme cluster"
81714fb9 261 \C Match a single C char (octet) even under Unicode.
262 NOTE: breaks up characters into their UTF-8 bytes,
263 so you may end up with malformed pieces of UTF-8.
264 Unsupported in lookbehind.
5d458dd8 265 \1 Backreference to a specific group.
c74340f9 266 '1' may actually be any positive integer.
2bf803e2 267 \g1 Backreference to a specific or previous group,
268 \g{-1} number may be negative indicating a previous buffer and may
269 optionally be wrapped in curly brackets for safer parsing.
1f1031fe 270 \g{name} Named backreference
81714fb9 271 \k<name> Named backreference
ee9b8eae 272 \K Keep the stuff left of the \K, don't include it in $&
c741660a 273 \N Any character but \n
e1d1eefb 274 \v Vertical whitespace
275 \V Not vertical whitespace
276 \h Horizontal whitespace
277 \H Not horizontal whitespace
2ddf2931 278 \R Linebreak
a0d0e21e 279
08ce8fc6 280A C<\w> matches a single alphanumeric character (an alphabetic
281character, or a decimal digit) or C<_>, not a whole word. Use C<\w+>
282to match a string of Perl-identifier characters (which isn't the same
283as matching an English word). If C<use locale> is in effect, the list
284of alphabetic characters generated by C<\w> is taken from the current
285locale. See L<perllocale>. You may use C<\w>, C<\W>, C<\s>, C<\S>,
0d017f4d 286C<\d>, and C<\D> within character classes, but they aren't usable
287as either end of a range. If any of them precedes or follows a "-",
288the "-" is understood literally. If Unicode is in effect, C<\s> matches
c62285ac 289also "\x{85}", "\x{2028}", and "\x{2029}". See L<perlunicode> for more
0d017f4d 290details about C<\pP>, C<\PP>, C<\X> and the possibility of defining
291your own C<\p> and C<\P> properties, and L<perluniintro> about Unicode
292in general.
d74e8afc 293X<\w> X<\W> X<word>
a0d0e21e 294
e1d1eefb 295C<\R> will atomically match a linebreak, including the network line-ending
e2cb52ee 296"\x0D\x0A". Specifically, X<\R> is exactly equivalent to
e1d1eefb 297
298 (?>\x0D\x0A?|[\x0A-\x0C\x85\x{2028}\x{2029}])
299
300B<Note:> C<\R> has no special meaning inside of a character class;
301use C<\v> instead (vertical whitespace).
302X<\R>
303
b8c5462f 304The POSIX character class syntax
d74e8afc 305X<character class>
b8c5462f 306
820475bd 307 [:class:]
b8c5462f 308
0d017f4d 309is also available. Note that the C<[> and C<]> brackets are I<literal>;
5496314a 310they must always be used within a character class expression.
311
312 # this is correct:
313 $string =~ /[[:alpha:]]/;
314
315 # this is not, and will generate a warning:
316 $string =~ /[:alpha:]/;
317
6fa80ea2 318The following table shows the mapping of POSIX character class
319names, common escapes, literal escape sequences and their equivalent
320Unicode style property names.
321X<character class> X<\p> X<\p{}>
d74e8afc 322X<alpha> X<alnum> X<ascii> X<blank> X<cntrl> X<digit> X<graph>
323X<lower> X<print> X<punct> X<space> X<upper> X<word> X<xdigit>
b8c5462f 324
6fa80ea2 325B<Note:> up to Perl 5.10 the property names used were shared with
326standard Unicode properties, this was changed in Perl 5.11, see
327L<perl5110delta> for details.
328
329 POSIX Esc Class Property Note
330 --------------------------------------------------------
331 alnum [0-9A-Za-z] IsPosixAlnum
332 alpha [A-Za-z] IsPosixAlpha
333 ascii [\000-\177] IsASCII
334 blank [\011 ] IsPosixBlank [1]
335 cntrl [\0-\37\177] IsPosixCntrl
336 digit \d [0-9] IsPosixDigit
337 graph [!-~] IsPosixGraph
338 lower [a-z] IsPosixLower
339 print [ -~] IsPosixPrint
340 punct [!-/:-@[-`{-~] IsPosixPunct
341 space [\11-\15 ] IsPosixSpace [2]
342 \s [\11\12\14\15 ] IsPerlSpace [2]
343 upper [A-Z] IsPosixUpper
344 word \w [0-9A-Z_a-z] IsPerlWord [3]
345 xdigit [0-9A-Fa-f] IsXDigit
b8c5462f 346
07698885 347=over
348
349=item [1]
350
b432a672 351A GNU extension equivalent to C<[ \t]>, "all horizontal whitespace".
07698885 352
353=item [2]
354
6fa80ea2 355Note that C<\s> and C<[[:space:]]> are B<not> equivalent as C<[[:space:]]>
356includes also the (very rare) "vertical tabulator", "\cK" or chr(11) in
357ASCII.
07698885 358
359=item [3]
360
08ce8fc6 361A Perl extension, see above.
07698885 362
363=back
aaa51d5e 364
26b44a0a 365For example use C<[:upper:]> to match all the uppercase characters.
aaa51d5e 366Note that the C<[]> are part of the C<[::]> construct, not part of the
367whole character class. For example:
b8c5462f 368
820475bd 369 [01[:alpha:]%]
b8c5462f 370
0d017f4d 371matches zero, one, any alphabetic character, and the percent sign.
b8c5462f 372
345e2394 373=over 4
374
fdf0a293 375=item C<$>
376
377Currency symbol
378
379=item C<+> C<< < >> C<=> C<< > >> C<|> C<~>
380
381Mathematical symbols
382
383=item C<^> C<`>
384
385Modifier symbols (accents)
386
fdf0a293 387
388=back
389
353c6505 390The other named classes are:
b8c5462f 391
392=over 4
393
394=item cntrl
d74e8afc 395X<cntrl>
b8c5462f 396
820475bd 397Any control character. Usually characters that don't produce output as
398such but instead control the terminal somehow: for example newline and
399backspace are control characters. All characters with ord() less than
0d017f4d 40032 are usually classified as control characters (assuming ASCII,
7be5a6cf 401the ISO Latin character sets, and Unicode), as is the character with
402the ord() value of 127 (C<DEL>).
b8c5462f 403
404=item graph
d74e8afc 405X<graph>
b8c5462f 406
f1cbbd6e 407Any alphanumeric or punctuation (special) character.
b8c5462f 408
409=item print
d74e8afc 410X<print>
b8c5462f 411
f79b3095 412Any alphanumeric or punctuation (special) character or the space character.
b8c5462f 413
414=item punct
d74e8afc 415X<punct>
b8c5462f 416
f1cbbd6e 417Any punctuation (special) character.
b8c5462f 418
419=item xdigit
d74e8afc 420X<xdigit>
b8c5462f 421
593df60c 422Any hexadecimal digit. Though this may feel silly ([0-9A-Fa-f] would
820475bd 423work just fine) it is included for completeness.
b8c5462f 424
b8c5462f 425=back
426
427You can negate the [::] character classes by prefixing the class name
428with a '^'. This is a Perl extension. For example:
d74e8afc 429X<character class, negation>
b8c5462f 430
5496314a 431 POSIX traditional Unicode
93733859 432
6fa80ea2 433 [[:^digit:]] \D \P{IsPosixDigit}
434 [[:^space:]] \S \P{IsPosixSpace}
435 [[:^word:]] \W \P{IsPerlWord}
b8c5462f 436
54c18d04 437Perl respects the POSIX standard in that POSIX character classes are
438only supported within a character class. The POSIX character classes
439[.cc.] and [=cc=] are recognized but B<not> supported and trying to
440use them will cause an error.
b8c5462f 441
04838cea 442=head3 Assertions
443
a0d0e21e 444Perl defines the following zero-width assertions:
d74e8afc 445X<zero-width assertion> X<assertion> X<regex, zero-width assertion>
446X<regexp, zero-width assertion>
447X<regular expression, zero-width assertion>
448X<\b> X<\B> X<\A> X<\Z> X<\z> X<\G>
a0d0e21e 449
450 \b Match a word boundary
0d017f4d 451 \B Match except at a word boundary
b85d18e9 452 \A Match only at beginning of string
453 \Z Match only at end of string, or before newline at the end
454 \z Match only at end of string
9da458fc 455 \G Match only at pos() (e.g. at the end-of-match position
456 of prior m//g)
a0d0e21e 457
14218588 458A word boundary (C<\b>) is a spot between two characters
19799a22 459that has a C<\w> on one side of it and a C<\W> on the other side
460of it (in either order), counting the imaginary characters off the
461beginning and end of the string as matching a C<\W>. (Within
462character classes C<\b> represents backspace rather than a word
463boundary, just as it normally does in any double-quoted string.)
464The C<\A> and C<\Z> are just like "^" and "$", except that they
465won't match multiple times when the C</m> modifier is used, while
466"^" and "$" will match at every internal line boundary. To match
467the actual end of the string and not ignore an optional trailing
468newline, use C<\z>.
d74e8afc 469X<\b> X<\A> X<\Z> X<\z> X</m>
19799a22 470
471The C<\G> assertion can be used to chain global matches (using
472C<m//g>), as described in L<perlop/"Regexp Quote-Like Operators">.
473It is also useful when writing C<lex>-like scanners, when you have
474several patterns that you want to match against consequent substrings
475of your string, see the previous reference. The actual location
476where C<\G> will match can also be influenced by using C<pos()> as
58e23c8d 477an lvalue: see L<perlfunc/pos>. Note that the rule for zero-length
478matches is modified somewhat, in that contents to the left of C<\G> is
479not counted when determining the length of the match. Thus the following
480will not match forever:
d74e8afc 481X<\G>
c47ff5f1 482
58e23c8d 483 $str = 'ABC';
484 pos($str) = 1;
485 while (/.\G/g) {
486 print $&;
487 }
488
489It will print 'A' and then terminate, as it considers the match to
490be zero-width, and thus will not match at the same position twice in a
491row.
492
493It is worth noting that C<\G> improperly used can result in an infinite
494loop. Take care when using patterns that include C<\G> in an alternation.
495
04838cea 496=head3 Capture buffers
497
0d017f4d 498The bracketing construct C<( ... )> creates capture buffers. To refer
499to the current contents of a buffer later on, within the same pattern,
500use \1 for the first, \2 for the second, and so on.
501Outside the match use "$" instead of "\". (The
81714fb9 502\<digit> notation works in certain circumstances outside
14218588 503the match. See the warning below about \1 vs $1 for details.)
504Referring back to another part of the match is called a
505I<backreference>.
d74e8afc 506X<regex, capture buffer> X<regexp, capture buffer>
507X<regular expression, capture buffer> X<backreference>
14218588 508
509There is no limit to the number of captured substrings that you may
510use. However Perl also uses \10, \11, etc. as aliases for \010,
fb55449c 511\011, etc. (Recall that 0 means octal, so \011 is the character at
512number 9 in your coded character set; which would be the 10th character,
81714fb9 513a horizontal tab under ASCII.) Perl resolves this
514ambiguity by interpreting \10 as a backreference only if at least 10
515left parentheses have opened before it. Likewise \11 is a
516backreference only if at least 11 left parentheses have opened
517before it. And so on. \1 through \9 are always interpreted as
5624f11d 518backreferences.
40863337 519If the bracketing group did not match, the associated backreference won't
520match either. (This can happen if the bracketing group is optional, or
521in a different branch of an alternation.)
522
1f1031fe 523X<\g{1}> X<\g{-1}> X<\g{name}> X<relative backreference> X<named backreference>
2bf803e2 524In order to provide a safer and easier way to construct patterns using
99d59c4d 525backreferences, Perl provides the C<\g{N}> notation (starting with perl
5265.10.0). The curly brackets are optional, however omitting them is less
527safe as the meaning of the pattern can be changed by text (such as digits)
528following it. When N is a positive integer the C<\g{N}> notation is
529exactly equivalent to using normal backreferences. When N is a negative
530integer then it is a relative backreference referring to the previous N'th
531capturing group. When the bracket form is used and N is not an integer, it
532is treated as a reference to a named buffer.
2bf803e2 533
534Thus C<\g{-1}> refers to the last buffer, C<\g{-2}> refers to the
535buffer before that. For example:
5624f11d 536
537 /
538 (Y) # buffer 1
539 ( # buffer 2
540 (X) # buffer 3
2bf803e2 541 \g{-1} # backref to buffer 3
542 \g{-3} # backref to buffer 1
5624f11d 543 )
544 /x
545
2bf803e2 546and would match the same as C</(Y) ( (X) \3 \1 )/x>.
14218588 547
99d59c4d 548Additionally, as of Perl 5.10.0 you may use named capture buffers and named
1f1031fe 549backreferences. The notation is C<< (?<name>...) >> to declare and C<< \k<name> >>
0d017f4d 550to reference. You may also use apostrophes instead of angle brackets to delimit the
551name; and you may use the bracketed C<< \g{name} >> backreference syntax.
552It's possible to refer to a named capture buffer by absolute and relative number as well.
553Outside the pattern, a named capture buffer is available via the C<%+> hash.
554When different buffers within the same pattern have the same name, C<$+{name}>
555and C<< \k<name> >> refer to the leftmost defined group. (Thus it's possible
556to do things with named capture buffers that would otherwise require C<(??{})>
557code to accomplish.)
558X<named capture buffer> X<regular expression, named capture buffer>
64c5a566 559X<%+> X<$+{name}> X<< \k<name> >>
81714fb9 560
14218588 561Examples:
a0d0e21e 562
563 s/^([^ ]*) *([^ ]*)/$2 $1/; # swap first two words
564
81714fb9 565 /(.)\1/ # find first doubled char
566 and print "'$1' is the first doubled character\n";
567
568 /(?<char>.)\k<char>/ # ... a different way
569 and print "'$+{char}' is the first doubled character\n";
570
0d017f4d 571 /(?'char'.)\1/ # ... mix and match
81714fb9 572 and print "'$1' is the first doubled character\n";
c47ff5f1 573
14218588 574 if (/Time: (..):(..):(..)/) { # parse out values
a0d0e21e 575 $hours = $1;
576 $minutes = $2;
577 $seconds = $3;
578 }
c47ff5f1 579
14218588 580Several special variables also refer back to portions of the previous
581match. C<$+> returns whatever the last bracket match matched.
582C<$&> returns the entire matched string. (At one point C<$0> did
583also, but now it returns the name of the program.) C<$`> returns
77ea4f6d 584everything before the matched string. C<$'> returns everything
585after the matched string. And C<$^N> contains whatever was matched by
586the most-recently closed group (submatch). C<$^N> can be used in
587extended patterns (see below), for example to assign a submatch to a
81714fb9 588variable.
d74e8afc 589X<$+> X<$^N> X<$&> X<$`> X<$'>
14218588 590
665e98b9 591The numbered match variables ($1, $2, $3, etc.) and the related punctuation
77ea4f6d 592set (C<$+>, C<$&>, C<$`>, C<$'>, and C<$^N>) are all dynamically scoped
14218588 593until the end of the enclosing block or until the next successful
594match, whichever comes first. (See L<perlsyn/"Compound Statements">.)
d74e8afc 595X<$+> X<$^N> X<$&> X<$`> X<$'>
596X<$1> X<$2> X<$3> X<$4> X<$5> X<$6> X<$7> X<$8> X<$9>
597
14218588 598
0d017f4d 599B<NOTE>: Failed matches in Perl do not reset the match variables,
5146ce24 600which makes it easier to write code that tests for a series of more
665e98b9 601specific cases and remembers the best match.
602
14218588 603B<WARNING>: Once Perl sees that you need one of C<$&>, C<$`>, or
604C<$'> anywhere in the program, it has to provide them for every
605pattern match. This may substantially slow your program. Perl
606uses the same mechanism to produce $1, $2, etc, so you also pay a
607price for each pattern that contains capturing parentheses. (To
608avoid this cost while retaining the grouping behaviour, use the
609extended regular expression C<(?: ... )> instead.) But if you never
610use C<$&>, C<$`> or C<$'>, then patterns I<without> capturing
611parentheses will not be penalized. So avoid C<$&>, C<$'>, and C<$`>
612if you can, but if you can't (and some algorithms really appreciate
613them), once you've used them once, use them at will, because you've
614already paid the price. As of 5.005, C<$&> is not so costly as the
615other two.
d74e8afc 616X<$&> X<$`> X<$'>
68dc0745 617
99d59c4d 618As a workaround for this problem, Perl 5.10.0 introduces C<${^PREMATCH}>,
cde0cee5 619C<${^MATCH}> and C<${^POSTMATCH}>, which are equivalent to C<$`>, C<$&>
620and C<$'>, B<except> that they are only guaranteed to be defined after a
87e95b7f 621successful match that was executed with the C</p> (preserve) modifier.
cde0cee5 622The use of these variables incurs no global performance penalty, unlike
623their punctuation char equivalents, however at the trade-off that you
624have to tell perl when you want to use them.
87e95b7f 625X</p> X<p modifier>
cde0cee5 626
19799a22 627Backslashed metacharacters in Perl are alphanumeric, such as C<\b>,
628C<\w>, C<\n>. Unlike some other regular expression languages, there
629are no backslashed symbols that aren't alphanumeric. So anything
c47ff5f1 630that looks like \\, \(, \), \<, \>, \{, or \} is always
19799a22 631interpreted as a literal character, not a metacharacter. This was
632once used in a common idiom to disable or quote the special meanings
633of regular expression metacharacters in a string that you want to
36bbe248 634use for a pattern. Simply quote all non-"word" characters:
a0d0e21e 635
636 $pattern =~ s/(\W)/\\$1/g;
637
f1cbbd6e 638(If C<use locale> is set, then this depends on the current locale.)
14218588 639Today it is more common to use the quotemeta() function or the C<\Q>
640metaquoting escape sequence to disable all metacharacters' special
641meanings like this:
a0d0e21e 642
643 /$unquoted\Q$quoted\E$unquoted/
644
9da458fc 645Beware that if you put literal backslashes (those not inside
646interpolated variables) between C<\Q> and C<\E>, double-quotish
647backslash interpolation may lead to confusing results. If you
648I<need> to use literal backslashes within C<\Q...\E>,
649consult L<perlop/"Gory details of parsing quoted constructs">.
650
19799a22 651=head2 Extended Patterns
652
14218588 653Perl also defines a consistent extension syntax for features not
654found in standard tools like B<awk> and B<lex>. The syntax is a
655pair of parentheses with a question mark as the first thing within
656the parentheses. The character after the question mark indicates
657the extension.
19799a22 658
14218588 659The stability of these extensions varies widely. Some have been
660part of the core language for many years. Others are experimental
661and may change without warning or be completely removed. Check
662the documentation on an individual feature to verify its current
663status.
19799a22 664
14218588 665A question mark was chosen for this and for the minimal-matching
666construct because 1) question marks are rare in older regular
667expressions, and 2) whenever you see one, you should stop and
668"question" exactly what is going on. That's psychology...
a0d0e21e 669
670=over 10
671
cc6b7395 672=item C<(?#text)>
d74e8afc 673X<(?#)>
a0d0e21e 674
14218588 675A comment. The text is ignored. If the C</x> modifier enables
19799a22 676whitespace formatting, a simple C<#> will suffice. Note that Perl closes
259138e3 677the comment as soon as it sees a C<)>, so there is no way to put a literal
678C<)> in the comment.
a0d0e21e 679
f7819f85 680=item C<(?pimsx-imsx)>
d74e8afc 681X<(?)>
19799a22 682
0b6d1084 683One or more embedded pattern-match modifiers, to be turned on (or
684turned off, if preceded by C<->) for the remainder of the pattern or
685the remainder of the enclosing pattern group (if any). This is
686particularly useful for dynamic patterns, such as those read in from a
0d017f4d 687configuration file, taken from an argument, or specified in a table
688somewhere. Consider the case where some patterns want to be case
689sensitive and some do not: The case insensitive ones merely need to
690include C<(?i)> at the front of the pattern. For example:
19799a22 691
692 $pattern = "foobar";
5d458dd8 693 if ( /$pattern/i ) { }
19799a22 694
695 # more flexible:
696
697 $pattern = "(?i)foobar";
5d458dd8 698 if ( /$pattern/ ) { }
19799a22 699
0b6d1084 700These modifiers are restored at the end of the enclosing group. For example,
19799a22 701
702 ( (?i) blah ) \s+ \1
703
0d017f4d 704will match C<blah> in any case, some spaces, and an exact (I<including the case>!)
705repetition of the previous word, assuming the C</x> modifier, and no C</i>
706modifier outside this group.
19799a22 707
8eb5594e 708These modifiers do not carry over into named subpatterns called in the
709enclosing group. In other words, a pattern such as C<((?i)(&NAME))> does not
710change the case-sensitivity of the "NAME" pattern.
711
5530442b 712Note that the C<p> modifier is special in that it can only be enabled,
cde0cee5 713not disabled, and that its presence anywhere in a pattern has a global
5530442b 714effect. Thus C<(?-p)> and C<(?-p:...)> are meaningless and will warn
cde0cee5 715when executed under C<use warnings>.
716
5a964f20 717=item C<(?:pattern)>
d74e8afc 718X<(?:)>
a0d0e21e 719
ca9dfc88 720=item C<(?imsx-imsx:pattern)>
721
5a964f20 722This is for clustering, not capturing; it groups subexpressions like
723"()", but doesn't make backreferences as "()" does. So
a0d0e21e 724
5a964f20 725 @fields = split(/\b(?:a|b|c)\b/)
a0d0e21e 726
727is like
728
5a964f20 729 @fields = split(/\b(a|b|c)\b/)
a0d0e21e 730
19799a22 731but doesn't spit out extra fields. It's also cheaper not to capture
732characters if you don't need to.
a0d0e21e 733
19799a22 734Any letters between C<?> and C<:> act as flags modifiers as with
5d458dd8 735C<(?imsx-imsx)>. For example,
ca9dfc88 736
737 /(?s-i:more.*than).*million/i
738
14218588 739is equivalent to the more verbose
ca9dfc88 740
741 /(?:(?s-i)more.*than).*million/i
742
594d7033 743=item C<(?|pattern)>
744X<(?|)> X<Branch reset>
745
746This is the "branch reset" pattern, which has the special property
747that the capture buffers are numbered from the same starting point
99d59c4d 748in each alternation branch. It is available starting from perl 5.10.0.
4deaaa80 749
693596a8 750Capture buffers are numbered from left to right, but inside this
751construct the numbering is restarted for each branch.
4deaaa80 752
753The numbering within each branch will be as normal, and any buffers
754following this construct will be numbered as though the construct
755contained only one branch, that being the one with the most capture
756buffers in it.
757
758This construct will be useful when you want to capture one of a
759number of alternative matches.
760
761Consider the following pattern. The numbers underneath show in
762which buffer the captured content will be stored.
594d7033 763
764
765 # before ---------------branch-reset----------- after
766 / ( a ) (?| x ( y ) z | (p (q) r) | (t) u (v) ) ( z ) /x
767 # 1 2 2 3 2 3 4
768
ab106183 769Be careful when using the branch reset pattern in combination with
770named captures. Named captures are implemented as being aliases to
771numbered buffers holding the captures, and that interferes with the
772implementation of the branch reset pattern. If you are using named
773captures in a branch reset pattern, it's best to use the same names,
774in the same order, in each of the alternations:
775
776 /(?| (?<a> x ) (?<b> y )
777 | (?<a> z ) (?<b> w )) /x
778
779Not doing so may lead to surprises:
780
781 "12" =~ /(?| (?<a> \d+ ) | (?<b> \D+))/x;
782 say $+ {a}; # Prints '12'
783 say $+ {b}; # *Also* prints '12'.
784
785The problem here is that both the buffer named C<< a >> and the buffer
786named C<< b >> are aliases for the buffer belonging to C<< $1 >>.
90a18110 787
ee9b8eae 788=item Look-Around Assertions
789X<look-around assertion> X<lookaround assertion> X<look-around> X<lookaround>
790
791Look-around assertions are zero width patterns which match a specific
792pattern without including it in C<$&>. Positive assertions match when
793their subpattern matches, negative assertions match when their subpattern
794fails. Look-behind matches text up to the current match position,
795look-ahead matches text following the current match position.
796
797=over 4
798
5a964f20 799=item C<(?=pattern)>
d74e8afc 800X<(?=)> X<look-ahead, positive> X<lookahead, positive>
a0d0e21e 801
19799a22 802A zero-width positive look-ahead assertion. For example, C</\w+(?=\t)/>
a0d0e21e 803matches a word followed by a tab, without including the tab in C<$&>.
804
5a964f20 805=item C<(?!pattern)>
d74e8afc 806X<(?!)> X<look-ahead, negative> X<lookahead, negative>
a0d0e21e 807
19799a22 808A zero-width negative look-ahead assertion. For example C</foo(?!bar)/>
a0d0e21e 809matches any occurrence of "foo" that isn't followed by "bar". Note
19799a22 810however that look-ahead and look-behind are NOT the same thing. You cannot
811use this for look-behind.
7b8d334a 812
5a964f20 813If you are looking for a "bar" that isn't preceded by a "foo", C</(?!foo)bar/>
7b8d334a 814will not do what you want. That's because the C<(?!foo)> is just saying that
815the next thing cannot be "foo"--and it's not, it's a "bar", so "foobar" will
816match. You would have to do something like C</(?!foo)...bar/> for that. We
817say "like" because there's the case of your "bar" not having three characters
818before it. You could cover that this way: C</(?:(?!foo)...|^.{0,2})bar/>.
819Sometimes it's still easier just to say:
a0d0e21e 820
a3cb178b 821 if (/bar/ && $` !~ /foo$/)
a0d0e21e 822
19799a22 823For look-behind see below.
c277df42 824
ee9b8eae 825=item C<(?<=pattern)> C<\K>
826X<(?<=)> X<look-behind, positive> X<lookbehind, positive> X<\K>
c277df42 827
c47ff5f1 828A zero-width positive look-behind assertion. For example, C</(?<=\t)\w+/>
19799a22 829matches a word that follows a tab, without including the tab in C<$&>.
830Works only for fixed-width look-behind.
c277df42 831
ee9b8eae 832There is a special form of this construct, called C<\K>, which causes the
833regex engine to "keep" everything it had matched prior to the C<\K> and
834not include it in C<$&>. This effectively provides variable length
835look-behind. The use of C<\K> inside of another look-around assertion
836is allowed, but the behaviour is currently not well defined.
837
c62285ac 838For various reasons C<\K> may be significantly more efficient than the
ee9b8eae 839equivalent C<< (?<=...) >> construct, and it is especially useful in
840situations where you want to efficiently remove something following
841something else in a string. For instance
842
843 s/(foo)bar/$1/g;
844
845can be rewritten as the much more efficient
846
847 s/foo\Kbar//g;
848
5a964f20 849=item C<(?<!pattern)>
d74e8afc 850X<(?<!)> X<look-behind, negative> X<lookbehind, negative>
c277df42 851
19799a22 852A zero-width negative look-behind assertion. For example C</(?<!bar)foo/>
853matches any occurrence of "foo" that does not follow "bar". Works
854only for fixed-width look-behind.
c277df42 855
ee9b8eae 856=back
857
81714fb9 858=item C<(?'NAME'pattern)>
859
860=item C<< (?<NAME>pattern) >>
861X<< (?<NAME>) >> X<(?'NAME')> X<named capture> X<capture>
862
863A named capture buffer. Identical in every respect to normal capturing
90a18110 864parentheses C<()> but for the additional fact that C<%+> or C<%-> may be
865used after a successful match to refer to a named buffer. See C<perlvar>
866for more details on the C<%+> and C<%-> hashes.
81714fb9 867
868If multiple distinct capture buffers have the same name then the
869$+{NAME} will refer to the leftmost defined buffer in the match.
870
0d017f4d 871The forms C<(?'NAME'pattern)> and C<< (?<NAME>pattern) >> are equivalent.
81714fb9 872
873B<NOTE:> While the notation of this construct is the same as the similar
0d017f4d 874function in .NET regexes, the behavior is not. In Perl the buffers are
81714fb9 875numbered sequentially regardless of being named or not. Thus in the
876pattern
877
878 /(x)(?<foo>y)(z)/
879
880$+{foo} will be the same as $2, and $3 will contain 'z' instead of
881the opposite which is what a .NET regex hacker might expect.
882
1f1031fe 883Currently NAME is restricted to simple identifiers only.
884In other words, it must match C</^[_A-Za-z][_A-Za-z0-9]*\z/> or
885its Unicode extension (see L<utf8>),
886though it isn't extended by the locale (see L<perllocale>).
81714fb9 887
1f1031fe 888B<NOTE:> In order to make things easier for programmers with experience
ae5648b3 889with the Python or PCRE regex engines, the pattern C<< (?PE<lt>NAMEE<gt>pattern) >>
0d017f4d 890may be used instead of C<< (?<NAME>pattern) >>; however this form does not
64c5a566 891support the use of single quotes as a delimiter for the name.
81714fb9 892
1f1031fe 893=item C<< \k<NAME> >>
894
895=item C<< \k'NAME' >>
81714fb9 896
897Named backreference. Similar to numeric backreferences, except that
898the group is designated by name and not number. If multiple groups
899have the same name then it refers to the leftmost defined group in
900the current match.
901
0d017f4d 902It is an error to refer to a name not defined by a C<< (?<NAME>) >>
81714fb9 903earlier in the pattern.
904
905Both forms are equivalent.
906
1f1031fe 907B<NOTE:> In order to make things easier for programmers with experience
0d017f4d 908with the Python or PCRE regex engines, the pattern C<< (?P=NAME) >>
64c5a566 909may be used instead of C<< \k<NAME> >>.
1f1031fe 910
cc6b7395 911=item C<(?{ code })>
d74e8afc 912X<(?{})> X<regex, code in> X<regexp, code in> X<regular expression, code in>
c277df42 913
19799a22 914B<WARNING>: This extended regular expression feature is considered
b9b4dddf 915experimental, and may be changed without notice. Code executed that
916has side effects may not perform identically from version to version
917due to the effect of future optimisations in the regex engine.
c277df42 918
cc46d5f2 919This zero-width assertion evaluates any embedded Perl code. It
19799a22 920always succeeds, and its C<code> is not interpolated. Currently,
921the rules to determine where the C<code> ends are somewhat convoluted.
922
77ea4f6d 923This feature can be used together with the special variable C<$^N> to
924capture the results of submatches in variables without having to keep
925track of the number of nested parentheses. For example:
926
927 $_ = "The brown fox jumps over the lazy dog";
928 /the (\S+)(?{ $color = $^N }) (\S+)(?{ $animal = $^N })/i;
929 print "color = $color, animal = $animal\n";
930
754091cb 931Inside the C<(?{...})> block, C<$_> refers to the string the regular
932expression is matching against. You can also use C<pos()> to know what is
fa11829f 933the current position of matching within this string.
754091cb 934
19799a22 935The C<code> is properly scoped in the following sense: If the assertion
936is backtracked (compare L<"Backtracking">), all changes introduced after
937C<local>ization are undone, so that
b9ac3b5b 938
939 $_ = 'a' x 8;
5d458dd8 940 m<
b9ac3b5b 941 (?{ $cnt = 0 }) # Initialize $cnt.
942 (
5d458dd8 943 a
b9ac3b5b 944 (?{
945 local $cnt = $cnt + 1; # Update $cnt, backtracking-safe.
946 })
5d458dd8 947 )*
b9ac3b5b 948 aaaa
949 (?{ $res = $cnt }) # On success copy to non-localized
950 # location.
951 >x;
952
0d017f4d 953will set C<$res = 4>. Note that after the match, C<$cnt> returns to the globally
14218588 954introduced value, because the scopes that restrict C<local> operators
b9ac3b5b 955are unwound.
956
19799a22 957This assertion may be used as a C<(?(condition)yes-pattern|no-pattern)>
958switch. If I<not> used in this way, the result of evaluation of
959C<code> is put into the special variable C<$^R>. This happens
960immediately, so C<$^R> can be used from other C<(?{ code })> assertions
961inside the same regular expression.
b9ac3b5b 962
19799a22 963The assignment to C<$^R> above is properly localized, so the old
964value of C<$^R> is restored if the assertion is backtracked; compare
965L<"Backtracking">.
b9ac3b5b 966
19799a22 967For reasons of security, this construct is forbidden if the regular
968expression involves run-time interpolation of variables, unless the
969perilous C<use re 'eval'> pragma has been used (see L<re>), or the
970variables contain results of C<qr//> operator (see
5d458dd8 971L<perlop/"qr/STRING/imosx">).
871b0233 972
0d017f4d 973This restriction is due to the wide-spread and remarkably convenient
19799a22 974custom of using run-time determined strings as patterns. For example:
871b0233 975
976 $re = <>;
977 chomp $re;
978 $string =~ /$re/;
979
14218588 980Before Perl knew how to execute interpolated code within a pattern,
981this operation was completely safe from a security point of view,
982although it could raise an exception from an illegal pattern. If
983you turn on the C<use re 'eval'>, though, it is no longer secure,
984so you should only do so if you are also using taint checking.
985Better yet, use the carefully constrained evaluation within a Safe
cc46d5f2 986compartment. See L<perlsec> for details about both these mechanisms.
871b0233 987
e95d7314 988B<WARNING>: Use of lexical (C<my>) variables in these blocks is
989broken. The result is unpredictable and will make perl unstable. The
990workaround is to use global (C<our>) variables.
991
992B<WARNING>: Because Perl's regex engine is currently not re-entrant,
993interpolated code may not invoke the regex engine either directly with
994C<m//> or C<s///>), or indirectly with functions such as
995C<split>. Invoking the regex engine in these blocks will make perl
996unstable.
8988a1bb 997
14455d6c 998=item C<(??{ code })>
d74e8afc 999X<(??{})>
1000X<regex, postponed> X<regexp, postponed> X<regular expression, postponed>
0f5d15d6 1001
19799a22 1002B<WARNING>: This extended regular expression feature is considered
b9b4dddf 1003experimental, and may be changed without notice. Code executed that
1004has side effects may not perform identically from version to version
1005due to the effect of future optimisations in the regex engine.
0f5d15d6 1006
19799a22 1007This is a "postponed" regular subexpression. The C<code> is evaluated
1008at run time, at the moment this subexpression may match. The result
1009of evaluation is considered as a regular expression and matched as
61528107 1010if it were inserted instead of this construct. Note that this means
6bda09f9 1011that the contents of capture buffers defined inside an eval'ed pattern
1012are not available outside of the pattern, and vice versa, there is no
1013way for the inner pattern to refer to a capture buffer defined outside.
1014Thus,
1015
1016 ('a' x 100)=~/(??{'(.)' x 100})/
1017
81714fb9 1018B<will> match, it will B<not> set $1.
0f5d15d6 1019
428594d9 1020The C<code> is not interpolated. As before, the rules to determine
19799a22 1021where the C<code> ends are currently somewhat convoluted.
1022
1023The following pattern matches a parenthesized group:
0f5d15d6 1024
1025 $re = qr{
1026 \(
1027 (?:
1028 (?> [^()]+ ) # Non-parens without backtracking
1029 |
14455d6c 1030 (??{ $re }) # Group with matching parens
0f5d15d6 1031 )*
1032 \)
1033 }x;
1034
6bda09f9 1035See also C<(?PARNO)> for a different, more efficient way to accomplish
1036the same task.
1037
0b370c0a 1038For reasons of security, this construct is forbidden if the regular
1039expression involves run-time interpolation of variables, unless the
1040perilous C<use re 'eval'> pragma has been used (see L<re>), or the
1041variables contain results of C<qr//> operator (see
1042L<perlop/"qr/STRING/imosx">).
1043
5d458dd8 1044Because perl's regex engine is not currently re-entrant, delayed
8988a1bb 1045code may not invoke the regex engine either directly with C<m//> or C<s///>),
1046or indirectly with functions such as C<split>.
1047
5d458dd8 1048Recursing deeper than 50 times without consuming any input string will
1049result in a fatal error. The maximum depth is compiled into perl, so
6bda09f9 1050changing it requires a custom build.
1051
542fa716 1052=item C<(?PARNO)> C<(?-PARNO)> C<(?+PARNO)> C<(?R)> C<(?0)>
1053X<(?PARNO)> X<(?1)> X<(?R)> X<(?0)> X<(?-1)> X<(?+1)> X<(?-PARNO)> X<(?+PARNO)>
6bda09f9 1054X<regex, recursive> X<regexp, recursive> X<regular expression, recursive>
542fa716 1055X<regex, relative recursion>
6bda09f9 1056
81714fb9 1057Similar to C<(??{ code })> except it does not involve compiling any code,
1058instead it treats the contents of a capture buffer as an independent
61528107 1059pattern that must match at the current position. Capture buffers
81714fb9 1060contained by the pattern will have the value as determined by the
6bda09f9 1061outermost recursion.
1062
894be9b7 1063PARNO is a sequence of digits (not starting with 0) whose value reflects
1064the paren-number of the capture buffer to recurse to. C<(?R)> recurses to
1065the beginning of the whole pattern. C<(?0)> is an alternate syntax for
542fa716 1066C<(?R)>. If PARNO is preceded by a plus or minus sign then it is assumed
1067to be relative, with negative numbers indicating preceding capture buffers
1068and positive ones following. Thus C<(?-1)> refers to the most recently
1069declared buffer, and C<(?+1)> indicates the next buffer to be declared.
c74340f9 1070Note that the counting for relative recursion differs from that of
1071relative backreferences, in that with recursion unclosed buffers B<are>
1072included.
6bda09f9 1073
81714fb9 1074The following pattern matches a function foo() which may contain
f145b7e9 1075balanced parentheses as the argument.
6bda09f9 1076
1077 $re = qr{ ( # paren group 1 (full function)
81714fb9 1078 foo
6bda09f9 1079 ( # paren group 2 (parens)
1080 \(
1081 ( # paren group 3 (contents of parens)
1082 (?:
1083 (?> [^()]+ ) # Non-parens without backtracking
1084 |
1085 (?2) # Recurse to start of paren group 2
1086 )*
1087 )
1088 \)
1089 )
1090 )
1091 }x;
1092
1093If the pattern was used as follows
1094
1095 'foo(bar(baz)+baz(bop))'=~/$re/
1096 and print "\$1 = $1\n",
1097 "\$2 = $2\n",
1098 "\$3 = $3\n";
1099
1100the output produced should be the following:
1101
1102 $1 = foo(bar(baz)+baz(bop))
1103 $2 = (bar(baz)+baz(bop))
81714fb9 1104 $3 = bar(baz)+baz(bop)
6bda09f9 1105
81714fb9 1106If there is no corresponding capture buffer defined, then it is a
61528107 1107fatal error. Recursing deeper than 50 times without consuming any input
81714fb9 1108string will also result in a fatal error. The maximum depth is compiled
6bda09f9 1109into perl, so changing it requires a custom build.
1110
542fa716 1111The following shows how using negative indexing can make it
1112easier to embed recursive patterns inside of a C<qr//> construct
1113for later use:
1114
1115 my $parens = qr/(\((?:[^()]++|(?-1))*+\))/;
1116 if (/foo $parens \s+ + \s+ bar $parens/x) {
1117 # do something here...
1118 }
1119
81714fb9 1120B<Note> that this pattern does not behave the same way as the equivalent
0d017f4d 1121PCRE or Python construct of the same form. In Perl you can backtrack into
6bda09f9 1122a recursed group, in PCRE and Python the recursed into group is treated
542fa716 1123as atomic. Also, modifiers are resolved at compile time, so constructs
1124like (?i:(?1)) or (?:(?i)(?1)) do not affect how the sub-pattern will
1125be processed.
6bda09f9 1126
894be9b7 1127=item C<(?&NAME)>
1128X<(?&NAME)>
1129
0d017f4d 1130Recurse to a named subpattern. Identical to C<(?PARNO)> except that the
1131parenthesis to recurse to is determined by name. If multiple parentheses have
894be9b7 1132the same name, then it recurses to the leftmost.
1133
1134It is an error to refer to a name that is not declared somewhere in the
1135pattern.
1136
1f1031fe 1137B<NOTE:> In order to make things easier for programmers with experience
1138with the Python or PCRE regex engines the pattern C<< (?P>NAME) >>
64c5a566 1139may be used instead of C<< (?&NAME) >>.
1f1031fe 1140
e2e6a0f1 1141=item C<(?(condition)yes-pattern|no-pattern)>
1142X<(?()>
286f584a 1143
e2e6a0f1 1144=item C<(?(condition)yes-pattern)>
286f584a 1145
e2e6a0f1 1146Conditional expression. C<(condition)> should be either an integer in
1147parentheses (which is valid if the corresponding pair of parentheses
1148matched), a look-ahead/look-behind/evaluate zero-width assertion, a
1149name in angle brackets or single quotes (which is valid if a buffer
1150with the given name matched), or the special symbol (R) (true when
1151evaluated inside of recursion or eval). Additionally the R may be
1152followed by a number, (which will be true when evaluated when recursing
1153inside of the appropriate group), or by C<&NAME>, in which case it will
1154be true only when evaluated during recursion in the named group.
1155
1156Here's a summary of the possible predicates:
1157
1158=over 4
1159
1160=item (1) (2) ...
1161
1162Checks if the numbered capturing buffer has matched something.
1163
1164=item (<NAME>) ('NAME')
1165
1166Checks if a buffer with the given name has matched something.
1167
1168=item (?{ CODE })
1169
1170Treats the code block as the condition.
1171
1172=item (R)
1173
1174Checks if the expression has been evaluated inside of recursion.
1175
1176=item (R1) (R2) ...
1177
1178Checks if the expression has been evaluated while executing directly
1179inside of the n-th capture group. This check is the regex equivalent of
1180
1181 if ((caller(0))[3] eq 'subname') { ... }
1182
1183In other words, it does not check the full recursion stack.
1184
1185=item (R&NAME)
1186
1187Similar to C<(R1)>, this predicate checks to see if we're executing
1188directly inside of the leftmost group with a given name (this is the same
1189logic used by C<(?&NAME)> to disambiguate). It does not check the full
1190stack, but only the name of the innermost active recursion.
1191
1192=item (DEFINE)
1193
1194In this case, the yes-pattern is never directly executed, and no
1195no-pattern is allowed. Similar in spirit to C<(?{0})> but more efficient.
1196See below for details.
1197
1198=back
1199
1200For example:
1201
1202 m{ ( \( )?
1203 [^()]+
1204 (?(1) \) )
1205 }x
1206
1207matches a chunk of non-parentheses, possibly included in parentheses
1208themselves.
1209
1210A special form is the C<(DEFINE)> predicate, which never executes directly
1211its yes-pattern, and does not allow a no-pattern. This allows to define
1212subpatterns which will be executed only by using the recursion mechanism.
1213This way, you can define a set of regular expression rules that can be
1214bundled into any pattern you choose.
1215
1216It is recommended that for this usage you put the DEFINE block at the
1217end of the pattern, and that you name any subpatterns defined within it.
1218
1219Also, it's worth noting that patterns defined this way probably will
1220not be as efficient, as the optimiser is not very clever about
1221handling them.
1222
1223An example of how this might be used is as follows:
1224
2bf803e2 1225 /(?<NAME>(?&NAME_PAT))(?<ADDR>(?&ADDRESS_PAT))
e2e6a0f1 1226 (?(DEFINE)
2bf803e2 1227 (?<NAME_PAT>....)
1228 (?<ADRESS_PAT>....)
e2e6a0f1 1229 )/x
1230
1231Note that capture buffers matched inside of recursion are not accessible
0d017f4d 1232after the recursion returns, so the extra layer of capturing buffers is
e2e6a0f1 1233necessary. Thus C<$+{NAME_PAT}> would not be defined even though
1234C<$+{NAME}> would be.
286f584a 1235
c47ff5f1 1236=item C<< (?>pattern) >>
6bda09f9 1237X<backtrack> X<backtracking> X<atomic> X<possessive>
5a964f20 1238
19799a22 1239An "independent" subexpression, one which matches the substring
1240that a I<standalone> C<pattern> would match if anchored at the given
9da458fc 1241position, and it matches I<nothing other than this substring>. This
19799a22 1242construct is useful for optimizations of what would otherwise be
1243"eternal" matches, because it will not backtrack (see L<"Backtracking">).
9da458fc 1244It may also be useful in places where the "grab all you can, and do not
1245give anything back" semantic is desirable.
19799a22 1246
c47ff5f1 1247For example: C<< ^(?>a*)ab >> will never match, since C<< (?>a*) >>
19799a22 1248(anchored at the beginning of string, as above) will match I<all>
1249characters C<a> at the beginning of string, leaving no C<a> for
1250C<ab> to match. In contrast, C<a*ab> will match the same as C<a+b>,
1251since the match of the subgroup C<a*> is influenced by the following
1252group C<ab> (see L<"Backtracking">). In particular, C<a*> inside
1253C<a*ab> will match fewer characters than a standalone C<a*>, since
1254this makes the tail match.
1255
c47ff5f1 1256An effect similar to C<< (?>pattern) >> may be achieved by writing
19799a22 1257C<(?=(pattern))\1>. This matches the same substring as a standalone
1258C<a+>, and the following C<\1> eats the matched string; it therefore
c47ff5f1 1259makes a zero-length assertion into an analogue of C<< (?>...) >>.
19799a22 1260(The difference between these two constructs is that the second one
1261uses a capturing group, thus shifting ordinals of backreferences
1262in the rest of a regular expression.)
1263
1264Consider this pattern:
c277df42 1265
871b0233 1266 m{ \(
e2e6a0f1 1267 (
1268 [^()]+ # x+
1269 |
871b0233 1270 \( [^()]* \)
1271 )+
e2e6a0f1 1272 \)
871b0233 1273 }x
5a964f20 1274
19799a22 1275That will efficiently match a nonempty group with matching parentheses
1276two levels deep or less. However, if there is no such group, it
1277will take virtually forever on a long string. That's because there
1278are so many different ways to split a long string into several
1279substrings. This is what C<(.+)+> is doing, and C<(.+)+> is similar
1280to a subpattern of the above pattern. Consider how the pattern
1281above detects no-match on C<((()aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa> in several
1282seconds, but that each extra letter doubles this time. This
1283exponential performance will make it appear that your program has
14218588 1284hung. However, a tiny change to this pattern
5a964f20 1285
e2e6a0f1 1286 m{ \(
1287 (
1288 (?> [^()]+ ) # change x+ above to (?> x+ )
1289 |
871b0233 1290 \( [^()]* \)
1291 )+
e2e6a0f1 1292 \)
871b0233 1293 }x
c277df42 1294
c47ff5f1 1295which uses C<< (?>...) >> matches exactly when the one above does (verifying
5a964f20 1296this yourself would be a productive exercise), but finishes in a fourth
1297the time when used on a similar string with 1000000 C<a>s. Be aware,
1298however, that this pattern currently triggers a warning message under
9f1b1f2d 1299the C<use warnings> pragma or B<-w> switch saying it
6bab786b 1300C<"matches null string many times in regex">.
c277df42 1301
c47ff5f1 1302On simple groups, such as the pattern C<< (?> [^()]+ ) >>, a comparable
19799a22 1303effect may be achieved by negative look-ahead, as in C<[^()]+ (?! [^()] )>.
c277df42 1304This was only 4 times slower on a string with 1000000 C<a>s.
1305
9da458fc 1306The "grab all you can, and do not give anything back" semantic is desirable
1307in many situations where on the first sight a simple C<()*> looks like
1308the correct solution. Suppose we parse text with comments being delimited
1309by C<#> followed by some optional (horizontal) whitespace. Contrary to
4375e838 1310its appearance, C<#[ \t]*> I<is not> the correct subexpression to match
9da458fc 1311the comment delimiter, because it may "give up" some whitespace if
1312the remainder of the pattern can be made to match that way. The correct
1313answer is either one of these:
1314
1315 (?>#[ \t]*)
1316 #[ \t]*(?![ \t])
1317
1318For example, to grab non-empty comments into $1, one should use either
1319one of these:
1320
1321 / (?> \# [ \t]* ) ( .+ ) /x;
1322 / \# [ \t]* ( [^ \t] .* ) /x;
1323
1324Which one you pick depends on which of these expressions better reflects
1325the above specification of comments.
1326
6bda09f9 1327In some literature this construct is called "atomic matching" or
1328"possessive matching".
1329
b9b4dddf 1330Possessive quantifiers are equivalent to putting the item they are applied
1331to inside of one of these constructs. The following equivalences apply:
1332
1333 Quantifier Form Bracketing Form
1334 --------------- ---------------
1335 PAT*+ (?>PAT*)
1336 PAT++ (?>PAT+)
1337 PAT?+ (?>PAT?)
1338 PAT{min,max}+ (?>PAT{min,max})
1339
e2e6a0f1 1340=back
1341
1342=head2 Special Backtracking Control Verbs
1343
1344B<WARNING:> These patterns are experimental and subject to change or
0d017f4d 1345removal in a future version of Perl. Their usage in production code should
e2e6a0f1 1346be noted to avoid problems during upgrades.
1347
1348These special patterns are generally of the form C<(*VERB:ARG)>. Unless
1349otherwise stated the ARG argument is optional; in some cases, it is
1350forbidden.
1351
1352Any pattern containing a special backtracking verb that allows an argument
e1020413 1353has the special behaviour that when executed it sets the current package's
5d458dd8 1354C<$REGERROR> and C<$REGMARK> variables. When doing so the following
1355rules apply:
e2e6a0f1 1356
5d458dd8 1357On failure, the C<$REGERROR> variable will be set to the ARG value of the
1358verb pattern, if the verb was involved in the failure of the match. If the
1359ARG part of the pattern was omitted, then C<$REGERROR> will be set to the
1360name of the last C<(*MARK:NAME)> pattern executed, or to TRUE if there was
1361none. Also, the C<$REGMARK> variable will be set to FALSE.
e2e6a0f1 1362
5d458dd8 1363On a successful match, the C<$REGERROR> variable will be set to FALSE, and
1364the C<$REGMARK> variable will be set to the name of the last
1365C<(*MARK:NAME)> pattern executed. See the explanation for the
1366C<(*MARK:NAME)> verb below for more details.
e2e6a0f1 1367
5d458dd8 1368B<NOTE:> C<$REGERROR> and C<$REGMARK> are not magic variables like C<$1>
1369and most other regex related variables. They are not local to a scope, nor
1370readonly, but instead are volatile package variables similar to C<$AUTOLOAD>.
1371Use C<local> to localize changes to them to a specific scope if necessary.
e2e6a0f1 1372
1373If a pattern does not contain a special backtracking verb that allows an
5d458dd8 1374argument, then C<$REGERROR> and C<$REGMARK> are not touched at all.
e2e6a0f1 1375
1376=over 4
1377
1378=item Verbs that take an argument
1379
1380=over 4
1381
5d458dd8 1382=item C<(*PRUNE)> C<(*PRUNE:NAME)>
f7819f85 1383X<(*PRUNE)> X<(*PRUNE:NAME)>
54612592 1384
5d458dd8 1385This zero-width pattern prunes the backtracking tree at the current point
1386when backtracked into on failure. Consider the pattern C<A (*PRUNE) B>,
1387where A and B are complex patterns. Until the C<(*PRUNE)> verb is reached,
1388A may backtrack as necessary to match. Once it is reached, matching
1389continues in B, which may also backtrack as necessary; however, should B
1390not match, then no further backtracking will take place, and the pattern
1391will fail outright at the current starting position.
54612592 1392
1393The following example counts all the possible matching strings in a
1394pattern (without actually matching any of them).
1395
e2e6a0f1 1396 'aaab' =~ /a+b?(?{print "$&\n"; $count++})(*FAIL)/;
54612592 1397 print "Count=$count\n";
1398
1399which produces:
1400
1401 aaab
1402 aaa
1403 aa
1404 a
1405 aab
1406 aa
1407 a
1408 ab
1409 a
1410 Count=9
1411
5d458dd8 1412If we add a C<(*PRUNE)> before the count like the following
54612592 1413
5d458dd8 1414 'aaab' =~ /a+b?(*PRUNE)(?{print "$&\n"; $count++})(*FAIL)/;
54612592 1415 print "Count=$count\n";
1416
1417we prevent backtracking and find the count of the longest matching
353c6505 1418at each matching starting point like so:
54612592 1419
1420 aaab
1421 aab
1422 ab
1423 Count=3
1424
5d458dd8 1425Any number of C<(*PRUNE)> assertions may be used in a pattern.
54612592 1426
5d458dd8 1427See also C<< (?>pattern) >> and possessive quantifiers for other ways to
1428control backtracking. In some cases, the use of C<(*PRUNE)> can be
1429replaced with a C<< (?>pattern) >> with no functional difference; however,
1430C<(*PRUNE)> can be used to handle cases that cannot be expressed using a
1431C<< (?>pattern) >> alone.
54612592 1432
e2e6a0f1 1433
5d458dd8 1434=item C<(*SKIP)> C<(*SKIP:NAME)>
1435X<(*SKIP)>
e2e6a0f1 1436
5d458dd8 1437This zero-width pattern is similar to C<(*PRUNE)>, except that on
e2e6a0f1 1438failure it also signifies that whatever text that was matched leading up
5d458dd8 1439to the C<(*SKIP)> pattern being executed cannot be part of I<any> match
1440of this pattern. This effectively means that the regex engine "skips" forward
1441to this position on failure and tries to match again, (assuming that
1442there is sufficient room to match).
1443
1444The name of the C<(*SKIP:NAME)> pattern has special significance. If a
1445C<(*MARK:NAME)> was encountered while matching, then it is that position
1446which is used as the "skip point". If no C<(*MARK)> of that name was
1447encountered, then the C<(*SKIP)> operator has no effect. When used
1448without a name the "skip point" is where the match point was when
1449executing the (*SKIP) pattern.
1450
1451Compare the following to the examples in C<(*PRUNE)>, note the string
24b23f37 1452is twice as long:
1453
5d458dd8 1454 'aaabaaab' =~ /a+b?(*SKIP)(?{print "$&\n"; $count++})(*FAIL)/;
24b23f37 1455 print "Count=$count\n";
1456
1457outputs
1458
1459 aaab
1460 aaab
1461 Count=2
1462
5d458dd8 1463Once the 'aaab' at the start of the string has matched, and the C<(*SKIP)>
353c6505 1464executed, the next starting point will be where the cursor was when the
5d458dd8 1465C<(*SKIP)> was executed.
1466
5d458dd8 1467=item C<(*MARK:NAME)> C<(*:NAME)>
1468X<(*MARK)> C<(*MARK:NAME)> C<(*:NAME)>
1469
1470This zero-width pattern can be used to mark the point reached in a string
1471when a certain part of the pattern has been successfully matched. This
1472mark may be given a name. A later C<(*SKIP)> pattern will then skip
1473forward to that point if backtracked into on failure. Any number of
b4222fa9 1474C<(*MARK)> patterns are allowed, and the NAME portion may be duplicated.
5d458dd8 1475
1476In addition to interacting with the C<(*SKIP)> pattern, C<(*MARK:NAME)>
1477can be used to "label" a pattern branch, so that after matching, the
1478program can determine which branches of the pattern were involved in the
1479match.
1480
1481When a match is successful, the C<$REGMARK> variable will be set to the
1482name of the most recently executed C<(*MARK:NAME)> that was involved
1483in the match.
1484
1485This can be used to determine which branch of a pattern was matched
c62285ac 1486without using a separate capture buffer for each branch, which in turn
5d458dd8 1487can result in a performance improvement, as perl cannot optimize
1488C</(?:(x)|(y)|(z))/> as efficiently as something like
1489C</(?:x(*MARK:x)|y(*MARK:y)|z(*MARK:z))/>.
1490
1491When a match has failed, and unless another verb has been involved in
1492failing the match and has provided its own name to use, the C<$REGERROR>
1493variable will be set to the name of the most recently executed
1494C<(*MARK:NAME)>.
1495
1496See C<(*SKIP)> for more details.
1497
b62d2d15 1498As a shortcut C<(*MARK:NAME)> can be written C<(*:NAME)>.
1499
5d458dd8 1500=item C<(*THEN)> C<(*THEN:NAME)>
1501
241e7389 1502This is similar to the "cut group" operator C<::> from Perl 6. Like
5d458dd8 1503C<(*PRUNE)>, this verb always matches, and when backtracked into on
1504failure, it causes the regex engine to try the next alternation in the
1505innermost enclosing group (capturing or otherwise).
1506
1507Its name comes from the observation that this operation combined with the
1508alternation operator (C<|>) can be used to create what is essentially a
1509pattern-based if/then/else block:
1510
1511 ( COND (*THEN) FOO | COND2 (*THEN) BAR | COND3 (*THEN) BAZ )
1512
1513Note that if this operator is used and NOT inside of an alternation then
1514it acts exactly like the C<(*PRUNE)> operator.
1515
1516 / A (*PRUNE) B /
1517
1518is the same as
1519
1520 / A (*THEN) B /
1521
1522but
1523
1524 / ( A (*THEN) B | C (*THEN) D ) /
1525
1526is not the same as
1527
1528 / ( A (*PRUNE) B | C (*PRUNE) D ) /
1529
1530as after matching the A but failing on the B the C<(*THEN)> verb will
1531backtrack and try C; but the C<(*PRUNE)> verb will simply fail.
24b23f37 1532
e2e6a0f1 1533=item C<(*COMMIT)>
1534X<(*COMMIT)>
24b23f37 1535
241e7389 1536This is the Perl 6 "commit pattern" C<< <commit> >> or C<:::>. It's a
5d458dd8 1537zero-width pattern similar to C<(*SKIP)>, except that when backtracked
1538into on failure it causes the match to fail outright. No further attempts
1539to find a valid match by advancing the start pointer will occur again.
1540For example,
24b23f37 1541
e2e6a0f1 1542 'aaabaaab' =~ /a+b?(*COMMIT)(?{print "$&\n"; $count++})(*FAIL)/;
24b23f37 1543 print "Count=$count\n";
1544
1545outputs
1546
1547 aaab
1548 Count=1
1549
e2e6a0f1 1550In other words, once the C<(*COMMIT)> has been entered, and if the pattern
1551does not match, the regex engine will not try any further matching on the
1552rest of the string.
c277df42 1553
e2e6a0f1 1554=back
9af228c6 1555
e2e6a0f1 1556=item Verbs without an argument
9af228c6 1557
1558=over 4
1559
e2e6a0f1 1560=item C<(*FAIL)> C<(*F)>
1561X<(*FAIL)> X<(*F)>
9af228c6 1562
e2e6a0f1 1563This pattern matches nothing and always fails. It can be used to force the
1564engine to backtrack. It is equivalent to C<(?!)>, but easier to read. In
1565fact, C<(?!)> gets optimised into C<(*FAIL)> internally.
9af228c6 1566
e2e6a0f1 1567It is probably useful only when combined with C<(?{})> or C<(??{})>.
9af228c6 1568
e2e6a0f1 1569=item C<(*ACCEPT)>
1570X<(*ACCEPT)>
9af228c6 1571
e2e6a0f1 1572B<WARNING:> This feature is highly experimental. It is not recommended
1573for production code.
9af228c6 1574
e2e6a0f1 1575This pattern matches nothing and causes the end of successful matching at
1576the point at which the C<(*ACCEPT)> pattern was encountered, regardless of
1577whether there is actually more to match in the string. When inside of a
0d017f4d 1578nested pattern, such as recursion, or in a subpattern dynamically generated
e2e6a0f1 1579via C<(??{})>, only the innermost pattern is ended immediately.
9af228c6 1580
e2e6a0f1 1581If the C<(*ACCEPT)> is inside of capturing buffers then the buffers are
1582marked as ended at the point at which the C<(*ACCEPT)> was encountered.
1583For instance:
9af228c6 1584
e2e6a0f1 1585 'AB' =~ /(A (A|B(*ACCEPT)|C) D)(E)/x;
9af228c6 1586
e2e6a0f1 1587will match, and C<$1> will be C<AB> and C<$2> will be C<B>, C<$3> will not
0d017f4d 1588be set. If another branch in the inner parentheses were matched, such as in the
e2e6a0f1 1589string 'ACDE', then the C<D> and C<E> would have to be matched as well.
9af228c6 1590
1591=back
c277df42 1592
a0d0e21e 1593=back
1594
c07a80fd 1595=head2 Backtracking
d74e8afc 1596X<backtrack> X<backtracking>
c07a80fd 1597
35a734be 1598NOTE: This section presents an abstract approximation of regular
1599expression behavior. For a more rigorous (and complicated) view of
1600the rules involved in selecting a match among possible alternatives,
0d017f4d 1601see L<Combining RE Pieces>.
35a734be 1602
c277df42 1603A fundamental feature of regular expression matching involves the
5a964f20 1604notion called I<backtracking>, which is currently used (when needed)
0d017f4d 1605by all regular non-possessive expression quantifiers, namely C<*>, C<*?>, C<+>,
9da458fc 1606C<+?>, C<{n,m}>, and C<{n,m}?>. Backtracking is often optimized
1607internally, but the general principle outlined here is valid.
c07a80fd 1608
1609For a regular expression to match, the I<entire> regular expression must
1610match, not just part of it. So if the beginning of a pattern containing a
1611quantifier succeeds in a way that causes later parts in the pattern to
1612fail, the matching engine backs up and recalculates the beginning
1613part--that's why it's called backtracking.
1614
1615Here is an example of backtracking: Let's say you want to find the
1616word following "foo" in the string "Food is on the foo table.":
1617
1618 $_ = "Food is on the foo table.";
1619 if ( /\b(foo)\s+(\w+)/i ) {
1620 print "$2 follows $1.\n";
1621 }
1622
1623When the match runs, the first part of the regular expression (C<\b(foo)>)
1624finds a possible match right at the beginning of the string, and loads up
1625$1 with "Foo". However, as soon as the matching engine sees that there's
1626no whitespace following the "Foo" that it had saved in $1, it realizes its
68dc0745 1627mistake and starts over again one character after where it had the
c07a80fd 1628tentative match. This time it goes all the way until the next occurrence
1629of "foo". The complete regular expression matches this time, and you get
1630the expected output of "table follows foo."
1631
1632Sometimes minimal matching can help a lot. Imagine you'd like to match
1633everything between "foo" and "bar". Initially, you write something
1634like this:
1635
1636 $_ = "The food is under the bar in the barn.";
1637 if ( /foo(.*)bar/ ) {
1638 print "got <$1>\n";
1639 }
1640
1641Which perhaps unexpectedly yields:
1642
1643 got <d is under the bar in the >
1644
1645That's because C<.*> was greedy, so you get everything between the
14218588 1646I<first> "foo" and the I<last> "bar". Here it's more effective
c07a80fd 1647to use minimal matching to make sure you get the text between a "foo"
1648and the first "bar" thereafter.
1649
1650 if ( /foo(.*?)bar/ ) { print "got <$1>\n" }
1651 got <d is under the >
1652
0d017f4d 1653Here's another example. Let's say you'd like to match a number at the end
b6e13d97 1654of a string, and you also want to keep the preceding part of the match.
c07a80fd 1655So you write this:
1656
1657 $_ = "I have 2 numbers: 53147";
1658 if ( /(.*)(\d*)/ ) { # Wrong!
1659 print "Beginning is <$1>, number is <$2>.\n";
1660 }
1661
1662That won't work at all, because C<.*> was greedy and gobbled up the
1663whole string. As C<\d*> can match on an empty string the complete
1664regular expression matched successfully.
1665
8e1088bc 1666 Beginning is <I have 2 numbers: 53147>, number is <>.
c07a80fd 1667
1668Here are some variants, most of which don't work:
1669
1670 $_ = "I have 2 numbers: 53147";
1671 @pats = qw{
1672 (.*)(\d*)
1673 (.*)(\d+)
1674 (.*?)(\d*)
1675 (.*?)(\d+)
1676 (.*)(\d+)$
1677 (.*?)(\d+)$
1678 (.*)\b(\d+)$
1679 (.*\D)(\d+)$
1680 };
1681
1682 for $pat (@pats) {
1683 printf "%-12s ", $pat;
1684 if ( /$pat/ ) {
1685 print "<$1> <$2>\n";
1686 } else {
1687 print "FAIL\n";
1688 }
1689 }
1690
1691That will print out:
1692
1693 (.*)(\d*) <I have 2 numbers: 53147> <>
1694 (.*)(\d+) <I have 2 numbers: 5314> <7>
1695 (.*?)(\d*) <> <>
1696 (.*?)(\d+) <I have > <2>
1697 (.*)(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: 5314> <7>
1698 (.*?)(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: > <53147>
1699 (.*)\b(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: > <53147>
1700 (.*\D)(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: > <53147>
1701
1702As you see, this can be a bit tricky. It's important to realize that a
1703regular expression is merely a set of assertions that gives a definition
1704of success. There may be 0, 1, or several different ways that the
1705definition might succeed against a particular string. And if there are
5a964f20 1706multiple ways it might succeed, you need to understand backtracking to
1707know which variety of success you will achieve.
c07a80fd 1708
19799a22 1709When using look-ahead assertions and negations, this can all get even
8b19b778 1710trickier. Imagine you'd like to find a sequence of non-digits not
c07a80fd 1711followed by "123". You might try to write that as
1712
871b0233 1713 $_ = "ABC123";
1714 if ( /^\D*(?!123)/ ) { # Wrong!
1715 print "Yup, no 123 in $_\n";
1716 }
c07a80fd 1717
1718But that isn't going to match; at least, not the way you're hoping. It
1719claims that there is no 123 in the string. Here's a clearer picture of
9b9391b2 1720why that pattern matches, contrary to popular expectations:
c07a80fd 1721
4358a253 1722 $x = 'ABC123';
1723 $y = 'ABC445';
c07a80fd 1724
4358a253 1725 print "1: got $1\n" if $x =~ /^(ABC)(?!123)/;
1726 print "2: got $1\n" if $y =~ /^(ABC)(?!123)/;
c07a80fd 1727
4358a253 1728 print "3: got $1\n" if $x =~ /^(\D*)(?!123)/;
1729 print "4: got $1\n" if $y =~ /^(\D*)(?!123)/;
c07a80fd 1730
1731This prints
1732
1733 2: got ABC
1734 3: got AB
1735 4: got ABC
1736
5f05dabc 1737You might have expected test 3 to fail because it seems to a more
c07a80fd 1738general purpose version of test 1. The important difference between
1739them is that test 3 contains a quantifier (C<\D*>) and so can use
1740backtracking, whereas test 1 will not. What's happening is
1741that you've asked "Is it true that at the start of $x, following 0 or more
5f05dabc 1742non-digits, you have something that's not 123?" If the pattern matcher had
c07a80fd 1743let C<\D*> expand to "ABC", this would have caused the whole pattern to
54310121 1744fail.
14218588 1745
c07a80fd 1746The search engine will initially match C<\D*> with "ABC". Then it will
14218588 1747try to match C<(?!123> with "123", which fails. But because
c07a80fd 1748a quantifier (C<\D*>) has been used in the regular expression, the
1749search engine can backtrack and retry the match differently
54310121 1750in the hope of matching the complete regular expression.
c07a80fd 1751
5a964f20 1752The pattern really, I<really> wants to succeed, so it uses the
1753standard pattern back-off-and-retry and lets C<\D*> expand to just "AB" this
c07a80fd 1754time. Now there's indeed something following "AB" that is not
14218588 1755"123". It's "C123", which suffices.
c07a80fd 1756
14218588 1757We can deal with this by using both an assertion and a negation.
1758We'll say that the first part in $1 must be followed both by a digit
1759and by something that's not "123". Remember that the look-aheads
1760are zero-width expressions--they only look, but don't consume any
1761of the string in their match. So rewriting this way produces what
c07a80fd 1762you'd expect; that is, case 5 will fail, but case 6 succeeds:
1763
4358a253 1764 print "5: got $1\n" if $x =~ /^(\D*)(?=\d)(?!123)/;
1765 print "6: got $1\n" if $y =~ /^(\D*)(?=\d)(?!123)/;
c07a80fd 1766
1767 6: got ABC
1768
5a964f20 1769In other words, the two zero-width assertions next to each other work as though
19799a22 1770they're ANDed together, just as you'd use any built-in assertions: C</^$/>
c07a80fd 1771matches only if you're at the beginning of the line AND the end of the
1772line simultaneously. The deeper underlying truth is that juxtaposition in
1773regular expressions always means AND, except when you write an explicit OR
1774using the vertical bar. C</ab/> means match "a" AND (then) match "b",
1775although the attempted matches are made at different positions because "a"
1776is not a zero-width assertion, but a one-width assertion.
1777
0d017f4d 1778B<WARNING>: Particularly complicated regular expressions can take
14218588 1779exponential time to solve because of the immense number of possible
0d017f4d 1780ways they can use backtracking to try for a match. For example, without
9da458fc 1781internal optimizations done by the regular expression engine, this will
1782take a painfully long time to run:
c07a80fd 1783
e1901655 1784 'aaaaaaaaaaaa' =~ /((a{0,5}){0,5})*[c]/
1785
1786And if you used C<*>'s in the internal groups instead of limiting them
1787to 0 through 5 matches, then it would take forever--or until you ran
1788out of stack space. Moreover, these internal optimizations are not
1789always applicable. For example, if you put C<{0,5}> instead of C<*>
1790on the external group, no current optimization is applicable, and the
1791match takes a long time to finish.
c07a80fd 1792
9da458fc 1793A powerful tool for optimizing such beasts is what is known as an
1794"independent group",
c47ff5f1 1795which does not backtrack (see L<C<< (?>pattern) >>>). Note also that
9da458fc 1796zero-length look-ahead/look-behind assertions will not backtrack to make
5d458dd8 1797the tail match, since they are in "logical" context: only
14218588 1798whether they match is considered relevant. For an example
9da458fc 1799where side-effects of look-ahead I<might> have influenced the
c47ff5f1 1800following match, see L<C<< (?>pattern) >>>.
c277df42 1801
a0d0e21e 1802=head2 Version 8 Regular Expressions
d74e8afc 1803X<regular expression, version 8> X<regex, version 8> X<regexp, version 8>
a0d0e21e 1804
5a964f20 1805In case you're not familiar with the "regular" Version 8 regex
a0d0e21e 1806routines, here are the pattern-matching rules not described above.
1807
54310121 1808Any single character matches itself, unless it is a I<metacharacter>
a0d0e21e 1809with a special meaning described here or above. You can cause
5a964f20 1810characters that normally function as metacharacters to be interpreted
5f05dabc 1811literally by prefixing them with a "\" (e.g., "\." matches a ".", not any
0d017f4d 1812character; "\\" matches a "\"). This escape mechanism is also required
1813for the character used as the pattern delimiter.
1814
1815A series of characters matches that series of characters in the target
1816string, so the pattern C<blurfl> would match "blurfl" in the target
1817string.
a0d0e21e 1818
1819You can specify a character class, by enclosing a list of characters
5d458dd8 1820in C<[]>, which will match any character from the list. If the
a0d0e21e 1821first character after the "[" is "^", the class matches any character not
14218588 1822in the list. Within a list, the "-" character specifies a
5a964f20 1823range, so that C<a-z> represents all characters between "a" and "z",
8a4f6ac2 1824inclusive. If you want either "-" or "]" itself to be a member of a
1825class, put it at the start of the list (possibly after a "^"), or
1826escape it with a backslash. "-" is also taken literally when it is
1827at the end of the list, just before the closing "]". (The
84850974 1828following all specify the same class of three characters: C<[-az]>,
1829C<[az-]>, and C<[a\-z]>. All are different from C<[a-z]>, which
5d458dd8 1830specifies a class containing twenty-six characters, even on EBCDIC-based
1831character sets.) Also, if you try to use the character
1832classes C<\w>, C<\W>, C<\s>, C<\S>, C<\d>, or C<\D> as endpoints of
1833a range, the "-" is understood literally.
a0d0e21e 1834
8ada0baa 1835Note also that the whole range idea is rather unportable between
1836character sets--and even within character sets they may cause results
1837you probably didn't expect. A sound principle is to use only ranges
0d017f4d 1838that begin from and end at either alphabetics of equal case ([a-e],
8ada0baa 1839[A-E]), or digits ([0-9]). Anything else is unsafe. If in doubt,
1840spell out the character sets in full.
1841
54310121 1842Characters may be specified using a metacharacter syntax much like that
a0d0e21e 1843used in C: "\n" matches a newline, "\t" a tab, "\r" a carriage return,
1844"\f" a form feed, etc. More generally, \I<nnn>, where I<nnn> is a string
5d458dd8 1845of octal digits, matches the character whose coded character set value
1846is I<nnn>. Similarly, \xI<nn>, where I<nn> are hexadecimal digits,
1847matches the character whose numeric value is I<nn>. The expression \cI<x>
1848matches the character control-I<x>. Finally, the "." metacharacter
fb55449c 1849matches any character except "\n" (unless you use C</s>).
a0d0e21e 1850
1851You can specify a series of alternatives for a pattern using "|" to
1852separate them, so that C<fee|fie|foe> will match any of "fee", "fie",
5a964f20 1853or "foe" in the target string (as would C<f(e|i|o)e>). The
a0d0e21e 1854first alternative includes everything from the last pattern delimiter
1855("(", "[", or the beginning of the pattern) up to the first "|", and
1856the last alternative contains everything from the last "|" to the next
14218588 1857pattern delimiter. That's why it's common practice to include
1858alternatives in parentheses: to minimize confusion about where they
a3cb178b 1859start and end.
1860
5a964f20 1861Alternatives are tried from left to right, so the first
a3cb178b 1862alternative found for which the entire expression matches, is the one that
1863is chosen. This means that alternatives are not necessarily greedy. For
628afcb5 1864example: when matching C<foo|foot> against "barefoot", only the "foo"
a3cb178b 1865part will match, as that is the first alternative tried, and it successfully
1866matches the target string. (This might not seem important, but it is
1867important when you are capturing matched text using parentheses.)
1868
5a964f20 1869Also remember that "|" is interpreted as a literal within square brackets,
a3cb178b 1870so if you write C<[fee|fie|foe]> you're really only matching C<[feio|]>.
a0d0e21e 1871
14218588 1872Within a pattern, you may designate subpatterns for later reference
1873by enclosing them in parentheses, and you may refer back to the
1874I<n>th subpattern later in the pattern using the metacharacter
1875\I<n>. Subpatterns are numbered based on the left to right order
1876of their opening parenthesis. A backreference matches whatever
1877actually matched the subpattern in the string being examined, not
1878the rules for that subpattern. Therefore, C<(0|0x)\d*\s\1\d*> will
1879match "0x1234 0x4321", but not "0x1234 01234", because subpattern
18801 matched "0x", even though the rule C<0|0x> could potentially match
1881the leading 0 in the second number.
cb1a09d0 1882
0d017f4d 1883=head2 Warning on \1 Instead of $1
cb1a09d0 1884
5a964f20 1885Some people get too used to writing things like:
cb1a09d0 1886
1887 $pattern =~ s/(\W)/\\\1/g;
1888
1889This is grandfathered for the RHS of a substitute to avoid shocking the
1890B<sed> addicts, but it's a dirty habit to get into. That's because in
d1be9408 1891PerlThink, the righthand side of an C<s///> is a double-quoted string. C<\1> in
cb1a09d0 1892the usual double-quoted string means a control-A. The customary Unix
1893meaning of C<\1> is kludged in for C<s///>. However, if you get into the habit
1894of doing that, you get yourself into trouble if you then add an C</e>
1895modifier.
1896
5a964f20 1897 s/(\d+)/ \1 + 1 /eg; # causes warning under -w
cb1a09d0 1898
1899Or if you try to do
1900
1901 s/(\d+)/\1000/;
1902
1903You can't disambiguate that by saying C<\{1}000>, whereas you can fix it with
14218588 1904C<${1}000>. The operation of interpolation should not be confused
cb1a09d0 1905with the operation of matching a backreference. Certainly they mean two
1906different things on the I<left> side of the C<s///>.
9fa51da4 1907
0d017f4d 1908=head2 Repeated Patterns Matching a Zero-length Substring
c84d73f1 1909
19799a22 1910B<WARNING>: Difficult material (and prose) ahead. This section needs a rewrite.
c84d73f1 1911
1912Regular expressions provide a terse and powerful programming language. As
1913with most other power tools, power comes together with the ability
1914to wreak havoc.
1915
1916A common abuse of this power stems from the ability to make infinite
628afcb5 1917loops using regular expressions, with something as innocuous as:
c84d73f1 1918
1919 'foo' =~ m{ ( o? )* }x;
1920
0d017f4d 1921The C<o?> matches at the beginning of C<'foo'>, and since the position
c84d73f1 1922in the string is not moved by the match, C<o?> would match again and again
527e91da 1923because of the C<*> quantifier. Another common way to create a similar cycle
c84d73f1 1924is with the looping modifier C<//g>:
1925
1926 @matches = ( 'foo' =~ m{ o? }xg );
1927
1928or
1929
1930 print "match: <$&>\n" while 'foo' =~ m{ o? }xg;
1931
1932or the loop implied by split().
1933
1934However, long experience has shown that many programming tasks may
14218588 1935be significantly simplified by using repeated subexpressions that
1936may match zero-length substrings. Here's a simple example being:
c84d73f1 1937
1938 @chars = split //, $string; # // is not magic in split
1939 ($whitewashed = $string) =~ s/()/ /g; # parens avoid magic s// /
1940
9da458fc 1941Thus Perl allows such constructs, by I<forcefully breaking
c84d73f1 1942the infinite loop>. The rules for this are different for lower-level
527e91da 1943loops given by the greedy quantifiers C<*+{}>, and for higher-level
c84d73f1 1944ones like the C</g> modifier or split() operator.
1945
19799a22 1946The lower-level loops are I<interrupted> (that is, the loop is
1947broken) when Perl detects that a repeated expression matched a
1948zero-length substring. Thus
c84d73f1 1949
1950 m{ (?: NON_ZERO_LENGTH | ZERO_LENGTH )* }x;
1951
5d458dd8 1952is made equivalent to
c84d73f1 1953
5d458dd8 1954 m{ (?: NON_ZERO_LENGTH )*
1955 |
1956 (?: ZERO_LENGTH )?
c84d73f1 1957 }x;
1958
1959The higher level-loops preserve an additional state between iterations:
5d458dd8 1960whether the last match was zero-length. To break the loop, the following
c84d73f1 1961match after a zero-length match is prohibited to have a length of zero.
5d458dd8 1962This prohibition interacts with backtracking (see L<"Backtracking">),
c84d73f1 1963and so the I<second best> match is chosen if the I<best> match is of
1964zero length.
1965
19799a22 1966For example:
c84d73f1 1967
1968 $_ = 'bar';
1969 s/\w??/<$&>/g;
1970
20fb949f 1971results in C<< <><b><><a><><r><> >>. At each position of the string the best
5d458dd8 1972match given by non-greedy C<??> is the zero-length match, and the I<second
c84d73f1 1973best> match is what is matched by C<\w>. Thus zero-length matches
1974alternate with one-character-long matches.
1975
5d458dd8 1976Similarly, for repeated C<m/()/g> the second-best match is the match at the
c84d73f1 1977position one notch further in the string.
1978
19799a22 1979The additional state of being I<matched with zero-length> is associated with
c84d73f1 1980the matched string, and is reset by each assignment to pos().
9da458fc 1981Zero-length matches at the end of the previous match are ignored
1982during C<split>.
c84d73f1 1983
0d017f4d 1984=head2 Combining RE Pieces
35a734be 1985
1986Each of the elementary pieces of regular expressions which were described
1987before (such as C<ab> or C<\Z>) could match at most one substring
1988at the given position of the input string. However, in a typical regular
1989expression these elementary pieces are combined into more complicated
1990patterns using combining operators C<ST>, C<S|T>, C<S*> etc
1991(in these examples C<S> and C<T> are regular subexpressions).
1992
1993Such combinations can include alternatives, leading to a problem of choice:
1994if we match a regular expression C<a|ab> against C<"abc">, will it match
1995substring C<"a"> or C<"ab">? One way to describe which substring is
1996actually matched is the concept of backtracking (see L<"Backtracking">).
1997However, this description is too low-level and makes you think
1998in terms of a particular implementation.
1999
2000Another description starts with notions of "better"/"worse". All the
2001substrings which may be matched by the given regular expression can be
2002sorted from the "best" match to the "worst" match, and it is the "best"
2003match which is chosen. This substitutes the question of "what is chosen?"
2004by the question of "which matches are better, and which are worse?".
2005
2006Again, for elementary pieces there is no such question, since at most
2007one match at a given position is possible. This section describes the
2008notion of better/worse for combining operators. In the description
2009below C<S> and C<T> are regular subexpressions.
2010
13a2d996 2011=over 4
35a734be 2012
2013=item C<ST>
2014
2015Consider two possible matches, C<AB> and C<A'B'>, C<A> and C<A'> are
2016substrings which can be matched by C<S>, C<B> and C<B'> are substrings
5d458dd8 2017which can be matched by C<T>.
35a734be 2018
2019If C<A> is better match for C<S> than C<A'>, C<AB> is a better
2020match than C<A'B'>.
2021
2022If C<A> and C<A'> coincide: C<AB> is a better match than C<AB'> if
2023C<B> is better match for C<T> than C<B'>.
2024
2025=item C<S|T>
2026
2027When C<S> can match, it is a better match than when only C<T> can match.
2028
2029Ordering of two matches for C<S> is the same as for C<S>. Similar for
2030two matches for C<T>.
2031
2032=item C<S{REPEAT_COUNT}>
2033
2034Matches as C<SSS...S> (repeated as many times as necessary).
2035
2036=item C<S{min,max}>
2037
2038Matches as C<S{max}|S{max-1}|...|S{min+1}|S{min}>.
2039
2040=item C<S{min,max}?>
2041
2042Matches as C<S{min}|S{min+1}|...|S{max-1}|S{max}>.
2043
2044=item C<S?>, C<S*>, C<S+>
2045
2046Same as C<S{0,1}>, C<S{0,BIG_NUMBER}>, C<S{1,BIG_NUMBER}> respectively.
2047
2048=item C<S??>, C<S*?>, C<S+?>
2049
2050Same as C<S{0,1}?>, C<S{0,BIG_NUMBER}?>, C<S{1,BIG_NUMBER}?> respectively.
2051
c47ff5f1 2052=item C<< (?>S) >>
35a734be 2053
2054Matches the best match for C<S> and only that.
2055
2056=item C<(?=S)>, C<(?<=S)>
2057
2058Only the best match for C<S> is considered. (This is important only if
2059C<S> has capturing parentheses, and backreferences are used somewhere
2060else in the whole regular expression.)
2061
2062=item C<(?!S)>, C<(?<!S)>
2063
2064For this grouping operator there is no need to describe the ordering, since
2065only whether or not C<S> can match is important.
2066
6bda09f9 2067=item C<(??{ EXPR })>, C<(?PARNO)>
35a734be 2068
2069The ordering is the same as for the regular expression which is
6bda09f9 2070the result of EXPR, or the pattern contained by capture buffer PARNO.
35a734be 2071
2072=item C<(?(condition)yes-pattern|no-pattern)>
2073
2074Recall that which of C<yes-pattern> or C<no-pattern> actually matches is
2075already determined. The ordering of the matches is the same as for the
2076chosen subexpression.
2077
2078=back
2079
2080The above recipes describe the ordering of matches I<at a given position>.
2081One more rule is needed to understand how a match is determined for the
2082whole regular expression: a match at an earlier position is always better
2083than a match at a later position.
2084
0d017f4d 2085=head2 Creating Custom RE Engines
c84d73f1 2086
2087Overloaded constants (see L<overload>) provide a simple way to extend
2088the functionality of the RE engine.
2089
2090Suppose that we want to enable a new RE escape-sequence C<\Y|> which
0d017f4d 2091matches at a boundary between whitespace characters and non-whitespace
c84d73f1 2092characters. Note that C<(?=\S)(?<!\S)|(?!\S)(?<=\S)> matches exactly
2093at these positions, so we want to have each C<\Y|> in the place of the
2094more complicated version. We can create a module C<customre> to do
2095this:
2096
2097 package customre;
2098 use overload;
2099
2100 sub import {
2101 shift;
2102 die "No argument to customre::import allowed" if @_;
2103 overload::constant 'qr' => \&convert;
2104 }
2105
2106 sub invalid { die "/$_[0]/: invalid escape '\\$_[1]'"}
2107
580a9fe1 2108 # We must also take care of not escaping the legitimate \\Y|
2109 # sequence, hence the presence of '\\' in the conversion rules.
5d458dd8 2110 my %rules = ( '\\' => '\\\\',
c84d73f1 2111 'Y|' => qr/(?=\S)(?<!\S)|(?!\S)(?<=\S)/ );
2112 sub convert {
2113 my $re = shift;
5d458dd8 2114 $re =~ s{
c84d73f1 2115 \\ ( \\ | Y . )
2116 }
5d458dd8 2117 { $rules{$1} or invalid($re,$1) }sgex;
c84d73f1 2118 return $re;
2119 }
2120
2121Now C<use customre> enables the new escape in constant regular
2122expressions, i.e., those without any runtime variable interpolations.
2123As documented in L<overload>, this conversion will work only over
2124literal parts of regular expressions. For C<\Y|$re\Y|> the variable
2125part of this regular expression needs to be converted explicitly
2126(but only if the special meaning of C<\Y|> should be enabled inside $re):
2127
2128 use customre;
2129 $re = <>;
2130 chomp $re;
2131 $re = customre::convert $re;
2132 /\Y|$re\Y|/;
2133
1f1031fe 2134=head1 PCRE/Python Support
2135
99d59c4d 2136As of Perl 5.10.0, Perl supports several Python/PCRE specific extensions
1f1031fe 2137to the regex syntax. While Perl programmers are encouraged to use the
99d59c4d 2138Perl specific syntax, the following are also accepted:
1f1031fe 2139
2140=over 4
2141
ae5648b3 2142=item C<< (?PE<lt>NAMEE<gt>pattern) >>
1f1031fe 2143
2144Define a named capture buffer. Equivalent to C<< (?<NAME>pattern) >>.
2145
2146=item C<< (?P=NAME) >>
2147
2148Backreference to a named capture buffer. Equivalent to C<< \g{NAME} >>.
2149
2150=item C<< (?P>NAME) >>
2151
2152Subroutine call to a named capture buffer. Equivalent to C<< (?&NAME) >>.
2153
ee9b8eae 2154=back
1f1031fe 2155
19799a22 2156=head1 BUGS
2157
9da458fc 2158This document varies from difficult to understand to completely
2159and utterly opaque. The wandering prose riddled with jargon is
2160hard to fathom in several places.
2161
2162This document needs a rewrite that separates the tutorial content
2163from the reference content.
19799a22 2164
2165=head1 SEE ALSO
9fa51da4 2166
91e0c79e 2167L<perlrequick>.
2168
2169L<perlretut>.
2170
9b599b2a 2171L<perlop/"Regexp Quote-Like Operators">.
2172
1e66bd83 2173L<perlop/"Gory details of parsing quoted constructs">.
2174
14218588 2175L<perlfaq6>.
2176
9b599b2a 2177L<perlfunc/pos>.
2178
2179L<perllocale>.
2180
fb55449c 2181L<perlebcdic>.
2182
14218588 2183I<Mastering Regular Expressions> by Jeffrey Friedl, published
2184by O'Reilly and Associates.