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- =head1 NAME
-
- perlre - Perl regular expressions
-
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
-
- This page describes the syntax of regular expressions in Perl. For a
- description of how to actually I<use> regular expressions in matching
- operations, plus various examples of the same, see C<m//> and C<s///> in
- L<perlop>.
-
- The matching operations can
- have various modifiers, some of which relate to the interpretation of
- the regular expression inside. These are:
-
- i Do case-insensitive pattern matching.
- m Treat string as multiple lines.
- s Treat string as single line.
- x Extend your pattern's legibility with whitespace and comments.
-
- These are usually written as "the C</x> modifier", even though the delimiter
- in question might not actually be a slash. In fact, any of these
- modifiers may also be embedded within the regular expression itself using
- the new C<(?...)> construct. See below.
-
- The C</x> modifier itself needs a little more explanation. It tells
- the regular expression parser to ignore whitespace that is not
- backslashed or within a character class. You can use this to break up
- your regular expression into (slightly) more readable parts. The C<#>
- character is also treated as a metacharacter introducing a comment,
- just as in ordinary Perl code. Taken together, these features go a
- long way towards making Perl 5 a readable language. See the C comment
- deletion code in L<perlop>.
-
- =head2 Regular Expressions
-
- The patterns used in pattern matching are regular expressions such as
- those supplied in the Version 8 regexp routines. (In fact, the
- routines are derived (distantly) from Henry Spencer's freely
- redistributable reimplementation of the V8 routines.)
- See L<Version 8 Regular Expressions> for details.
-
- In particular the following metacharacters have their standard I<egrep>-ish
- meanings:
-
- \ Quote the next metacharacter
- ^ Match the beginning of the line
- . Match any character (except newline)
- $ Match the end of the line (or before newline at the end)
- | Alternation
- () Grouping
- [] Character class
-
- By default, the "^" character is guaranteed to match only at the
- beginning of the string, the "$" character only at the end (or before the
- newline at the end) and Perl does certain optimizations with the
- assumption that the string contains only one line. Embedded newlines
- will not be matched by "^" or "$". You may, however, wish to treat a
- string as a multi-line buffer, such that the "^" will match after any
- newline within the string, and "$" will match before any newline. At the
- cost of a little more overhead, you can do this by using the /m modifier
- on the pattern match operator. (Older programs did this by setting C<$*>,
- but this practice is deprecated in Perl 5.)
-
- To facilitate multi-line substitutions, the "." character never matches a
- newline unless you use the C</s> modifier, which tells Perl to pretend
- the string is a single line--even if it isn't. The C</s> modifier also
- overrides the setting of C<$*>, in case you have some (badly behaved) older
- code that sets it in another module.
-
- The following standard quantifiers are recognized:
-
- * Match 0 or more times
- + Match 1 or more times
- ? Match 1 or 0 times
- {n} Match exactly n times
- {n,} Match at least n times
- {n,m} Match at least n but not more than m times
-
- (If a curly bracket occurs in any other context, it is treated
- as a regular character.) The "*" modifier is equivalent to C<{0,}>, the "+"
- modifier to C<{1,}>, and the "?" modifier to C<{0,1}>. n and m are limited
- to integral values less than 65536.
-
- By default, a quantified subpattern is "greedy", that is, it will match as
- many times as possible without causing the rest of the pattern not to match.
- The standard quantifiers are all "greedy", in that they match as many
- occurrences as possible (given a particular starting location) without
- causing the pattern to fail. If you want it to match the minimum number
- of times possible, follow the quantifier with a "?" after any of them.
- Note that the meanings don't change, just the "gravity":
-
- *? Match 0 or more times
- +? Match 1 or more times
- ?? Match 0 or 1 time
- {n}? Match exactly n times
- {n,}? Match at least n times
- {n,m}? Match at least n but not more than m times
-
- Since patterns are processed as double quoted strings, the following
- also work:
-
- \t tab
- \n newline
- \r return
- \f form feed
- \a alarm (bell)
- \e escape (think troff)
- \033 octal char (think of a PDP-11)
- \x1B hex char
- \c[ control char
- \l lowercase next char (think vi)
- \u uppercase next char (think vi)
- \L lowercase till \E (think vi)
- \U uppercase till \E (think vi)
- \E end case modification (think vi)
- \Q quote regexp metacharacters till \E
-
- In addition, Perl defines the following:
-
- \w Match a "word" character (alphanumeric plus "_")
- \W Match a non-word character
- \s Match a whitespace character
- \S Match a non-whitespace character
- \d Match a digit character
- \D Match a non-digit character
-
- Note that C<\w> matches a single alphanumeric character, not a whole
- word. To match a word you'd need to say C<\w+>. You may use C<\w>,
- C<\W>, C<\s>, C<\S>, C<\d> and C<\D> within character classes (though not
- as either end of a range).
-
- Perl defines the following zero-width assertions:
-
- \b Match a word boundary
- \B Match a non-(word boundary)
- \A Match only at beginning of string
- \Z Match only at end of string (or before newline at the end)
- \G Match only where previous m//g left off
-
- A word boundary (C<\b>) is defined as a spot between two characters that
- has a C<\w> on one side of it and and a C<\W> on the other side of it (in
- either order), counting the imaginary characters off the beginning and
- end of the string as matching a C<\W>. (Within character classes C<\b>
- represents backspace rather than a word boundary.) The C<\A> and C<\Z> are
- just like "^" and "$" except that they won't match multiple times when the
- C</m> modifier is used, while "^" and "$" will match at every internal line
- boundary. To match the actual end of the string, not ignoring newline,
- you can use C<\Z(?!\n)>.
-
- When the bracketing construct C<( ... )> is used, \<digit> matches the
- digit'th substring. Outside of the pattern, always use "$" instead of "\"
- in front of the digit. (While the \<digit> notation can on rare occasion work
- outside the current pattern, this should not be relied upon. See the
- WARNING below.) The scope of $<digit> (and C<$`>, C<$&>, and C<$'>)
- extends to the end of the enclosing BLOCK or eval string, or to the next
- successful pattern match, whichever comes first. If you want to use
- parentheses to delimit a subpattern (e.g. a set of alternatives) without
- saving it as a subpattern, follow the ( with a ?.
-
- You may have as many parentheses as you wish. If you have more
- than 9 substrings, the variables $10, $11, ... refer to the
- corresponding substring. Within the pattern, \10, \11, etc. refer back
- to substrings if there have been at least that many left parens before
- the backreference. Otherwise (for backward compatibility) \10 is the
- same as \010, a backspace, and \11 the same as \011, a tab. And so
- on. (\1 through \9 are always backreferences.)
-
- C<$+> returns whatever the last bracket match matched. C<$&> returns the
- entire matched string. ($0 used to return the same thing, but not any
- more.) C<$`> returns everything before the matched string. C<$'> returns
- everything after the matched string. Examples:
-
- s/^([^ ]*) *([^ ]*)/$2 $1/; # swap first two words
-
- if (/Time: (..):(..):(..)/) {
- $hours = $1;
- $minutes = $2;
- $seconds = $3;
- }
-
- You will note that all backslashed metacharacters in Perl are
- alphanumeric, such as C<\b>, C<\w>, C<\n>. Unlike some other regular expression
- languages, there are no backslashed symbols that aren't alphanumeric.
- So anything that looks like \\, \(, \), \<, \>, \{, or \} is always
- interpreted as a literal character, not a metacharacter. This makes it
- simple to quote a string that you want to use for a pattern but that
- you are afraid might contain metacharacters. Simply quote all the
- non-alphanumeric characters:
-
- $pattern =~ s/(\W)/\\$1/g;
-
- You can also use the built-in quotemeta() function to do this.
- An even easier way to quote metacharacters right in the match operator
- is to say
-
- /$unquoted\Q$quoted\E$unquoted/
-
- Perl 5 defines a consistent extension syntax for regular expressions.
- The syntax is a pair of parens with a question mark as the first thing
- within the parens (this was a syntax error in Perl 4). The character
- after the question mark gives the function of the extension. Several
- extensions are already supported:
-
- =over 10
-
- =item (?#text)
-
- A comment. The text is ignored. If the C</x> switch is used to enable
- whitespace formatting, a simple C<#> will suffice.
-
- =item (?:regexp)
-
- This groups things like "()" but doesn't make backrefences like "()" does. So
-
- split(/\b(?:a|b|c)\b/)
-
- is like
-
- split(/\b(a|b|c)\b/)
-
- but doesn't spit out extra fields.
-
- =item (?=regexp)
-
- A zero-width positive lookahead assertion. For example, C</\w+(?=\t)/>
- matches a word followed by a tab, without including the tab in C<$&>.
-
- =item (?!regexp)
-
- A zero-width negative lookahead assertion. For example C</foo(?!bar)/>
- matches any occurrence of "foo" that isn't followed by "bar". Note
- however that lookahead and lookbehind are NOT the same thing. You cannot
- use this for lookbehind: C</(?!foo)bar/> will not find an occurrence of
- "bar" that is preceded by something which is not "foo". That's because
- the C<(?!foo)> is just saying that the next thing cannot be "foo"--and
- it's not, it's a "bar", so "foobar" will match. You would have to do
- something like C</(?foo)...bar/> for that. We say "like" because there's
- the case of your "bar" not having three characters before it. You could
- cover that this way: C</(?:(?!foo)...|^..?)bar/>. Sometimes it's still
- easier just to say:
-
- if (/foo/ && $` =~ /bar$/)
-
-
- =item (?imsx)
-
- One or more embedded pattern-match modifiers. This is particularly
- useful for patterns that are specified in a table somewhere, some of
- which want to be case sensitive, and some of which don't. The case
- insensitive ones merely need to include C<(?i)> at the front of the
- pattern. For example:
-
- $pattern = "foobar";
- if ( /$pattern/i )
-
- # more flexible:
-
- $pattern = "(?i)foobar";
- if ( /$pattern/ )
-
- =back
-
- The specific choice of question mark for this and the new minimal
- matching construct was because 1) question mark is pretty rare in older
- regular expressions, and 2) whenever you see one, you should stop
- and "question" exactly what is going on. That's psychology...
-
- =head2 Backtracking
-
- A fundamental feature of regular expression matching involves the notion
- called I<backtracking>. which is used (when needed) by all regular
- expression quantifiers, namely C<*>, C<*?>, C<+>, C<+?>, C<{n,m}>, and
- C<{n,m}?>.
-
- For a regular expression to match, the I<entire> regular expression must
- match, not just part of it. So if the beginning of a pattern containing a
- quantifier succeeds in a way that causes later parts in the pattern to
- fail, the matching engine backs up and recalculates the beginning
- part--that's why it's called backtracking.
-
- Here is an example of backtracking: Let's say you want to find the
- word following "foo" in the string "Food is on the foo table.":
-
- $_ = "Food is on the foo table.";
- if ( /\b(foo)\s+(\w+)/i ) {
- print "$2 follows $1.\n";
- }
-
- When the match runs, the first part of the regular expression (C<\b(foo)>)
- finds a possible match right at the beginning of the string, and loads up
- $1 with "Foo". However, as soon as the matching engine sees that there's
- no whitespace following the "Foo" that it had saved in $1, it realizes its
- mistake and starts over again one character after where it had had the
- tentative match. This time it goes all the way until the next occurrence
- of "foo". The complete regular expression matches this time, and you get
- the expected output of "table follows foo."
-
- Sometimes minimal matching can help a lot. Imagine you'd like to match
- everything between "foo" and "bar". Initially, you write something
- like this:
-
- $_ = "The food is under the bar in the barn.";
- if ( /foo(.*)bar/ ) {
- print "got <$1>\n";
- }
-
- Which perhaps unexpectedly yields:
-
- got <d is under the bar in the >
-
- That's because C<.*> was greedy, so you get everything between the
- I<first> "foo" and the I<last> "bar". In this case, it's more effective
- to use minimal matching to make sure you get the text between a "foo"
- and the first "bar" thereafter.
-
- if ( /foo(.*?)bar/ ) { print "got <$1>\n" }
- got <d is under the >
-
- Here's another example: let's say you'd like to match a number at the end
- of a string, and you also want to keep the preceding part the match.
- So you write this:
-
- $_ = "I have 2 numbers: 53147";
- if ( /(.*)(\d*)/ ) { # Wrong!
- print "Beginning is <$1>, number is <$2>.\n";
- }
-
- That won't work at all, because C<.*> was greedy and gobbled up the
- whole string. As C<\d*> can match on an empty string the complete
- regular expression matched successfully.
-
- Beginning is <I have 2: 53147>, number is <>.
-
- Here are some variants, most of which don't work:
-
- $_ = "I have 2 numbers: 53147";
- @pats = qw{
- (.*)(\d*)
- (.*)(\d+)
- (.*?)(\d*)
- (.*?)(\d+)
- (.*)(\d+)$
- (.*?)(\d+)$
- (.*)\b(\d+)$
- (.*\D)(\d+)$
- };
-
- for $pat (@pats) {
- printf "%-12s ", $pat;
- if ( /$pat/ ) {
- print "<$1> <$2>\n";
- } else {
- print "FAIL\n";
- }
- }
-
- That will print out:
-
- (.*)(\d*) <I have 2 numbers: 53147> <>
- (.*)(\d+) <I have 2 numbers: 5314> <7>
- (.*?)(\d*) <> <>
- (.*?)(\d+) <I have > <2>
- (.*)(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: 5314> <7>
- (.*?)(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: > <53147>
- (.*)\b(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: > <53147>
- (.*\D)(\d+)$ <I have 2 numbers: > <53147>
-
- As you see, this can be a bit tricky. It's important to realize that a
- regular expression is merely a set of assertions that gives a definition
- of success. There may be 0, 1, or several different ways that the
- definition might succeed against a particular string. And if there are
- multiple ways it might succeed, you need to understand backtracking in
- order to know which variety of success you will achieve.
-
- When using lookahead assertions and negations, this can all get even
- tricker. Imagine you'd like to find a sequence of nondigits not
- followed by "123". You might try to write that as
-
- $_ = "ABC123";
- if ( /^\D*(?!123)/ ) { # Wrong!
- print "Yup, no 123 in $_\n";
- }
-
- But that isn't going to match; at least, not the way you're hoping. It
- claims that there is no 123 in the string. Here's a clearer picture of
- why it that pattern matches, contrary to popular expectations:
-
- $x = 'ABC123' ;
- $y = 'ABC445' ;
-
- print "1: got $1\n" if $x =~ /^(ABC)(?!123)/ ;
- print "2: got $1\n" if $y =~ /^(ABC)(?!123)/ ;
-
- print "3: got $1\n" if $x =~ /^(\D*)(?!123)/ ;
- print "4: got $1\n" if $y =~ /^(\D*)(?!123)/ ;
-
- This prints
-
- 2: got ABC
- 3: got AB
- 4: got ABC
-
- You might have expected test 3 to fail because it just seems to a more
- general purpose version of test 1. The important difference between
- them is that test 3 contains a quantifier (C<\D*>) and so can use
- backtracking, whereas test 1 will not. What's happening is
- that you've asked "Is it true that at the start of $x, following 0 or more
- nondigits, you have something that's not 123?" If the pattern matcher had
- let C<\D*> expand to "ABC", this would have caused the whole pattern to
- fail.
- The search engine will initially match C<\D*> with "ABC". Then it will
- try to match C<(?!123> with "123" which, of course, fails. But because
- a quantifier (C<\D*>) has been used in the regular expression, the
- search engine can backtrack and retry the match differently
- in the hope of matching the complete regular expression.
-
- Well now,
- the pattern really, I<really> wants to succeed, so it uses the
- standard regexp backoff-and-retry and lets C<\D*> expand to just "AB" this
- time. Now there's indeed something following "AB" that is not
- "123". It's in fact "C123", which suffices.
-
- We can deal with this by using both an assertion and a negation. We'll
- say that the first part in $1 must be followed by a digit, and in fact, it
- must also be followed by something that's not "123". Remember that the
- lookaheads are zero-width expressions--they only look, but don't consume
- any of the string in their match. So rewriting this way produces what
- you'd expect; that is, case 5 will fail, but case 6 succeeds:
-
- print "5: got $1\n" if $x =~ /^(\D*)(?=\d)(?!123)/ ;
- print "6: got $1\n" if $y =~ /^(\D*)(?=\d)(?!123)/ ;
-
- 6: got ABC
-
- In other words, the two zero-width assertions next to each other work like
- they're ANDed together, just as you'd use any builtin assertions: C</^$/>
- matches only if you're at the beginning of the line AND the end of the
- line simultaneously. The deeper underlying truth is that juxtaposition in
- regular expressions always means AND, except when you write an explicit OR
- using the vertical bar. C</ab/> means match "a" AND (then) match "b",
- although the attempted matches are made at different positions because "a"
- is not a zero-width assertion, but a one-width assertion.
-
- One warning: particularly complicated regular expressions can take
- exponential time to solve due to the immense number of possible ways they
- can use backtracking to try match. For example this will take a very long
- time to run
-
- /((a{0,5}){0,5}){0,5}/
-
- And if you used C<*>'s instead of limiting it to 0 through 5 matches, then
- it would take literally forever--or until you ran out of stack space.
-
- =head2 Version 8 Regular Expressions
-
- In case you're not familiar with the "regular" Version 8 regexp
- routines, here are the pattern-matching rules not described above.
-
- Any single character matches itself, unless it is a I<metacharacter>
- with a special meaning described here or above. You can cause
- characters which normally function as metacharacters to be interpreted
- literally by prefixing them with a "\" (e.g. "\." matches a ".", not any
- character; "\\" matches a "\"). A series of characters matches that
- series of characters in the target string, so the pattern C<blurfl>
- would match "blurfl" in the target string.
-
- You can specify a character class, by enclosing a list of characters
- in C<[]>, which will match any one of the characters in the list. If the
- first character after the "[" is "^", the class matches any character not
- in the list. Within a list, the "-" character is used to specify a
- range, so that C<a-z> represents all the characters between "a" and "z",
- inclusive.
-
- Characters may be specified using a metacharacter syntax much like that
- used in C: "\n" matches a newline, "\t" a tab, "\r" a carriage return,
- "\f" a form feed, etc. More generally, \I<nnn>, where I<nnn> is a string
- of octal digits, matches the character whose ASCII value is I<nnn>.
- Similarly, \xI<nn>, where I<nn> are hexidecimal digits, matches the
- character whose ASCII value is I<nn>. The expression \cI<x> matches the
- ASCII character control-I<x>. Finally, the "." metacharacter matches any
- character except "\n" (unless you use C</s>).
-
- You can specify a series of alternatives for a pattern using "|" to
- separate them, so that C<fee|fie|foe> will match any of "fee", "fie",
- or "foe" in the target string (as would C<f(e|i|o)e>). Note that the
- first alternative includes everything from the last pattern delimiter
- ("(", "[", or the beginning of the pattern) up to the first "|", and
- the last alternative contains everything from the last "|" to the next
- pattern delimiter. For this reason, it's common practice to include
- alternatives in parentheses, to minimize confusion about where they
- start and end. Note however that "|" is interpreted as a literal with
- square brackets, so if you write C<[fee|fie|foe]> you're really only
- matching C<[feio|]>.
-
- Within a pattern, you may designate subpatterns for later reference by
- enclosing them in parentheses, and you may refer back to the I<n>th
- subpattern later in the pattern using the metacharacter \I<n>.
- Subpatterns are numbered based on the left to right order of their
- opening parenthesis. Note that a backreference matches whatever
- actually matched the subpattern in the string being examined, not the
- rules for that subpattern. Therefore, C<(0|0x)\d*\s\1\d*> will
- match "0x1234 0x4321",but not "0x1234 01234", since subpattern 1
- actually matched "0x", even though the rule C<0|0x> could
- potentially match the leading 0 in the second number.
-
- =head2 WARNING on \1 vs $1
-
- Some people get too used to writing things like
-
- $pattern =~ s/(\W)/\\\1/g;
-
- This is grandfathered for the RHS of a substitute to avoid shocking the
- B<sed> addicts, but it's a dirty habit to get into. That's because in
- PerlThink, the right-hand side of a C<s///> is a double-quoted string. C<\1> in
- the usual double-quoted string means a control-A. The customary Unix
- meaning of C<\1> is kludged in for C<s///>. However, if you get into the habit
- of doing that, you get yourself into trouble if you then add an C</e>
- modifier.
-
- s/(\d+)/ \1 + 1 /eg;
-
- Or if you try to do
-
- s/(\d+)/\1000/;
-
- You can't disambiguate that by saying C<\{1}000>, whereas you can fix it with
- C<${1}000>. Basically, the operation of interpolation should not be confused
- with the operation of matching a backreference. Certainly they mean two
- different things on the I<left> side of the C<s///>.
-