2007-11-07 18:26:11 +00:00
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Copyright 2006-2007 John Maddock.
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Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0.
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(See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
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http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt).
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]
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2007-06-08 09:13:34 +00:00
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[section:perl_syntax Perl Regular Expression Syntax]
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[h3 Synopsis]
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The Perl regular expression syntax is based on that used by the
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programming language Perl . Perl regular expressions are the
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default behavior in Boost.Regex or you can pass the flag `perl` to the
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[basic_regex] constructor, for example:
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// e1 is a case sensitive Perl regular expression:
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// since Perl is the default option there's no need to explicitly specify the syntax used here:
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boost::regex e1(my_expression);
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// e2 a case insensitive Perl regular expression:
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boost::regex e2(my_expression, boost::regex::perl|boost::regex::icase);
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[h3 Perl Regular Expression Syntax]
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In Perl regular expressions, all characters match themselves except for the
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following special characters:
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[pre .\[{()\\\*+?|^$]
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[h4 Wildcard]
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The single character '.' when used outside of a character set will match
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any single character except:
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* The NULL character when the [link boost_regex.ref.match_flag_type flag
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`match_not_dot_null`] is passed to the matching algorithms.
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* The newline character when the [link boost_regex.ref.match_flag_type
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flag `match_not_dot_newline`] is passed to
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the matching algorithms.
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[h4 Anchors]
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A '^' character shall match the start of a line.
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A '$' character shall match the end of a line.
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[h4 Marked sub-expressions]
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A section beginning `(` and ending `)` acts as a marked sub-expression.
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Whatever matched the sub-expression is split out in a separate field by
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the matching algorithms. Marked sub-expressions can also repeated, or
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referred to by a back-reference.
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[h4 Non-marking grouping]
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A marked sub-expression is useful to lexically group part of a regular
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expression, but has the side-effect of spitting out an extra field in
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the result. As an alternative you can lexically group part of a
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regular expression, without generating a marked sub-expression by using
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`(?:` and `)` , for example `(?:ab)+` will repeat `ab` without splitting
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out any separate sub-expressions.
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[h4 Repeats]
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Any atom (a single character, a marked sub-expression, or a character class)
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can be repeated with the `*`, `+`, `?`, and `{}` operators.
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The `*` operator will match the preceding atom zero or more times,
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for example the expression `a*b` will match any of the following:
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b
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ab
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aaaaaaaab
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The `+` operator will match the preceding atom one or more times, for
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example the expression `a+b` will match any of the following:
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ab
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aaaaaaaab
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But will not match:
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b
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The `?` operator will match the preceding atom zero or one times, for
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example the expression ca?b will match any of the following:
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cb
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cab
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But will not match:
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caab
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An atom can also be repeated with a bounded repeat:
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`a{n}` Matches 'a' repeated exactly n times.
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`a{n,}` Matches 'a' repeated n or more times.
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`a{n, m}` Matches 'a' repeated between n and m times inclusive.
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For example:
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[pre ^a{2,3}$]
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Will match either of:
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aa
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aaa
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But neither of:
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a
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aaaa
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It is an error to use a repeat operator, if the preceding construct can not
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be repeated, for example:
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a(*)
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Will raise an error, as there is nothing for the `*` operator to be applied to.
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[h4 Non greedy repeats]
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The normal repeat operators are "greedy", that is to say they will consume as
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much input as possible. There are non-greedy versions available that will
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consume as little input as possible while still producing a match.
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`*?` Matches the previous atom zero or more times, while consuming as little
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input as possible.
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`+?` Matches the previous atom one or more times, while consuming as
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little input as possible.
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`??` Matches the previous atom zero or one times, while consuming
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as little input as possible.
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`{n,}?` Matches the previous atom n or more times, while consuming as
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little input as possible.
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`{n,m}?` Matches the previous atom between n and m times, while
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consuming as little input as possible.
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2009-04-23 09:51:31 +00:00
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[h4 Pocessive repeats]
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By default when a repeated patten does not match then the engine will backtrack until
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a match is found. However, this behaviour can sometime be undesireable so there are
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also "pocessive" repeats: these match as much as possible and do not then allow
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backtracking if the rest of the expression fails to match.
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`*+` Matches the previous atom zero or more times, while giving nothing back.
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`++` Matches the previous atom one or more times, while giving nothing back.
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`?+` Matches the previous atom zero or one times, while giving nothing back.
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`{n,}+` Matches the previous atom n or more times, while giving nothing back.
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`{n,m}+` Matches the previous atom between n and m times, while giving nothing back.
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2007-06-08 09:13:34 +00:00
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[h4 Back references]
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An escape character followed by a digit /n/, where /n/ is in the range 1-9,
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matches the same string that was matched by sub-expression /n/. For example
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the expression:
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[pre ^(a\*).\*\\1$]
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Will match the string:
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aaabbaaa
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But not the string:
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aaabba
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[h4 Alternation]
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The `|` operator will match either of its arguments, so for example:
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`abc|def` will match either "abc" or "def".
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Parenthesis can be used to group alternations, for example: `ab(d|ef)`
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will match either of "abd" or "abef".
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Empty alternatives are not allowed (these are almost always a mistake), but
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if you really want an empty alternative use `(?:)` as a placeholder, for example:
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`|abc` is not a valid expression, but
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`(?:)|abc` is and is equivalent, also the expression:
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`(?:abc)??` has exactly the same effect.
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[h4 Character sets]
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A character set is a bracket-expression starting with `[` and ending with `]`,
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it defines a set of characters, and matches any single character that is a
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member of that set.
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A bracket expression may contain any combination of the following:
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[h5 Single characters]
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For example `[abc]`, will match any of the characters 'a', 'b', or 'c'.
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[h5 Character ranges]
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For example `[a-c]` will match any single character in the range 'a' to 'c'.
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By default, for Perl regular expressions, a character x is within the
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range y to z, if the code point of the character lies within the codepoints of
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the endpoints of the range. Alternatively, if you set the
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[link boost_regex.ref.syntax_option_type.syntax_option_type_perl `collate` flag]
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when constructing the regular expression, then ranges are locale sensitive.
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[h5 Negation]
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If the bracket-expression begins with the ^ character, then it matches the
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complement of the characters it contains, for example `[^a-c]` matches
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any character that is not in the range `a-c`.
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[h5 Character classes]
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An expression of the form `[[:name:]]` matches the named character class
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"name", for example `[[:lower:]]` matches any lower case character.
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See [link boost_regex.syntax.character_classes character class names].
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[h5 Collating Elements]
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An expression of the form `[[.col.]` matches the collating element /col/.
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A collating element is any single character, or any sequence of characters
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that collates as a single unit. Collating elements may also be used
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as the end point of a range, for example: `[[.ae.]-c]` matches the
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character sequence "ae", plus any single character in the range "ae"-c,
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assuming that "ae" is treated as a single collating element in the current locale.
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As an extension, a collating element may also be specified via it's
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[link boost_regex.syntax.collating_names symbolic name], for example:
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[[.NUL.]]
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matches a `\0` character.
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[h5 Equivalence classes]
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An expression of the form `[[=col=]]`, matches any character or collating element
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whose primary sort key is the same as that for collating element /col/, as with
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collating elements the name /col/ may be a
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[link boost_regex.syntax.collating_names symbolic name]. A primary sort key is
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one that ignores case, accentation, or locale-specific tailorings; so for
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example `[[=a=]]` matches any of the characters:
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a, '''À''', '''Á''', '''Â''',
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'''Ã''', '''Ä''', '''Å''', A, '''à''', '''á''',
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'''â''', '''ã''', '''ä''' and '''å'''.
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Unfortunately implementation of this is reliant on the platform's collation
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and localisation support; this feature can not be relied upon to work portably
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across all platforms, or even all locales on one platform.
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[h5 Escaped Characters]
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All the escape sequences that match a single character, or a single character
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class are permitted within a character class definition. For example
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`[\[\]]` would match either of `[` or `]` while `[\W\d]` would match any character
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that is either a "digit", /or/ is /not/ a "word" character.
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[h5 Combinations]
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All of the above can be combined in one character set declaration, for example:
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`[[:digit:]a-c[.NUL.]]`.
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[h4 Escapes]
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Any special character preceded by an escape shall match itself.
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The following escape sequences are all synonyms for single characters:
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[table
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[[Escape][Character]]
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[[`\a`][`\a`]]
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[[`\e`][`0x1B`]]
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[[`\f`][`\f`]]
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[[`\n`][`\n`]]
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[[`\r`][`\r`]]
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[[`\t`][`\t`]]
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[[`\v `][`\v`]]
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[[`\b`][`\b` (but only inside a character class declaration).]]
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[[`\cX`][An ASCII escape sequence - the character whose code point is X % 32]]
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[[`\xdd`][A hexadecimal escape sequence - matches the single character whose
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code point is 0xdd.]]
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[[`\x{dddd}`][A hexadecimal escape sequence - matches the single character whose
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code point is 0xdddd.]]
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[[`\0ddd`][An octal escape sequence - matches the single character whose
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code point is 0ddd.]]
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[[`\N{name}`][Matches the single character which has the
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[link boost_regex.syntax.collating_names symbolic name] /name/.
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For example `\N{newline}` matches the single character \\n.]]
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]
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[h5 "Single character" character classes:]
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Any escaped character /x/, if /x/ is the name of a character class shall
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match any character that is a member of that class, and any
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escaped character /X/, if /x/ is the name of a character class, shall
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match any character not in that class.
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The following are supported by default:
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[table
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[[Escape sequence][Equivalent to]]
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[[`\d`][`[[:digit:]]`]]
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[[`\l`][`[[:lower:]]`]]
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[[`\s`][`[[:space:]]`]]
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[[`\u`][`[[:upper:]]`]]
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[[`\w`][`[[:word:]]`]]
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[[`\h`][Horizontal whitespace]]
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[[`\v`][Vertical whitespace]]
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[[`\D`][`[^[:digit:]]`]]
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[[`\L`][`[^[:lower:]]`]]
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[[`\S`][`[^[:space:]]`]]
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[[`\U`][`[^[:upper:]]`]]
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[[`\W`][`[^[:word:]]`]]
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[[`\H`][Not Horizontal whitespace]]
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[[`\V`][Not Vertical whitespace]]
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]
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[h5 Character Properties]
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The character property names in the following table are all equivalent
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to the [link boost_regex.syntax.character_classes names used in character classes].
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[table
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[[Form][Description][Equivalent character set form]]
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[[`\pX`][Matches any character that has the property X.][`[[:X:]]`]]
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[[`\p{Name}`][Matches any character that has the property Name.][`[[:Name:]]`]]
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[[`\PX`][Matches any character that does not have the property X.][`[^[:X:]]`]]
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[[`\P{Name}`][Matches any character that does not have the property Name.][`[^[:Name:]]`]]
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]
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For example `\pd` matches any "digit" character, as does `\p{digit}`.
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[h5 Word Boundaries]
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The following escape sequences match the boundaries of words:
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`\<` Matches the start of a word.
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`\>` Matches the end of a word.
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`\b` Matches a word boundary (the start or end of a word).
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`\B` Matches only when not at a word boundary.
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[h5 Buffer boundaries]
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The following match only at buffer boundaries: a "buffer" in this
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context is the whole of the input text that is being matched against
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(note that ^ and $ may match embedded newlines within the text).
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\\\` Matches at the start of a buffer only.
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\\' Matches at the end of a buffer only.
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\\A Matches at the start of a buffer only (the same as \\\`).
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\\z Matches at the end of a buffer only (the same as \\').
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\\Z Matches an optional sequence of newlines at the end of a buffer:
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equivalent to the regular expression `\n*\z`
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[h5 Continuation Escape]
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The sequence `\G` matches only at the end of the last match found, or at
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the start of the text being matched if no previous match was found.
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This escape useful if you're iterating over the matches contained within a
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text, and you want each subsequence match to start where the last one ended.
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[h5 Quoting escape]
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The escape sequence `\Q` begins a "quoted sequence": all the subsequent characters
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are treated as literals, until either the end of the regular expression or \\E
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is found. For example the expression: `\Q\*+\Ea+` would match either of:
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\*+a
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\*+aaa
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[h5 Unicode escapes]
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`\C` Matches a single code point: in Boost regex this has exactly the
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same effect as a "." operator.
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`\X` Matches a combining character sequence: that is any non-combining
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character followed by a sequence of zero or more combining characters.
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[h5 Any other escape]
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Any other escape sequence matches the character that is escaped, for example
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\\@ matches a literal '@'.
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[h4 Perl Extended Patterns]
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Perl-specific extensions to the regular expression syntax all start with `(?`.
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[h5 Comments]
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`(?# ... )` is treated as a comment, it's contents are ignored.
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[h5 Modifiers]
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`(?imsx-imsx ... )` alters which of the perl modifiers are in effect within
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the pattern, changes take effect from the point that the block is first seen
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and extend to any enclosing `)`. Letters before a '-' turn that perl
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modifier on, letters afterward, turn it off.
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`(?imsx-imsx:pattern)` applies the specified modifiers to pattern only.
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[h5 Non-marking groups]
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`(?:pattern)` lexically groups pattern, without generating an additional
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sub-expression.
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[h5 Lookahead]
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`(?=pattern)` consumes zero characters, only if pattern matches.
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`(?!pattern)` consumes zero characters, only if pattern does not match.
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Lookahead is typically used to create the logical AND of two regular
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expressions, for example if a password must contain a lower case letter,
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an upper case letter, a punctuation symbol, and be at least 6 characters long,
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then the expression:
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(?=.*[[:lower:]])(?=.*[[:upper:]])(?=.*[[:punct:]]).{6,}
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could be used to validate the password.
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[h5 Lookbehind]
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`(?<=pattern)` consumes zero characters, only if pattern could be matched
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against the characters preceding the current position (pattern must be
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of fixed length).
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`(?<!pattern)` consumes zero characters, only if pattern could not be
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matched against the characters preceding the current position (pattern must
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be of fixed length).
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[h5 Independent sub-expressions]
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`(?>pattern)` /pattern/ is matched independently of the surrounding patterns,
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the expression will never backtrack into /pattern/. Independent sub-expressions
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are typically used to improve performance; only the best possible match
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for pattern will be considered, if this doesn't allow the expression as a
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whole to match then no match is found at all.
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[h5 Conditional Expressions]
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`(?(condition)yes-pattern|no-pattern)` attempts to match /yes-pattern/ if
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the /condition/ is true, otherwise attempts to match /no-pattern/.
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`(?(condition)yes-pattern)` attempts to match /yes-pattern/ if the /condition/
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is true, otherwise fails.
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/condition/ may be either a forward lookahead assert, or the index of
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a marked sub-expression (the condition becomes true if the sub-expression
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has been matched).
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[h4 Operator precedence]
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The order of precedence for of operators is as follows:
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# Collation-related bracket symbols `[==] [::] [..]`
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# Escaped characters `\`
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# Character set (bracket expression) `[]`
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# Grouping `()`
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|
# Single-character-ERE duplication `* + ? {m,n}`
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|
# Concatenation
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|
# Anchoring ^$
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# Alternation |
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[h3 What gets matched]
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If you view the regular expression as a directed (possibly cyclic)
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|
graph, then the best match found is the first match found by a
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|
depth-first-search performed on that graph, while matching the input text.
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Alternatively:
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|
The best match found is the
|
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[link boost_regex.syntax.leftmost_longest_rule leftmost match],
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|
with individual elements matched as follows;
|
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|
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|
[table
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|
[[Construct][What gets matched]]
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|
[[`AtomA AtomB`][Locates the best match for /AtomA/ that has a following match for /AtomB/.]]
|
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|
[[`Expression1 | Expression2`][If /Expresion1/ can be matched then returns that match,
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|
otherwise attempts to match /Expression2/.]]
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|
[[`S{N}`][Matches /S/ repeated exactly N times.]]
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|
[[`S{N,M}`][Matches S repeated between N and M times, and as many times as possible.]]
|
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|
[[`S{N,M}?`][Matches S repeated between N and M times, and as few times as possible.]]
|
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|
[[`S?, S*, S+`][The same as `S{0,1}`, `S{0,UINT_MAX}`, `S{1,UINT_MAX}` respectively.]]
|
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|
[[`S??, S*?, S+?`][The same as `S{0,1}?`, `S{0,UINT_MAX}?`, `S{1,UINT_MAX}?` respectively.]]
|
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|
[[`(?>S)`][Matches the best match for /S/, and only that.]]
|
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|
[[`(?=S), (?<=S)`][Matches only the best match for /S/ (this is only
|
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|
|
visible if there are capturing parenthesis within /S/).]]
|
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|
[[`(?!S), (?<!S)`][Considers only whether a match for S exists or not.]]
|
|
|
|
[[`(?(condition)yes-pattern | no-pattern)`][If condition is true, then
|
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|
|
only yes-pattern is considered, otherwise only no-pattern is considered.]]
|
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|
]
|
|
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|
|
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|
|
[h3 Variations]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The [link boost_regex.ref.syntax_option_type.syntax_option_type_perl options `normal`,
|
|
|
|
`ECMAScript`, `JavaScript` and `JScript`] are all synonyms for
|
|
|
|
`perl`.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[h3 Options]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
There are a [link boost_regex.ref.syntax_option_type.syntax_option_type_perl
|
|
|
|
variety of flags] that may be combined with the `perl` option when
|
|
|
|
constructing the regular expression, in particular note that the
|
|
|
|
`newline_alt` option alters the syntax, while the `collate`, `nosubs` and
|
|
|
|
`icase` options modify how the case and locale sensitivity are to be applied.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[h3 Pattern Modifiers]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The perl `smix` modifiers can either be applied using a `(?smix-smix)`
|
|
|
|
prefix to the regular expression, or with one of the
|
|
|
|
[link boost_regex.ref.syntax_option_type.syntax_option_type_perl regex-compile time
|
|
|
|
flags `no_mod_m`, `mod_x`, `mod_s`, and `no_mod_s`].
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[h3 References]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[@http://perldoc.perl.org/perlre.html Perl 5.8].
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
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|
|
[endsect]
|
|
|
|
|
2007-11-07 18:26:11 +00:00
|
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