* Regstart and reganch permit very fast decisions on suitable starting points
* for a match, cutting down the work a lot. Regmust permits fast rejection
* of lines that cannot possibly match. The regmust tests are costly enough
- * that regcomp() supplies a regmust only if the r.e. contains something
+ * that pregcomp() supplies a regmust only if the r.e. contains something
* potentially expensive (at present, the only such thing detected is * or +
* at the start of the r.e., which can involve a lot of backup). Regmlen is
- * supplied because the test in regexec() needs it and regcomp() is computing
+ * supplied because the test in pregexec() needs it and pregcomp() is computing
* it anyway.
* [regmust is now supplied always. The tests that use regmust have a
* heuristic that disables the test if it usually matches.]