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1 nigel 63 <html>
2     <head>
3     <title>pcrepattern specification</title>
4     </head>
5     <body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
6 nigel 75 <h1>pcrepattern man page</h1>
7     <p>
8     Return to the <a href="index.html">PCRE index page</a>.
9     </p>
10 ph10 111 <p>
11 nigel 75 This page is part of the PCRE HTML documentation. It was generated automatically
12     from the original man page. If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the
13     man page, in case the conversion went wrong.
14 ph10 111 <br>
15 nigel 63 <ul>
16     <li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">PCRE REGULAR EXPRESSION DETAILS</a>
17 ph10 227 <li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">NEWLINE CONVENTIONS</a>
18     <li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">CHARACTERS AND METACHARACTERS</a>
19     <li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">BACKSLASH</a>
20     <li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">CIRCUMFLEX AND DOLLAR</a>
21 ph10 518 <li><a name="TOC6" href="#SEC6">FULL STOP (PERIOD, DOT) AND \N</a>
22 ph10 869 <li><a name="TOC7" href="#SEC7">MATCHING A SINGLE DATA UNIT</a>
23 ph10 227 <li><a name="TOC8" href="#SEC8">SQUARE BRACKETS AND CHARACTER CLASSES</a>
24     <li><a name="TOC9" href="#SEC9">POSIX CHARACTER CLASSES</a>
25     <li><a name="TOC10" href="#SEC10">VERTICAL BAR</a>
26     <li><a name="TOC11" href="#SEC11">INTERNAL OPTION SETTING</a>
27     <li><a name="TOC12" href="#SEC12">SUBPATTERNS</a>
28     <li><a name="TOC13" href="#SEC13">DUPLICATE SUBPATTERN NUMBERS</a>
29     <li><a name="TOC14" href="#SEC14">NAMED SUBPATTERNS</a>
30     <li><a name="TOC15" href="#SEC15">REPETITION</a>
31     <li><a name="TOC16" href="#SEC16">ATOMIC GROUPING AND POSSESSIVE QUANTIFIERS</a>
32     <li><a name="TOC17" href="#SEC17">BACK REFERENCES</a>
33     <li><a name="TOC18" href="#SEC18">ASSERTIONS</a>
34     <li><a name="TOC19" href="#SEC19">CONDITIONAL SUBPATTERNS</a>
35     <li><a name="TOC20" href="#SEC20">COMMENTS</a>
36     <li><a name="TOC21" href="#SEC21">RECURSIVE PATTERNS</a>
37     <li><a name="TOC22" href="#SEC22">SUBPATTERNS AS SUBROUTINES</a>
38 ph10 345 <li><a name="TOC23" href="#SEC23">ONIGURUMA SUBROUTINE SYNTAX</a>
39     <li><a name="TOC24" href="#SEC24">CALLOUTS</a>
40     <li><a name="TOC25" href="#SEC25">BACKTRACKING CONTROL</a>
41     <li><a name="TOC26" href="#SEC26">SEE ALSO</a>
42     <li><a name="TOC27" href="#SEC27">AUTHOR</a>
43     <li><a name="TOC28" href="#SEC28">REVISION</a>
44 nigel 63 </ul>
45     <br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">PCRE REGULAR EXPRESSION DETAILS</a><br>
46     <P>
47 ph10 208 The syntax and semantics of the regular expressions that are supported by PCRE
48     are described in detail below. There is a quick-reference syntax summary in the
49     <a href="pcresyntax.html"><b>pcresyntax</b></a>
50 ph10 345 page. PCRE tries to match Perl syntax and semantics as closely as it can. PCRE
51     also supports some alternative regular expression syntax (which does not
52     conflict with the Perl syntax) in order to provide some compatibility with
53     regular expressions in Python, .NET, and Oniguruma.
54     </P>
55     <P>
56     Perl's regular expressions are described in its own documentation, and
57 ph10 208 regular expressions in general are covered in a number of books, some of which
58     have copious examples. Jeffrey Friedl's "Mastering Regular Expressions",
59     published by O'Reilly, covers regular expressions in great detail. This
60     description of PCRE's regular expressions is intended as reference material.
61 nigel 63 </P>
62     <P>
63 nigel 75 The original operation of PCRE was on strings of one-byte characters. However,
64 ph10 869 there is now also support for UTF-8 strings in the original library, and a
65     second library that supports 16-bit and UTF-16 character strings. To use these
66     features, PCRE must be built to include appropriate support. When using UTF
67     strings you must either call the compiling function with the PCRE_UTF8 or
68 ph10 903 PCRE_UTF16 option, or the pattern must start with one of these special
69 ph10 869 sequences:
70 ph10 416 <pre>
71     (*UTF8)
72 ph10 903 (*UTF16)
73 ph10 416 </pre>
74 ph10 869 Starting a pattern with such a sequence is equivalent to setting the relevant
75     option. This feature is not Perl-compatible. How setting a UTF mode affects
76 ph10 416 pattern matching is mentioned in several places below. There is also a summary
77 ph10 869 of features in the
78 ph10 678 <a href="pcreunicode.html"><b>pcreunicode</b></a>
79 nigel 63 page.
80     </P>
81     <P>
82 ph10 535 Another special sequence that may appear at the start of a pattern or in
83 ph10 869 combination with (*UTF8) or (*UTF16) is:
84 ph10 535 <pre>
85     (*UCP)
86     </pre>
87     This has the same effect as setting the PCRE_UCP option: it causes sequences
88     such as \d and \w to use Unicode properties to determine character types,
89     instead of recognizing only characters with codes less than 128 via a lookup
90     table.
91     </P>
92     <P>
93 ph10 579 If a pattern starts with (*NO_START_OPT), it has the same effect as setting the
94     PCRE_NO_START_OPTIMIZE option either at compile or matching time. There are
95     also some more of these special sequences that are concerned with the handling
96     of newlines; they are described below.
97     </P>
98     <P>
99 nigel 77 The remainder of this document discusses the patterns that are supported by
100 ph10 869 PCRE when one its main matching functions, <b>pcre_exec()</b> (8-bit) or
101     <b>pcre16_exec()</b> (16-bit), is used. PCRE also has alternative matching
102     functions, <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b> and <b>pcre16_dfa_exec()</b>, which match using
103     a different algorithm that is not Perl-compatible. Some of the features
104     discussed below are not available when DFA matching is used. The advantages and
105     disadvantages of the alternative functions, and how they differ from the normal
106     functions, are discussed in the
107 nigel 77 <a href="pcrematching.html"><b>pcrematching</b></a>
108     page.
109 ph10 567 <a name="newlines"></a></P>
110 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">NEWLINE CONVENTIONS</a><br>
111 nigel 77 <P>
112 ph10 227 PCRE supports five different conventions for indicating line breaks in
113     strings: a single CR (carriage return) character, a single LF (linefeed)
114     character, the two-character sequence CRLF, any of the three preceding, or any
115     Unicode newline sequence. The
116     <a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
117     page has
118     <a href="pcreapi.html#newlines">further discussion</a>
119     about newlines, and shows how to set the newline convention in the
120     <i>options</i> arguments for the compiling and matching functions.
121     </P>
122     <P>
123     It is also possible to specify a newline convention by starting a pattern
124     string with one of the following five sequences:
125     <pre>
126     (*CR) carriage return
127     (*LF) linefeed
128     (*CRLF) carriage return, followed by linefeed
129     (*ANYCRLF) any of the three above
130     (*ANY) all Unicode newline sequences
131     </pre>
132 ph10 869 These override the default and the options given to the compiling function. For
133     example, on a Unix system where LF is the default newline sequence, the pattern
134 ph10 227 <pre>
135     (*CR)a.b
136     </pre>
137     changes the convention to CR. That pattern matches "a\nb" because LF is no
138     longer a newline. Note that these special settings, which are not
139     Perl-compatible, are recognized only at the very start of a pattern, and that
140 ph10 231 they must be in upper case. If more than one of them is present, the last one
141     is used.
142 ph10 227 </P>
143 ph10 231 <P>
144 ph10 518 The newline convention affects the interpretation of the dot metacharacter when
145     PCRE_DOTALL is not set, and also the behaviour of \N. However, it does not
146     affect what the \R escape sequence matches. By default, this is any Unicode
147     newline sequence, for Perl compatibility. However, this can be changed; see the
148     description of \R in the section entitled
149 ph10 231 <a href="#newlineseq">"Newline sequences"</a>
150 ph10 247 below. A change of \R setting can be combined with a change of newline
151     convention.
152 ph10 231 </P>
153 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">CHARACTERS AND METACHARACTERS</a><br>
154     <P>
155 nigel 63 A regular expression is a pattern that is matched against a subject string from
156     left to right. Most characters stand for themselves in a pattern, and match the
157     corresponding characters in the subject. As a trivial example, the pattern
158     <pre>
159     The quick brown fox
160 nigel 75 </pre>
161 nigel 77 matches a portion of a subject string that is identical to itself. When
162     caseless matching is specified (the PCRE_CASELESS option), letters are matched
163 ph10 869 independently of case. In a UTF mode, PCRE always understands the concept of
164 nigel 77 case for characters whose values are less than 128, so caseless matching is
165     always possible. For characters with higher values, the concept of case is
166     supported if PCRE is compiled with Unicode property support, but not otherwise.
167     If you want to use caseless matching for characters 128 and above, you must
168     ensure that PCRE is compiled with Unicode property support as well as with
169 ph10 869 UTF support.
170 nigel 77 </P>
171     <P>
172     The power of regular expressions comes from the ability to include alternatives
173     and repetitions in the pattern. These are encoded in the pattern by the use of
174 nigel 75 <i>metacharacters</i>, which do not stand for themselves but instead are
175 nigel 63 interpreted in some special way.
176     </P>
177     <P>
178 nigel 75 There are two different sets of metacharacters: those that are recognized
179 nigel 63 anywhere in the pattern except within square brackets, and those that are
180 nigel 93 recognized within square brackets. Outside square brackets, the metacharacters
181     are as follows:
182 nigel 63 <pre>
183     \ general escape character with several uses
184     ^ assert start of string (or line, in multiline mode)
185     $ assert end of string (or line, in multiline mode)
186     . match any character except newline (by default)
187     [ start character class definition
188     | start of alternative branch
189     ( start subpattern
190     ) end subpattern
191     ? extends the meaning of (
192     also 0 or 1 quantifier
193     also quantifier minimizer
194     * 0 or more quantifier
195     + 1 or more quantifier
196     also "possessive quantifier"
197     { start min/max quantifier
198 nigel 75 </pre>
199 nigel 63 Part of a pattern that is in square brackets is called a "character class". In
200 nigel 75 a character class the only metacharacters are:
201 nigel 63 <pre>
202     \ general escape character
203     ^ negate the class, but only if the first character
204     - indicates character range
205 nigel 75 [ POSIX character class (only if followed by POSIX syntax)
206 nigel 63 ] terminates the character class
207 nigel 75 </pre>
208     The following sections describe the use of each of the metacharacters.
209 nigel 63 </P>
210 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">BACKSLASH</a><br>
211 nigel 63 <P>
212     The backslash character has several uses. Firstly, if it is followed by a
213 ph10 579 character that is not a number or a letter, it takes away any special meaning
214     that character may have. This use of backslash as an escape character applies
215     both inside and outside character classes.
216 nigel 63 </P>
217     <P>
218     For example, if you want to match a * character, you write \* in the pattern.
219     This escaping action applies whether or not the following character would
220 nigel 75 otherwise be interpreted as a metacharacter, so it is always safe to precede a
221     non-alphanumeric with backslash to specify that it stands for itself. In
222 nigel 63 particular, if you want to match a backslash, you write \\.
223     </P>
224     <P>
225 ph10 869 In a UTF mode, only ASCII numbers and letters have any special meaning after a
226 ph10 579 backslash. All other characters (in particular, those whose codepoints are
227     greater than 127) are treated as literals.
228     </P>
229     <P>
230 ph10 975 If a pattern is compiled with the PCRE_EXTENDED option, white space in the
231 nigel 63 pattern (other than in a character class) and characters between a # outside
232 nigel 91 a character class and the next newline are ignored. An escaping backslash can
233 ph10 975 be used to include a white space or # character as part of the pattern.
234 nigel 63 </P>
235     <P>
236     If you want to remove the special meaning from a sequence of characters, you
237     can do so by putting them between \Q and \E. This is different from Perl in
238     that $ and @ are handled as literals in \Q...\E sequences in PCRE, whereas in
239     Perl, $ and @ cause variable interpolation. Note the following examples:
240     <pre>
241     Pattern PCRE matches Perl matches
242 nigel 75
243     \Qabc$xyz\E abc$xyz abc followed by the contents of $xyz
244 nigel 63 \Qabc\$xyz\E abc\$xyz abc\$xyz
245     \Qabc\E\$\Qxyz\E abc$xyz abc$xyz
246 nigel 75 </pre>
247 nigel 63 The \Q...\E sequence is recognized both inside and outside character classes.
248 ph10 654 An isolated \E that is not preceded by \Q is ignored. If \Q is not followed
249     by \E later in the pattern, the literal interpretation continues to the end of
250     the pattern (that is, \E is assumed at the end). If the isolated \Q is inside
251     a character class, this causes an error, because the character class is not
252     terminated.
253 nigel 75 <a name="digitsafterbackslash"></a></P>
254     <br><b>
255     Non-printing characters
256     </b><br>
257 nigel 63 <P>
258     A second use of backslash provides a way of encoding non-printing characters
259     in patterns in a visible manner. There is no restriction on the appearance of
260     non-printing characters, apart from the binary zero that terminates a pattern,
261 ph10 461 but when a pattern is being prepared by text editing, it is often easier to use
262     one of the following escape sequences than the binary character it represents:
263 nigel 63 <pre>
264     \a alarm, that is, the BEL character (hex 07)
265 ph10 579 \cx "control-x", where x is any ASCII character
266 nigel 63 \e escape (hex 1B)
267 ph10 975 \f form feed (hex 0C)
268 ph10 227 \n linefeed (hex 0A)
269 nigel 63 \r carriage return (hex 0D)
270     \t tab (hex 09)
271 ph10 488 \ddd character with octal code ddd, or back reference
272 nigel 63 \xhh character with hex code hh
273 ph10 836 \x{hhh..} character with hex code hhh.. (non-JavaScript mode)
274     \uhhhh character with hex code hhhh (JavaScript mode only)
275 nigel 75 </pre>
276 nigel 63 The precise effect of \cx is as follows: if x is a lower case letter, it
277     is converted to upper case. Then bit 6 of the character (hex 40) is inverted.
278 ph10 579 Thus \cz becomes hex 1A (z is 7A), but \c{ becomes hex 3B ({ is 7B), while
279     \c; becomes hex 7B (; is 3B). If the byte following \c has a value greater
280     than 127, a compile-time error occurs. This locks out non-ASCII characters in
281 ph10 869 all modes. (When PCRE is compiled in EBCDIC mode, all byte values are valid. A
282     lower case letter is converted to upper case, and then the 0xc0 bits are
283     flipped.)
284 nigel 63 </P>
285     <P>
286 ph10 836 By default, after \x, from zero to two hexadecimal digits are read (letters
287     can be in upper or lower case). Any number of hexadecimal digits may appear
288 ph10 869 between \x{ and }, but the character code is constrained as follows:
289     <pre>
290     8-bit non-UTF mode less than 0x100
291     8-bit UTF-8 mode less than 0x10ffff and a valid codepoint
292     16-bit non-UTF mode less than 0x10000
293     16-bit UTF-16 mode less than 0x10ffff and a valid codepoint
294     </pre>
295 ph10 903 Invalid Unicode codepoints are the range 0xd800 to 0xdfff (the so-called
296 ph10 869 "surrogate" codepoints).
297 nigel 63 </P>
298     <P>
299 ph10 211 If characters other than hexadecimal digits appear between \x{ and }, or if
300     there is no terminating }, this form of escape is not recognized. Instead, the
301     initial \x will be interpreted as a basic hexadecimal escape, with no
302     following digits, giving a character whose value is zero.
303     </P>
304     <P>
305 ph10 836 If the PCRE_JAVASCRIPT_COMPAT option is set, the interpretation of \x is
306     as just described only when it is followed by two hexadecimal digits.
307     Otherwise, it matches a literal "x" character. In JavaScript mode, support for
308     code points greater than 256 is provided by \u, which must be followed by
309     four hexadecimal digits; otherwise it matches a literal "u" character.
310     </P>
311     <P>
312 nigel 63 Characters whose value is less than 256 can be defined by either of the two
313 ph10 836 syntaxes for \x (or by \u in JavaScript mode). There is no difference in the
314     way they are handled. For example, \xdc is exactly the same as \x{dc} (or
315     \u00dc in JavaScript mode).
316 nigel 63 </P>
317     <P>
318 nigel 91 After \0 up to two further octal digits are read. If there are fewer than two
319     digits, just those that are present are used. Thus the sequence \0\x\07
320     specifies two binary zeros followed by a BEL character (code value 7). Make
321     sure you supply two digits after the initial zero if the pattern character that
322     follows is itself an octal digit.
323 nigel 63 </P>
324     <P>
325     The handling of a backslash followed by a digit other than 0 is complicated.
326     Outside a character class, PCRE reads it and any following digits as a decimal
327     number. If the number is less than 10, or if there have been at least that many
328     previous capturing left parentheses in the expression, the entire sequence is
329     taken as a <i>back reference</i>. A description of how this works is given
330 nigel 75 <a href="#backreferences">later,</a>
331     following the discussion of
332     <a href="#subpattern">parenthesized subpatterns.</a>
333 nigel 63 </P>
334     <P>
335     Inside a character class, or if the decimal number is greater than 9 and there
336     have not been that many capturing subpatterns, PCRE re-reads up to three octal
337 nigel 93 digits following the backslash, and uses them to generate a data character. Any
338 ph10 903 subsequent digits stand for themselves. The value of the character is
339 ph10 869 constrained in the same way as characters specified in hexadecimal.
340     For example:
341 nigel 63 <pre>
342     \040 is another way of writing a space
343 nigel 75 \40 is the same, provided there are fewer than 40 previous capturing subpatterns
344 nigel 63 \7 is always a back reference
345 nigel 75 \11 might be a back reference, or another way of writing a tab
346 nigel 63 \011 is always a tab
347     \0113 is a tab followed by the character "3"
348 nigel 75 \113 might be a back reference, otherwise the character with octal code 113
349 ph10 869 \377 might be a back reference, otherwise the value 255 (decimal)
350 nigel 75 \81 is either a back reference, or a binary zero followed by the two characters "8" and "1"
351     </pre>
352 nigel 63 Note that octal values of 100 or greater must not be introduced by a leading
353     zero, because no more than three octal digits are ever read.
354     </P>
355     <P>
356 nigel 91 All the sequences that define a single character value can be used both inside
357 ph10 836 and outside character classes. In addition, inside a character class, \b is
358     interpreted as the backspace character (hex 08).
359 nigel 63 </P>
360 ph10 836 <P>
361     \N is not allowed in a character class. \B, \R, and \X are not special
362     inside a character class. Like other unrecognized escape sequences, they are
363     treated as the literal characters "B", "R", and "X" by default, but cause an
364     error if the PCRE_EXTRA option is set. Outside a character class, these
365     sequences have different meanings.
366     </P>
367 nigel 75 <br><b>
368 ph10 836 Unsupported escape sequences
369     </b><br>
370     <P>
371     In Perl, the sequences \l, \L, \u, and \U are recognized by its string
372     handler and used to modify the case of following characters. By default, PCRE
373     does not support these escape sequences. However, if the PCRE_JAVASCRIPT_COMPAT
374     option is set, \U matches a "U" character, and \u can be used to define a
375     character by code point, as described in the previous section.
376     </P>
377     <br><b>
378 nigel 93 Absolute and relative back references
379     </b><br>
380     <P>
381 ph10 208 The sequence \g followed by an unsigned or a negative number, optionally
382     enclosed in braces, is an absolute or relative back reference. A named back
383     reference can be coded as \g{name}. Back references are discussed
384 nigel 93 <a href="#backreferences">later,</a>
385     following the discussion of
386     <a href="#subpattern">parenthesized subpatterns.</a>
387     </P>
388     <br><b>
389 ph10 345 Absolute and relative subroutine calls
390     </b><br>
391     <P>
392     For compatibility with Oniguruma, the non-Perl syntax \g followed by a name or
393     a number enclosed either in angle brackets or single quotes, is an alternative
394     syntax for referencing a subpattern as a "subroutine". Details are discussed
395     <a href="#onigurumasubroutines">later.</a>
396     Note that \g{...} (Perl syntax) and \g&#60;...&#62; (Oniguruma syntax) are <i>not</i>
397 ph10 461 synonymous. The former is a back reference; the latter is a
398 ph10 454 <a href="#subpatternsassubroutines">subroutine</a>
399     call.
400 ph10 518 <a name="genericchartypes"></a></P>
401 ph10 345 <br><b>
402 nigel 75 Generic character types
403     </b><br>
404 nigel 63 <P>
405 ph10 518 Another use of backslash is for specifying generic character types:
406 nigel 63 <pre>
407     \d any decimal digit
408     \D any character that is not a decimal digit
409 ph10 975 \h any horizontal white space character
410     \H any character that is not a horizontal white space character
411     \s any white space character
412     \S any character that is not a white space character
413     \v any vertical white space character
414     \V any character that is not a vertical white space character
415 nigel 63 \w any "word" character
416     \W any "non-word" character
417 nigel 75 </pre>
418 ph10 535 There is also the single sequence \N, which matches a non-newline character.
419     This is the same as
420 ph10 518 <a href="#fullstopdot">the "." metacharacter</a>
421 ph10 836 when PCRE_DOTALL is not set. Perl also uses \N to match characters by name;
422     PCRE does not support this.
423 nigel 63 </P>
424     <P>
425 ph10 518 Each pair of lower and upper case escape sequences partitions the complete set
426     of characters into two disjoint sets. Any given character matches one, and only
427 ph10 535 one, of each pair. The sequences can appear both inside and outside character
428 nigel 75 classes. They each match one character of the appropriate type. If the current
429 ph10 535 matching point is at the end of the subject string, all of them fail, because
430 nigel 75 there is no character to match.
431 nigel 63 </P>
432     <P>
433     For compatibility with Perl, \s does not match the VT character (code 11).
434     This makes it different from the the POSIX "space" class. The \s characters
435 ph10 182 are HT (9), LF (10), FF (12), CR (13), and space (32). If "use locale;" is
436 nigel 91 included in a Perl script, \s may match the VT character. In PCRE, it never
437 ph10 182 does.
438 nigel 63 </P>
439     <P>
440 ph10 535 A "word" character is an underscore or any character that is a letter or digit.
441     By default, the definition of letters and digits is controlled by PCRE's
442     low-valued character tables, and may vary if locale-specific matching is taking
443     place (see
444     <a href="pcreapi.html#localesupport">"Locale support"</a>
445     in the
446     <a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
447     page). For example, in a French locale such as "fr_FR" in Unix-like systems,
448     or "french" in Windows, some character codes greater than 128 are used for
449     accented letters, and these are then matched by \w. The use of locales with
450     Unicode is discouraged.
451 ph10 182 </P>
452     <P>
453 ph10 869 By default, in a UTF mode, characters with values greater than 128 never match
454 ph10 535 \d, \s, or \w, and always match \D, \S, and \W. These sequences retain
455 ph10 869 their original meanings from before UTF support was available, mainly for
456 ph10 535 efficiency reasons. However, if PCRE is compiled with Unicode property support,
457     and the PCRE_UCP option is set, the behaviour is changed so that Unicode
458     properties are used to determine character types, as follows:
459     <pre>
460     \d any character that \p{Nd} matches (decimal digit)
461     \s any character that \p{Z} matches, plus HT, LF, FF, CR
462     \w any character that \p{L} or \p{N} matches, plus underscore
463     </pre>
464     The upper case escapes match the inverse sets of characters. Note that \d
465     matches only decimal digits, whereas \w matches any Unicode digit, as well as
466     any Unicode letter, and underscore. Note also that PCRE_UCP affects \b, and
467     \B because they are defined in terms of \w and \W. Matching these sequences
468     is noticeably slower when PCRE_UCP is set.
469     </P>
470     <P>
471 ph10 579 The sequences \h, \H, \v, and \V are features that were added to Perl at
472 ph10 572 release 5.10. In contrast to the other sequences, which match only ASCII
473 ph10 869 characters by default, these always match certain high-valued codepoints,
474     whether or not PCRE_UCP is set. The horizontal space characters are:
475 ph10 182 <pre>
476     U+0009 Horizontal tab
477     U+0020 Space
478     U+00A0 Non-break space
479     U+1680 Ogham space mark
480     U+180E Mongolian vowel separator
481     U+2000 En quad
482     U+2001 Em quad
483     U+2002 En space
484     U+2003 Em space
485     U+2004 Three-per-em space
486     U+2005 Four-per-em space
487     U+2006 Six-per-em space
488     U+2007 Figure space
489     U+2008 Punctuation space
490     U+2009 Thin space
491     U+200A Hair space
492     U+202F Narrow no-break space
493     U+205F Medium mathematical space
494     U+3000 Ideographic space
495     </pre>
496     The vertical space characters are:
497     <pre>
498     U+000A Linefeed
499     U+000B Vertical tab
500 ph10 975 U+000C Form feed
501 ph10 182 U+000D Carriage return
502     U+0085 Next line
503     U+2028 Line separator
504     U+2029 Paragraph separator
505 ph10 869 </pre>
506 ph10 903 In 8-bit, non-UTF-8 mode, only the characters with codepoints less than 256 are
507     relevant.
508 ph10 869 <a name="newlineseq"></a></P>
509 nigel 93 <br><b>
510     Newline sequences
511     </b><br>
512     <P>
513 ph10 231 Outside a character class, by default, the escape sequence \R matches any
514 ph10 869 Unicode newline sequence. In 8-bit non-UTF-8 mode \R is equivalent to the
515     following:
516 nigel 93 <pre>
517     (?&#62;\r\n|\n|\x0b|\f|\r|\x85)
518     </pre>
519     This is an example of an "atomic group", details of which are given
520     <a href="#atomicgroup">below.</a>
521     This particular group matches either the two-character sequence CR followed by
522     LF, or one of the single characters LF (linefeed, U+000A), VT (vertical tab,
523 ph10 975 U+000B), FF (form feed, U+000C), CR (carriage return, U+000D), or NEL (next
524 nigel 93 line, U+0085). The two-character sequence is treated as a single unit that
525     cannot be split.
526     </P>
527     <P>
528 ph10 869 In other modes, two additional characters whose codepoints are greater than 255
529 nigel 93 are added: LS (line separator, U+2028) and PS (paragraph separator, U+2029).
530     Unicode character property support is not needed for these characters to be
531     recognized.
532     </P>
533     <P>
534 ph10 231 It is possible to restrict \R to match only CR, LF, or CRLF (instead of the
535     complete set of Unicode line endings) by setting the option PCRE_BSR_ANYCRLF
536 ph10 247 either at compile time or when the pattern is matched. (BSR is an abbrevation
537     for "backslash R".) This can be made the default when PCRE is built; if this is
538     the case, the other behaviour can be requested via the PCRE_BSR_UNICODE option.
539     It is also possible to specify these settings by starting a pattern string with
540     one of the following sequences:
541 ph10 231 <pre>
542     (*BSR_ANYCRLF) CR, LF, or CRLF only
543     (*BSR_UNICODE) any Unicode newline sequence
544     </pre>
545 ph10 869 These override the default and the options given to the compiling function, but
546     they can themselves be overridden by options given to a matching function. Note
547     that these special settings, which are not Perl-compatible, are recognized only
548     at the very start of a pattern, and that they must be in upper case. If more
549     than one of them is present, the last one is used. They can be combined with a
550     change of newline convention; for example, a pattern can start with:
551 ph10 247 <pre>
552     (*ANY)(*BSR_ANYCRLF)
553     </pre>
554 ph10 869 They can also be combined with the (*UTF8), (*UTF16), or (*UCP) special
555     sequences. Inside a character class, \R is treated as an unrecognized escape
556     sequence, and so matches the letter "R" by default, but causes an error if
557     PCRE_EXTRA is set.
558 nigel 75 <a name="uniextseq"></a></P>
559     <br><b>
560     Unicode character properties
561     </b><br>
562     <P>
563     When PCRE is built with Unicode character property support, three additional
564 ph10 185 escape sequences that match characters with specific properties are available.
565 ph10 869 When in 8-bit non-UTF-8 mode, these sequences are of course limited to testing
566 ph10 185 characters whose codepoints are less than 256, but they do work in this mode.
567     The extra escape sequences are:
568 nigel 75 <pre>
569 nigel 87 \p{<i>xx</i>} a character with the <i>xx</i> property
570     \P{<i>xx</i>} a character without the <i>xx</i> property
571     \X an extended Unicode sequence
572 nigel 75 </pre>
573 nigel 87 The property names represented by <i>xx</i> above are limited to the Unicode
574 ph10 518 script names, the general category properties, "Any", which matches any
575     character (including newline), and some special PCRE properties (described
576 ph10 535 in the
577 ph10 518 <a href="#extraprops">next section).</a>
578     Other Perl properties such as "InMusicalSymbols" are not currently supported by
579     PCRE. Note that \P{Any} does not match any characters, so always causes a
580     match failure.
581 nigel 63 </P>
582     <P>
583 nigel 87 Sets of Unicode characters are defined as belonging to certain scripts. A
584     character from one of these sets can be matched using a script name. For
585     example:
586 nigel 75 <pre>
587 nigel 87 \p{Greek}
588     \P{Han}
589     </pre>
590     Those that are not part of an identified script are lumped together as
591     "Common". The current list of scripts is:
592     </P>
593     <P>
594     Arabic,
595     Armenian,
596 ph10 507 Avestan,
597 nigel 93 Balinese,
598 ph10 507 Bamum,
599 ph10 954 Batak,
600 nigel 87 Bengali,
601     Bopomofo,
602 ph10 954 Brahmi,
603 nigel 87 Braille,
604     Buginese,
605     Buhid,
606     Canadian_Aboriginal,
607 ph10 507 Carian,
608 ph10 954 Chakma,
609 ph10 507 Cham,
610 nigel 87 Cherokee,
611     Common,
612     Coptic,
613 nigel 93 Cuneiform,
614 nigel 87 Cypriot,
615     Cyrillic,
616     Deseret,
617     Devanagari,
618 ph10 507 Egyptian_Hieroglyphs,
619 nigel 87 Ethiopic,
620     Georgian,
621     Glagolitic,
622     Gothic,
623     Greek,
624     Gujarati,
625     Gurmukhi,
626     Han,
627     Hangul,
628     Hanunoo,
629     Hebrew,
630     Hiragana,
631 ph10 507 Imperial_Aramaic,
632 nigel 87 Inherited,
633 ph10 507 Inscriptional_Pahlavi,
634     Inscriptional_Parthian,
635     Javanese,
636     Kaithi,
637 nigel 87 Kannada,
638     Katakana,
639 ph10 507 Kayah_Li,
640 nigel 87 Kharoshthi,
641     Khmer,
642     Lao,
643     Latin,
644 ph10 507 Lepcha,
645 nigel 87 Limbu,
646     Linear_B,
647 ph10 507 Lisu,
648     Lycian,
649     Lydian,
650 nigel 87 Malayalam,
651 ph10 954 Mandaic,
652 ph10 507 Meetei_Mayek,
653 ph10 954 Meroitic_Cursive,
654     Meroitic_Hieroglyphs,
655     Miao,
656 nigel 87 Mongolian,
657     Myanmar,
658     New_Tai_Lue,
659 nigel 93 Nko,
660 nigel 87 Ogham,
661     Old_Italic,
662     Old_Persian,
663 ph10 507 Old_South_Arabian,
664     Old_Turkic,
665     Ol_Chiki,
666 nigel 87 Oriya,
667     Osmanya,
668 nigel 93 Phags_Pa,
669     Phoenician,
670 ph10 507 Rejang,
671 nigel 87 Runic,
672 ph10 507 Samaritan,
673     Saurashtra,
674 ph10 954 Sharada,
675 nigel 87 Shavian,
676     Sinhala,
677 ph10 954 Sora_Sompeng,
678 ph10 507 Sundanese,
679 nigel 87 Syloti_Nagri,
680     Syriac,
681     Tagalog,
682     Tagbanwa,
683     Tai_Le,
684 ph10 507 Tai_Tham,
685     Tai_Viet,
686 ph10 954 Takri,
687 nigel 87 Tamil,
688     Telugu,
689     Thaana,
690     Thai,
691     Tibetan,
692     Tifinagh,
693     Ugaritic,
694 ph10 507 Vai,
695 nigel 87 Yi.
696     </P>
697     <P>
698 ph10 518 Each character has exactly one Unicode general category property, specified by
699     a two-letter abbreviation. For compatibility with Perl, negation can be
700     specified by including a circumflex between the opening brace and the property
701     name. For example, \p{^Lu} is the same as \P{Lu}.
702 nigel 87 </P>
703     <P>
704     If only one letter is specified with \p or \P, it includes all the general
705     category properties that start with that letter. In this case, in the absence
706     of negation, the curly brackets in the escape sequence are optional; these two
707     examples have the same effect:
708     <pre>
709 nigel 75 \p{L}
710     \pL
711     </pre>
712 nigel 87 The following general category property codes are supported:
713 nigel 75 <pre>
714     C Other
715     Cc Control
716     Cf Format
717     Cn Unassigned
718     Co Private use
719     Cs Surrogate
720    
721     L Letter
722     Ll Lower case letter
723     Lm Modifier letter
724     Lo Other letter
725     Lt Title case letter
726     Lu Upper case letter
727    
728     M Mark
729     Mc Spacing mark
730     Me Enclosing mark
731     Mn Non-spacing mark
732    
733     N Number
734     Nd Decimal number
735     Nl Letter number
736     No Other number
737    
738     P Punctuation
739     Pc Connector punctuation
740     Pd Dash punctuation
741     Pe Close punctuation
742     Pf Final punctuation
743     Pi Initial punctuation
744     Po Other punctuation
745     Ps Open punctuation
746    
747     S Symbol
748     Sc Currency symbol
749     Sk Modifier symbol
750     Sm Mathematical symbol
751     So Other symbol
752    
753     Z Separator
754     Zl Line separator
755     Zp Paragraph separator
756     Zs Space separator
757     </pre>
758 nigel 87 The special property L& is also supported: it matches a character that has
759     the Lu, Ll, or Lt property, in other words, a letter that is not classified as
760     a modifier or "other".
761 nigel 75 </P>
762     <P>
763 ph10 211 The Cs (Surrogate) property applies only to characters in the range U+D800 to
764 ph10 869 U+DFFF. Such characters are not valid in Unicode strings and so
765     cannot be tested by PCRE, unless UTF validity checking has been turned off
766     (see the discussion of PCRE_NO_UTF8_CHECK and PCRE_NO_UTF16_CHECK in the
767 ph10 211 <a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
768 ph10 453 page). Perl does not support the Cs property.
769 ph10 211 </P>
770     <P>
771 ph10 453 The long synonyms for property names that Perl supports (such as \p{Letter})
772 nigel 91 are not supported by PCRE, nor is it permitted to prefix any of these
773 nigel 87 properties with "Is".
774     </P>
775     <P>
776     No character that is in the Unicode table has the Cn (unassigned) property.
777     Instead, this property is assumed for any code point that is not in the
778     Unicode table.
779     </P>
780     <P>
781 nigel 75 Specifying caseless matching does not affect these escape sequences. For
782     example, \p{Lu} always matches only upper case letters.
783     </P>
784     <P>
785     The \X escape matches any number of Unicode characters that form an extended
786     Unicode sequence. \X is equivalent to
787     <pre>
788     (?&#62;\PM\pM*)
789     </pre>
790     That is, it matches a character without the "mark" property, followed by zero
791     or more characters with the "mark" property, and treats the sequence as an
792     atomic group
793     <a href="#atomicgroup">(see below).</a>
794     Characters with the "mark" property are typically accents that affect the
795 ph10 185 preceding character. None of them have codepoints less than 256, so in
796 ph10 869 8-bit non-UTF-8 mode \X matches any one character.
797 nigel 75 </P>
798     <P>
799 ph10 654 Note that recent versions of Perl have changed \X to match what Unicode calls
800     an "extended grapheme cluster", which has a more complicated definition.
801     </P>
802     <P>
803 nigel 75 Matching characters by Unicode property is not fast, because PCRE has to search
804     a structure that contains data for over fifteen thousand characters. That is
805     why the traditional escape sequences such as \d and \w do not use Unicode
806 ph10 535 properties in PCRE by default, though you can make them do so by setting the
807 ph10 869 PCRE_UCP option or by starting the pattern with (*UCP).
808 ph10 518 <a name="extraprops"></a></P>
809     <br><b>
810     PCRE's additional properties
811     </b><br>
812     <P>
813 ph10 535 As well as the standard Unicode properties described in the previous
814     section, PCRE supports four more that make it possible to convert traditional
815 ph10 518 escape sequences such as \w and \s and POSIX character classes to use Unicode
816 ph10 535 properties. PCRE uses these non-standard, non-Perl properties internally when
817     PCRE_UCP is set. They are:
818 ph10 518 <pre>
819     Xan Any alphanumeric character
820     Xps Any POSIX space character
821     Xsp Any Perl space character
822     Xwd Any Perl "word" character
823     </pre>
824 ph10 535 Xan matches characters that have either the L (letter) or the N (number)
825 ph10 975 property. Xps matches the characters tab, linefeed, vertical tab, form feed, or
826 ph10 518 carriage return, and any other character that has the Z (separator) property.
827 ph10 535 Xsp is the same as Xps, except that vertical tab is excluded. Xwd matches the
828 ph10 518 same characters as Xan, plus underscore.
829 ph10 172 <a name="resetmatchstart"></a></P>
830     <br><b>
831     Resetting the match start
832     </b><br>
833     <P>
834 ph10 572 The escape sequence \K causes any previously matched characters not to be
835     included in the final matched sequence. For example, the pattern:
836 ph10 172 <pre>
837     foo\Kbar
838     </pre>
839     matches "foobar", but reports that it has matched "bar". This feature is
840     similar to a lookbehind assertion
841     <a href="#lookbehind">(described below).</a>
842     However, in this case, the part of the subject before the real match does not
843     have to be of fixed length, as lookbehind assertions do. The use of \K does
844     not interfere with the setting of
845     <a href="#subpattern">captured substrings.</a>
846     For example, when the pattern
847     <pre>
848     (foo)\Kbar
849     </pre>
850     matches "foobar", the first substring is still set to "foo".
851 ph10 507 </P>
852     <P>
853     Perl documents that the use of \K within assertions is "not well defined". In
854     PCRE, \K is acted upon when it occurs inside positive assertions, but is
855     ignored in negative assertions.
856 nigel 75 <a name="smallassertions"></a></P>
857     <br><b>
858     Simple assertions
859     </b><br>
860     <P>
861 nigel 93 The final use of backslash is for certain simple assertions. An assertion
862 nigel 63 specifies a condition that has to be met at a particular point in a match,
863     without consuming any characters from the subject string. The use of
864 nigel 75 subpatterns for more complicated assertions is described
865     <a href="#bigassertions">below.</a>
866 nigel 91 The backslashed assertions are:
867 nigel 63 <pre>
868     \b matches at a word boundary
869     \B matches when not at a word boundary
870 nigel 93 \A matches at the start of the subject
871     \Z matches at the end of the subject
872     also matches before a newline at the end of the subject
873     \z matches only at the end of the subject
874     \G matches at the first matching position in the subject
875 nigel 75 </pre>
876 ph10 518 Inside a character class, \b has a different meaning; it matches the backspace
877 ph10 535 character. If any other of these assertions appears in a character class, by
878 ph10 518 default it matches the corresponding literal character (for example, \B
879     matches the letter B). However, if the PCRE_EXTRA option is set, an "invalid
880     escape sequence" error is generated instead.
881 nigel 63 </P>
882     <P>
883     A word boundary is a position in the subject string where the current character
884     and the previous character do not both match \w or \W (i.e. one matches
885     \w and the other matches \W), or the start or end of the string if the
886 ph10 869 first or last character matches \w, respectively. In a UTF mode, the meanings
887 ph10 535 of \w and \W can be changed by setting the PCRE_UCP option. When this is
888     done, it also affects \b and \B. Neither PCRE nor Perl has a separate "start
889     of word" or "end of word" metasequence. However, whatever follows \b normally
890     determines which it is. For example, the fragment \ba matches "a" at the start
891     of a word.
892 nigel 63 </P>
893     <P>
894     The \A, \Z, and \z assertions differ from the traditional circumflex and
895 nigel 75 dollar (described in the next section) in that they only ever match at the very
896     start and end of the subject string, whatever options are set. Thus, they are
897     independent of multiline mode. These three assertions are not affected by the
898     PCRE_NOTBOL or PCRE_NOTEOL options, which affect only the behaviour of the
899     circumflex and dollar metacharacters. However, if the <i>startoffset</i>
900     argument of <b>pcre_exec()</b> is non-zero, indicating that matching is to start
901     at a point other than the beginning of the subject, \A can never match. The
902 nigel 91 difference between \Z and \z is that \Z matches before a newline at the end
903     of the string as well as at the very end, whereas \z matches only at the end.
904 nigel 63 </P>
905     <P>
906     The \G assertion is true only when the current matching position is at the
907     start point of the match, as specified by the <i>startoffset</i> argument of
908     <b>pcre_exec()</b>. It differs from \A when the value of <i>startoffset</i> is
909     non-zero. By calling <b>pcre_exec()</b> multiple times with appropriate
910     arguments, you can mimic Perl's /g option, and it is in this kind of
911     implementation where \G can be useful.
912     </P>
913     <P>
914     Note, however, that PCRE's interpretation of \G, as the start of the current
915     match, is subtly different from Perl's, which defines it as the end of the
916     previous match. In Perl, these can be different when the previously matched
917     string was empty. Because PCRE does just one match at a time, it cannot
918     reproduce this behaviour.
919     </P>
920     <P>
921     If all the alternatives of a pattern begin with \G, the expression is anchored
922     to the starting match position, and the "anchored" flag is set in the compiled
923     regular expression.
924     </P>
925 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">CIRCUMFLEX AND DOLLAR</a><br>
926 nigel 63 <P>
927     Outside a character class, in the default matching mode, the circumflex
928 nigel 75 character is an assertion that is true only if the current matching point is
929 nigel 63 at the start of the subject string. If the <i>startoffset</i> argument of
930     <b>pcre_exec()</b> is non-zero, circumflex can never match if the PCRE_MULTILINE
931     option is unset. Inside a character class, circumflex has an entirely different
932 nigel 75 meaning
933     <a href="#characterclass">(see below).</a>
934 nigel 63 </P>
935     <P>
936     Circumflex need not be the first character of the pattern if a number of
937     alternatives are involved, but it should be the first thing in each alternative
938     in which it appears if the pattern is ever to match that branch. If all
939     possible alternatives start with a circumflex, that is, if the pattern is
940     constrained to match only at the start of the subject, it is said to be an
941     "anchored" pattern. (There are also other constructs that can cause a pattern
942     to be anchored.)
943     </P>
944     <P>
945 nigel 75 A dollar character is an assertion that is true only if the current matching
946 nigel 63 point is at the end of the subject string, or immediately before a newline
947 nigel 91 at the end of the string (by default). Dollar need not be the last character of
948     the pattern if a number of alternatives are involved, but it should be the last
949     item in any branch in which it appears. Dollar has no special meaning in a
950     character class.
951 nigel 63 </P>
952     <P>
953     The meaning of dollar can be changed so that it matches only at the very end of
954     the string, by setting the PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY option at compile time. This
955     does not affect the \Z assertion.
956     </P>
957     <P>
958     The meanings of the circumflex and dollar characters are changed if the
959 nigel 91 PCRE_MULTILINE option is set. When this is the case, a circumflex matches
960     immediately after internal newlines as well as at the start of the subject
961     string. It does not match after a newline that ends the string. A dollar
962     matches before any newlines in the string, as well as at the very end, when
963     PCRE_MULTILINE is set. When newline is specified as the two-character
964     sequence CRLF, isolated CR and LF characters do not indicate newlines.
965 nigel 63 </P>
966     <P>
967 nigel 91 For example, the pattern /^abc$/ matches the subject string "def\nabc" (where
968     \n represents a newline) in multiline mode, but not otherwise. Consequently,
969     patterns that are anchored in single line mode because all branches start with
970     ^ are not anchored in multiline mode, and a match for circumflex is possible
971     when the <i>startoffset</i> argument of <b>pcre_exec()</b> is non-zero. The
972     PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY option is ignored if PCRE_MULTILINE is set.
973     </P>
974     <P>
975 nigel 63 Note that the sequences \A, \Z, and \z can be used to match the start and
976     end of the subject in both modes, and if all branches of a pattern start with
977 nigel 91 \A it is always anchored, whether or not PCRE_MULTILINE is set.
978 ph10 518 <a name="fullstopdot"></a></P>
979     <br><a name="SEC6" href="#TOC1">FULL STOP (PERIOD, DOT) AND \N</a><br>
980 nigel 63 <P>
981     Outside a character class, a dot in the pattern matches any one character in
982 nigel 91 the subject string except (by default) a character that signifies the end of a
983 ph10 903 line.
984 nigel 63 </P>
985 nigel 91 <P>
986 nigel 93 When a line ending is defined as a single character, dot never matches that
987     character; when the two-character sequence CRLF is used, dot does not match CR
988     if it is immediately followed by LF, but otherwise it matches all characters
989     (including isolated CRs and LFs). When any Unicode line endings are being
990     recognized, dot does not match CR or LF or any of the other line ending
991     characters.
992     </P>
993     <P>
994 nigel 91 The behaviour of dot with regard to newlines can be changed. If the PCRE_DOTALL
995 nigel 93 option is set, a dot matches any one character, without exception. If the
996     two-character sequence CRLF is present in the subject string, it takes two dots
997     to match it.
998 nigel 91 </P>
999     <P>
1000     The handling of dot is entirely independent of the handling of circumflex and
1001     dollar, the only relationship being that they both involve newlines. Dot has no
1002     special meaning in a character class.
1003     </P>
1004 ph10 518 <P>
1005 ph10 579 The escape sequence \N behaves like a dot, except that it is not affected by
1006 ph10 572 the PCRE_DOTALL option. In other words, it matches any character except one
1007 ph10 836 that signifies the end of a line. Perl also uses \N to match characters by
1008     name; PCRE does not support this.
1009 ph10 518 </P>
1010 ph10 869 <br><a name="SEC7" href="#TOC1">MATCHING A SINGLE DATA UNIT</a><br>
1011 nigel 63 <P>
1012 ph10 869 Outside a character class, the escape sequence \C matches any one data unit,
1013     whether or not a UTF mode is set. In the 8-bit library, one data unit is one
1014     byte; in the 16-bit library it is a 16-bit unit. Unlike a dot, \C always
1015     matches line-ending characters. The feature is provided in Perl in order to
1016     match individual bytes in UTF-8 mode, but it is unclear how it can usefully be
1017     used. Because \C breaks up characters into individual data units, matching one
1018     unit with \C in a UTF mode means that the rest of the string may start with a
1019     malformed UTF character. This has undefined results, because PCRE assumes that
1020     it is dealing with valid UTF strings (and by default it checks this at the
1021 ph10 959 start of processing unless the PCRE_NO_UTF8_CHECK or PCRE_NO_UTF16_CHECK option
1022     is used).
1023 nigel 63 </P>
1024     <P>
1025 nigel 75 PCRE does not allow \C to appear in lookbehind assertions
1026 ph10 836 <a href="#lookbehind">(described below)</a>
1027 ph10 869 in a UTF mode, because this would make it impossible to calculate the length of
1028 nigel 75 the lookbehind.
1029 ph10 738 </P>
1030     <P>
1031 ph10 869 In general, the \C escape sequence is best avoided. However, one
1032     way of using it that avoids the problem of malformed UTF characters is to use a
1033     lookahead to check the length of the next character, as in this pattern, which
1034     could be used with a UTF-8 string (ignore white space and line breaks):
1035 ph10 738 <pre>
1036     (?| (?=[\x00-\x7f])(\C) |
1037     (?=[\x80-\x{7ff}])(\C)(\C) |
1038     (?=[\x{800}-\x{ffff}])(\C)(\C)(\C) |
1039     (?=[\x{10000}-\x{1fffff}])(\C)(\C)(\C)(\C))
1040     </pre>
1041     A group that starts with (?| resets the capturing parentheses numbers in each
1042     alternative (see
1043     <a href="#dupsubpatternnumber">"Duplicate Subpattern Numbers"</a>
1044     below). The assertions at the start of each branch check the next UTF-8
1045     character for values whose encoding uses 1, 2, 3, or 4 bytes, respectively. The
1046     character's individual bytes are then captured by the appropriate number of
1047     groups.
1048 nigel 75 <a name="characterclass"></a></P>
1049 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC8" href="#TOC1">SQUARE BRACKETS AND CHARACTER CLASSES</a><br>
1050 nigel 63 <P>
1051     An opening square bracket introduces a character class, terminated by a closing
1052 ph10 461 square bracket. A closing square bracket on its own is not special by default.
1053     However, if the PCRE_JAVASCRIPT_COMPAT option is set, a lone closing square
1054     bracket causes a compile-time error. If a closing square bracket is required as
1055     a member of the class, it should be the first data character in the class
1056     (after an initial circumflex, if present) or escaped with a backslash.
1057 nigel 63 </P>
1058     <P>
1059 ph10 869 A character class matches a single character in the subject. In a UTF mode, the
1060     character may be more than one data unit long. A matched character must be in
1061     the set of characters defined by the class, unless the first character in the
1062     class definition is a circumflex, in which case the subject character must not
1063     be in the set defined by the class. If a circumflex is actually required as a
1064     member of the class, ensure it is not the first character, or escape it with a
1065 nigel 63 backslash.
1066     </P>
1067     <P>
1068     For example, the character class [aeiou] matches any lower case vowel, while
1069     [^aeiou] matches any character that is not a lower case vowel. Note that a
1070 nigel 75 circumflex is just a convenient notation for specifying the characters that
1071     are in the class by enumerating those that are not. A class that starts with a
1072 ph10 461 circumflex is not an assertion; it still consumes a character from the subject
1073 nigel 75 string, and therefore it fails if the current pointer is at the end of the
1074     string.
1075 nigel 63 </P>
1076     <P>
1077 ph10 869 In UTF-8 (UTF-16) mode, characters with values greater than 255 (0xffff) can be
1078     included in a class as a literal string of data units, or by using the \x{
1079     escaping mechanism.
1080 nigel 63 </P>
1081     <P>
1082     When caseless matching is set, any letters in a class represent both their
1083     upper case and lower case versions, so for example, a caseless [aeiou] matches
1084     "A" as well as "a", and a caseless [^aeiou] does not match "A", whereas a
1085 ph10 869 caseful version would. In a UTF mode, PCRE always understands the concept of
1086 nigel 77 case for characters whose values are less than 128, so caseless matching is
1087     always possible. For characters with higher values, the concept of case is
1088     supported if PCRE is compiled with Unicode property support, but not otherwise.
1089 ph10 869 If you want to use caseless matching in a UTF mode for characters 128 and
1090     above, you must ensure that PCRE is compiled with Unicode property support as
1091     well as with UTF support.
1092 nigel 63 </P>
1093     <P>
1094 nigel 93 Characters that might indicate line breaks are never treated in any special way
1095     when matching character classes, whatever line-ending sequence is in use, and
1096     whatever setting of the PCRE_DOTALL and PCRE_MULTILINE options is used. A class
1097     such as [^a] always matches one of these characters.
1098 nigel 63 </P>
1099     <P>
1100     The minus (hyphen) character can be used to specify a range of characters in a
1101     character class. For example, [d-m] matches any letter between d and m,
1102     inclusive. If a minus character is required in a class, it must be escaped with
1103     a backslash or appear in a position where it cannot be interpreted as
1104     indicating a range, typically as the first or last character in the class.
1105     </P>
1106     <P>
1107     It is not possible to have the literal character "]" as the end character of a
1108     range. A pattern such as [W-]46] is interpreted as a class of two characters
1109     ("W" and "-") followed by a literal string "46]", so it would match "W46]" or
1110     "-46]". However, if the "]" is escaped with a backslash it is interpreted as
1111 nigel 75 the end of range, so [W-\]46] is interpreted as a class containing a range
1112     followed by two other characters. The octal or hexadecimal representation of
1113     "]" can also be used to end a range.
1114 nigel 63 </P>
1115     <P>
1116     Ranges operate in the collating sequence of character values. They can also be
1117 ph10 903 used for characters specified numerically, for example [\000-\037]. Ranges
1118 ph10 869 can include any characters that are valid for the current mode.
1119 nigel 63 </P>
1120     <P>
1121     If a range that includes letters is used when caseless matching is set, it
1122     matches the letters in either case. For example, [W-c] is equivalent to
1123 ph10 869 [][\\^_`wxyzabc], matched caselessly, and in a non-UTF mode, if character
1124 ph10 142 tables for a French locale are in use, [\xc8-\xcb] matches accented E
1125 ph10 869 characters in both cases. In UTF modes, PCRE supports the concept of case for
1126 nigel 75 characters with values greater than 128 only when it is compiled with Unicode
1127     property support.
1128 nigel 63 </P>
1129     <P>
1130 ph10 579 The character escape sequences \d, \D, \h, \H, \p, \P, \s, \S, \v,
1131     \V, \w, and \W may appear in a character class, and add the characters that
1132     they match to the class. For example, [\dABCDEF] matches any hexadecimal
1133 ph10 869 digit. In UTF modes, the PCRE_UCP option affects the meanings of \d, \s, \w
1134 ph10 579 and their upper case partners, just as it does when they appear outside a
1135     character class, as described in the section entitled
1136     <a href="#genericchartypes">"Generic character types"</a>
1137     above. The escape sequence \b has a different meaning inside a character
1138     class; it matches the backspace character. The sequences \B, \N, \R, and \X
1139     are not special inside a character class. Like any other unrecognized escape
1140     sequences, they are treated as the literal characters "B", "N", "R", and "X" by
1141     default, but cause an error if the PCRE_EXTRA option is set.
1142     </P>
1143     <P>
1144     A circumflex can conveniently be used with the upper case character types to
1145 ph10 535 specify a more restricted set of characters than the matching lower case type.
1146 ph10 579 For example, the class [^\W_] matches any letter or digit, but not underscore,
1147     whereas [\w] includes underscore. A positive character class should be read as
1148     "something OR something OR ..." and a negative class as "NOT something AND NOT
1149     something AND NOT ...".
1150 nigel 63 </P>
1151     <P>
1152 nigel 75 The only metacharacters that are recognized in character classes are backslash,
1153     hyphen (only where it can be interpreted as specifying a range), circumflex
1154     (only at the start), opening square bracket (only when it can be interpreted as
1155     introducing a POSIX class name - see the next section), and the terminating
1156     closing square bracket. However, escaping other non-alphanumeric characters
1157     does no harm.
1158 nigel 63 </P>
1159 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC9" href="#TOC1">POSIX CHARACTER CLASSES</a><br>
1160 nigel 63 <P>
1161 nigel 75 Perl supports the POSIX notation for character classes. This uses names
1162 nigel 63 enclosed by [: and :] within the enclosing square brackets. PCRE also supports
1163     this notation. For example,
1164     <pre>
1165     [01[:alpha:]%]
1166 nigel 75 </pre>
1167 nigel 63 matches "0", "1", any alphabetic character, or "%". The supported class names
1168 ph10 535 are:
1169 nigel 63 <pre>
1170     alnum letters and digits
1171     alpha letters
1172     ascii character codes 0 - 127
1173     blank space or tab only
1174     cntrl control characters
1175     digit decimal digits (same as \d)
1176     graph printing characters, excluding space
1177     lower lower case letters
1178     print printing characters, including space
1179 ph10 535 punct printing characters, excluding letters and digits and space
1180 nigel 63 space white space (not quite the same as \s)
1181     upper upper case letters
1182     word "word" characters (same as \w)
1183     xdigit hexadecimal digits
1184 nigel 75 </pre>
1185 nigel 63 The "space" characters are HT (9), LF (10), VT (11), FF (12), CR (13), and
1186     space (32). Notice that this list includes the VT character (code 11). This
1187     makes "space" different to \s, which does not include VT (for Perl
1188     compatibility).
1189     </P>
1190     <P>
1191     The name "word" is a Perl extension, and "blank" is a GNU extension from Perl
1192     5.8. Another Perl extension is negation, which is indicated by a ^ character
1193     after the colon. For example,
1194     <pre>
1195     [12[:^digit:]]
1196 nigel 75 </pre>
1197 nigel 63 matches "1", "2", or any non-digit. PCRE (and Perl) also recognize the POSIX
1198     syntax [.ch.] and [=ch=] where "ch" is a "collating element", but these are not
1199     supported, and an error is given if they are encountered.
1200     </P>
1201     <P>
1202 ph10 869 By default, in UTF modes, characters with values greater than 128 do not match
1203 ph10 535 any of the POSIX character classes. However, if the PCRE_UCP option is passed
1204     to <b>pcre_compile()</b>, some of the classes are changed so that Unicode
1205     character properties are used. This is achieved by replacing the POSIX classes
1206     by other sequences, as follows:
1207     <pre>
1208     [:alnum:] becomes \p{Xan}
1209     [:alpha:] becomes \p{L}
1210     [:blank:] becomes \h
1211     [:digit:] becomes \p{Nd}
1212     [:lower:] becomes \p{Ll}
1213     [:space:] becomes \p{Xps}
1214     [:upper:] becomes \p{Lu}
1215     [:word:] becomes \p{Xwd}
1216     </pre>
1217     Negated versions, such as [:^alpha:] use \P instead of \p. The other POSIX
1218     classes are unchanged, and match only characters with code points less than
1219     128.
1220 nigel 63 </P>
1221 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC10" href="#TOC1">VERTICAL BAR</a><br>
1222 nigel 63 <P>
1223     Vertical bar characters are used to separate alternative patterns. For example,
1224     the pattern
1225     <pre>
1226     gilbert|sullivan
1227 nigel 75 </pre>
1228 nigel 63 matches either "gilbert" or "sullivan". Any number of alternatives may appear,
1229 nigel 91 and an empty alternative is permitted (matching the empty string). The matching
1230     process tries each alternative in turn, from left to right, and the first one
1231     that succeeds is used. If the alternatives are within a subpattern
1232 nigel 75 <a href="#subpattern">(defined below),</a>
1233     "succeeds" means matching the rest of the main pattern as well as the
1234     alternative in the subpattern.
1235 nigel 63 </P>
1236 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC11" href="#TOC1">INTERNAL OPTION SETTING</a><br>
1237 nigel 63 <P>
1238     The settings of the PCRE_CASELESS, PCRE_MULTILINE, PCRE_DOTALL, and
1239 ph10 243 PCRE_EXTENDED options (which are Perl-compatible) can be changed from within
1240     the pattern by a sequence of Perl option letters enclosed between "(?" and ")".
1241     The option letters are
1242 nigel 63 <pre>
1243     i for PCRE_CASELESS
1244     m for PCRE_MULTILINE
1245     s for PCRE_DOTALL
1246     x for PCRE_EXTENDED
1247 nigel 75 </pre>
1248 nigel 63 For example, (?im) sets caseless, multiline matching. It is also possible to
1249     unset these options by preceding the letter with a hyphen, and a combined
1250     setting and unsetting such as (?im-sx), which sets PCRE_CASELESS and
1251     PCRE_MULTILINE while unsetting PCRE_DOTALL and PCRE_EXTENDED, is also
1252     permitted. If a letter appears both before and after the hyphen, the option is
1253     unset.
1254     </P>
1255     <P>
1256 ph10 243 The PCRE-specific options PCRE_DUPNAMES, PCRE_UNGREEDY, and PCRE_EXTRA can be
1257     changed in the same way as the Perl-compatible options by using the characters
1258     J, U and X respectively.
1259     </P>
1260     <P>
1261 ph10 416 When one of these option changes occurs at top level (that is, not inside
1262     subpattern parentheses), the change applies to the remainder of the pattern
1263     that follows. If the change is placed right at the start of a pattern, PCRE
1264     extracts it into the global options (and it will therefore show up in data
1265     extracted by the <b>pcre_fullinfo()</b> function).
1266 nigel 63 </P>
1267     <P>
1268 nigel 93 An option change within a subpattern (see below for a description of
1269 ph10 572 subpatterns) affects only that part of the subpattern that follows it, so
1270 nigel 63 <pre>
1271     (a(?i)b)c
1272 nigel 75 </pre>
1273 nigel 63 matches abc and aBc and no other strings (assuming PCRE_CASELESS is not used).
1274     By this means, options can be made to have different settings in different
1275     parts of the pattern. Any changes made in one alternative do carry on
1276     into subsequent branches within the same subpattern. For example,
1277     <pre>
1278     (a(?i)b|c)
1279 nigel 75 </pre>
1280 nigel 63 matches "ab", "aB", "c", and "C", even though when matching "C" the first
1281     branch is abandoned before the option setting. This is because the effects of
1282     option settings happen at compile time. There would be some very weird
1283     behaviour otherwise.
1284 ph10 254 </P>
1285     <P>
1286     <b>Note:</b> There are other PCRE-specific options that can be set by the
1287 ph10 869 application when the compiling or matching functions are called. In some cases
1288     the pattern can contain special leading sequences such as (*CRLF) to override
1289     what the application has set or what has been defaulted. Details are given in
1290     the section entitled
1291 ph10 254 <a href="#newlineseq">"Newline sequences"</a>
1292 ph10 869 above. There are also the (*UTF8), (*UTF16), and (*UCP) leading sequences that
1293     can be used to set UTF and Unicode property modes; they are equivalent to
1294     setting the PCRE_UTF8, PCRE_UTF16, and the PCRE_UCP options, respectively.
1295 nigel 75 <a name="subpattern"></a></P>
1296 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC12" href="#TOC1">SUBPATTERNS</a><br>
1297 nigel 63 <P>
1298     Subpatterns are delimited by parentheses (round brackets), which can be nested.
1299 nigel 75 Turning part of a pattern into a subpattern does two things:
1300     <br>
1301     <br>
1302 nigel 63 1. It localizes a set of alternatives. For example, the pattern
1303     <pre>
1304     cat(aract|erpillar|)
1305 nigel 75 </pre>
1306 ph10 572 matches "cataract", "caterpillar", or "cat". Without the parentheses, it would
1307     match "cataract", "erpillar" or an empty string.
1308 nigel 75 <br>
1309     <br>
1310     2. It sets up the subpattern as a capturing subpattern. This means that, when
1311     the whole pattern matches, that portion of the subject string that matched the
1312 ph10 903 subpattern is passed back to the caller via the <i>ovector</i> argument of the
1313     matching function. (This applies only to the traditional matching functions;
1314 ph10 869 the DFA matching functions do not support capturing.)
1315     </P>
1316     <P>
1317     Opening parentheses are counted from left to right (starting from 1) to obtain
1318     numbers for the capturing subpatterns. For example, if the string "the red
1319     king" is matched against the pattern
1320 nigel 63 <pre>
1321     the ((red|white) (king|queen))
1322 nigel 75 </pre>
1323 nigel 63 the captured substrings are "red king", "red", and "king", and are numbered 1,
1324     2, and 3, respectively.
1325     </P>
1326     <P>
1327     The fact that plain parentheses fulfil two functions is not always helpful.
1328     There are often times when a grouping subpattern is required without a
1329     capturing requirement. If an opening parenthesis is followed by a question mark
1330     and a colon, the subpattern does not do any capturing, and is not counted when
1331     computing the number of any subsequent capturing subpatterns. For example, if
1332     the string "the white queen" is matched against the pattern
1333     <pre>
1334     the ((?:red|white) (king|queen))
1335 nigel 75 </pre>
1336 nigel 63 the captured substrings are "white queen" and "queen", and are numbered 1 and
1337 nigel 93 2. The maximum number of capturing subpatterns is 65535.
1338 nigel 63 </P>
1339     <P>
1340     As a convenient shorthand, if any option settings are required at the start of
1341     a non-capturing subpattern, the option letters may appear between the "?" and
1342     the ":". Thus the two patterns
1343     <pre>
1344     (?i:saturday|sunday)
1345     (?:(?i)saturday|sunday)
1346 nigel 75 </pre>
1347 nigel 63 match exactly the same set of strings. Because alternative branches are tried
1348     from left to right, and options are not reset until the end of the subpattern
1349     is reached, an option setting in one branch does affect subsequent branches, so
1350     the above patterns match "SUNDAY" as well as "Saturday".
1351 ph10 461 <a name="dupsubpatternnumber"></a></P>
1352 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC13" href="#TOC1">DUPLICATE SUBPATTERN NUMBERS</a><br>
1353 nigel 63 <P>
1354 ph10 182 Perl 5.10 introduced a feature whereby each alternative in a subpattern uses
1355     the same numbers for its capturing parentheses. Such a subpattern starts with
1356     (?| and is itself a non-capturing subpattern. For example, consider this
1357     pattern:
1358     <pre>
1359     (?|(Sat)ur|(Sun))day
1360     </pre>
1361     Because the two alternatives are inside a (?| group, both sets of capturing
1362     parentheses are numbered one. Thus, when the pattern matches, you can look
1363     at captured substring number one, whichever alternative matched. This construct
1364     is useful when you want to capture part, but not all, of one of a number of
1365     alternatives. Inside a (?| group, parentheses are numbered as usual, but the
1366     number is reset at the start of each branch. The numbers of any capturing
1367 ph10 572 parentheses that follow the subpattern start after the highest number used in
1368     any branch. The following example is taken from the Perl documentation. The
1369     numbers underneath show in which buffer the captured content will be stored.
1370 ph10 182 <pre>
1371     # before ---------------branch-reset----------- after
1372     / ( a ) (?| x ( y ) z | (p (q) r) | (t) u (v) ) ( z ) /x
1373     # 1 2 2 3 2 3 4
1374     </pre>
1375 ph10 488 A back reference to a numbered subpattern uses the most recent value that is
1376     set for that number by any subpattern. The following pattern matches "abcabc"
1377     or "defdef":
1378 ph10 461 <pre>
1379     /(?|(abc)|(def))\1/
1380     </pre>
1381 ph10 733 In contrast, a subroutine call to a numbered subpattern always refers to the
1382     first one in the pattern with the given number. The following pattern matches
1383     "abcabc" or "defabc":
1384 ph10 461 <pre>
1385     /(?|(abc)|(def))(?1)/
1386     </pre>
1387     If a
1388     <a href="#conditions">condition test</a>
1389     for a subpattern's having matched refers to a non-unique number, the test is
1390     true if any of the subpatterns of that number have matched.
1391 ph10 182 </P>
1392     <P>
1393     An alternative approach to using this "branch reset" feature is to use
1394     duplicate named subpatterns, as described in the next section.
1395     </P>
1396 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC14" href="#TOC1">NAMED SUBPATTERNS</a><br>
1397 ph10 182 <P>
1398 nigel 63 Identifying capturing parentheses by number is simple, but it can be very hard
1399     to keep track of the numbers in complicated regular expressions. Furthermore,
1400 nigel 75 if an expression is modified, the numbers may change. To help with this
1401 nigel 93 difficulty, PCRE supports the naming of subpatterns. This feature was not
1402     added to Perl until release 5.10. Python had the feature earlier, and PCRE
1403     introduced it at release 4.0, using the Python syntax. PCRE now supports both
1404 ph10 461 the Perl and the Python syntax. Perl allows identically numbered subpatterns to
1405     have different names, but PCRE does not.
1406 nigel 93 </P>
1407     <P>
1408     In PCRE, a subpattern can be named in one of three ways: (?&#60;name&#62;...) or
1409     (?'name'...) as in Perl, or (?P&#60;name&#62;...) as in Python. References to capturing
1410 nigel 91 parentheses from other parts of the pattern, such as
1411 ph10 488 <a href="#backreferences">back references,</a>
1412 nigel 91 <a href="#recursion">recursion,</a>
1413     and
1414     <a href="#conditions">conditions,</a>
1415     can be made by name as well as by number.
1416 nigel 63 </P>
1417     <P>
1418 nigel 91 Names consist of up to 32 alphanumeric characters and underscores. Named
1419 nigel 93 capturing parentheses are still allocated numbers as well as names, exactly as
1420     if the names were not present. The PCRE API provides function calls for
1421     extracting the name-to-number translation table from a compiled pattern. There
1422     is also a convenience function for extracting a captured substring by name.
1423 nigel 91 </P>
1424     <P>
1425     By default, a name must be unique within a pattern, but it is possible to relax
1426 ph10 461 this constraint by setting the PCRE_DUPNAMES option at compile time. (Duplicate
1427     names are also always permitted for subpatterns with the same number, set up as
1428     described in the previous section.) Duplicate names can be useful for patterns
1429     where only one instance of the named parentheses can match. Suppose you want to
1430     match the name of a weekday, either as a 3-letter abbreviation or as the full
1431     name, and in both cases you want to extract the abbreviation. This pattern
1432     (ignoring the line breaks) does the job:
1433 nigel 91 <pre>
1434 nigel 93 (?&#60;DN&#62;Mon|Fri|Sun)(?:day)?|
1435     (?&#60;DN&#62;Tue)(?:sday)?|
1436     (?&#60;DN&#62;Wed)(?:nesday)?|
1437     (?&#60;DN&#62;Thu)(?:rsday)?|
1438     (?&#60;DN&#62;Sat)(?:urday)?
1439 nigel 91 </pre>
1440     There are five capturing substrings, but only one is ever set after a match.
1441 ph10 182 (An alternative way of solving this problem is to use a "branch reset"
1442     subpattern, as described in the previous section.)
1443     </P>
1444     <P>
1445 nigel 91 The convenience function for extracting the data by name returns the substring
1446 nigel 93 for the first (and in this example, the only) subpattern of that name that
1447 ph10 461 matched. This saves searching to find which numbered subpattern it was.
1448     </P>
1449     <P>
1450 ph10 488 If you make a back reference to a non-unique named subpattern from elsewhere in
1451 ph10 461 the pattern, the one that corresponds to the first occurrence of the name is
1452     used. In the absence of duplicate numbers (see the previous section) this is
1453     the one with the lowest number. If you use a named reference in a condition
1454     test (see the
1455     <a href="#conditions">section about conditions</a>
1456     below), either to check whether a subpattern has matched, or to check for
1457     recursion, all subpatterns with the same name are tested. If the condition is
1458     true for any one of them, the overall condition is true. This is the same
1459     behaviour as testing by number. For further details of the interfaces for
1460     handling named subpatterns, see the
1461 nigel 63 <a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
1462     documentation.
1463     </P>
1464 ph10 392 <P>
1465     <b>Warning:</b> You cannot use different names to distinguish between two
1466 ph10 461 subpatterns with the same number because PCRE uses only the numbers when
1467     matching. For this reason, an error is given at compile time if different names
1468     are given to subpatterns with the same number. However, you can give the same
1469     name to subpatterns with the same number, even when PCRE_DUPNAMES is not set.
1470 ph10 392 </P>
1471 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC15" href="#TOC1">REPETITION</a><br>
1472 nigel 63 <P>
1473     Repetition is specified by quantifiers, which can follow any of the following
1474     items:
1475     <pre>
1476     a literal data character
1477 nigel 93 the dot metacharacter
1478 nigel 63 the \C escape sequence
1479 ph10 869 the \X escape sequence
1480 nigel 93 the \R escape sequence
1481 ph10 572 an escape such as \d or \pL that matches a single character
1482 nigel 63 a character class
1483     a back reference (see next section)
1484 ph10 654 a parenthesized subpattern (including assertions)
1485 ph10 733 a subroutine call to a subpattern (recursive or otherwise)
1486 nigel 75 </pre>
1487 nigel 63 The general repetition quantifier specifies a minimum and maximum number of
1488     permitted matches, by giving the two numbers in curly brackets (braces),
1489     separated by a comma. The numbers must be less than 65536, and the first must
1490     be less than or equal to the second. For example:
1491     <pre>
1492     z{2,4}
1493 nigel 75 </pre>
1494 nigel 63 matches "zz", "zzz", or "zzzz". A closing brace on its own is not a special
1495     character. If the second number is omitted, but the comma is present, there is
1496     no upper limit; if the second number and the comma are both omitted, the
1497     quantifier specifies an exact number of required matches. Thus
1498     <pre>
1499     [aeiou]{3,}
1500 nigel 75 </pre>
1501 nigel 63 matches at least 3 successive vowels, but may match many more, while
1502     <pre>
1503     \d{8}
1504 nigel 75 </pre>
1505 nigel 63 matches exactly 8 digits. An opening curly bracket that appears in a position
1506     where a quantifier is not allowed, or one that does not match the syntax of a
1507     quantifier, is taken as a literal character. For example, {,6} is not a
1508     quantifier, but a literal string of four characters.
1509     </P>
1510     <P>
1511 ph10 869 In UTF modes, quantifiers apply to characters rather than to individual data
1512     units. Thus, for example, \x{100}{2} matches two characters, each of
1513     which is represented by a two-byte sequence in a UTF-8 string. Similarly,
1514     \X{3} matches three Unicode extended sequences, each of which may be several
1515     data units long (and they may be of different lengths).
1516 nigel 63 </P>
1517     <P>
1518     The quantifier {0} is permitted, causing the expression to behave as if the
1519 ph10 345 previous item and the quantifier were not present. This may be useful for
1520     subpatterns that are referenced as
1521     <a href="#subpatternsassubroutines">subroutines</a>
1522 ph10 572 from elsewhere in the pattern (but see also the section entitled
1523     <a href="#subdefine">"Defining subpatterns for use by reference only"</a>
1524     below). Items other than subpatterns that have a {0} quantifier are omitted
1525     from the compiled pattern.
1526 nigel 63 </P>
1527     <P>
1528 nigel 93 For convenience, the three most common quantifiers have single-character
1529     abbreviations:
1530 nigel 63 <pre>
1531     * is equivalent to {0,}
1532     + is equivalent to {1,}
1533     ? is equivalent to {0,1}
1534 nigel 75 </pre>
1535 nigel 63 It is possible to construct infinite loops by following a subpattern that can
1536     match no characters with a quantifier that has no upper limit, for example:
1537     <pre>
1538     (a?)*
1539 nigel 75 </pre>
1540 nigel 63 Earlier versions of Perl and PCRE used to give an error at compile time for
1541     such patterns. However, because there are cases where this can be useful, such
1542     patterns are now accepted, but if any repetition of the subpattern does in fact
1543     match no characters, the loop is forcibly broken.
1544     </P>
1545     <P>
1546     By default, the quantifiers are "greedy", that is, they match as much as
1547     possible (up to the maximum number of permitted times), without causing the
1548     rest of the pattern to fail. The classic example of where this gives problems
1549 nigel 75 is in trying to match comments in C programs. These appear between /* and */
1550     and within the comment, individual * and / characters may appear. An attempt to
1551     match C comments by applying the pattern
1552 nigel 63 <pre>
1553     /\*.*\*/
1554 nigel 75 </pre>
1555 nigel 63 to the string
1556     <pre>
1557 nigel 75 /* first comment */ not comment /* second comment */
1558     </pre>
1559 nigel 63 fails, because it matches the entire string owing to the greediness of the .*
1560     item.
1561     </P>
1562     <P>
1563     However, if a quantifier is followed by a question mark, it ceases to be
1564     greedy, and instead matches the minimum number of times possible, so the
1565     pattern
1566     <pre>
1567     /\*.*?\*/
1568 nigel 75 </pre>
1569 nigel 63 does the right thing with the C comments. The meaning of the various
1570     quantifiers is not otherwise changed, just the preferred number of matches.
1571     Do not confuse this use of question mark with its use as a quantifier in its
1572     own right. Because it has two uses, it can sometimes appear doubled, as in
1573     <pre>
1574     \d??\d
1575 nigel 75 </pre>
1576 nigel 63 which matches one digit by preference, but can match two if that is the only
1577     way the rest of the pattern matches.
1578     </P>
1579     <P>
1580 nigel 93 If the PCRE_UNGREEDY option is set (an option that is not available in Perl),
1581 nigel 63 the quantifiers are not greedy by default, but individual ones can be made
1582     greedy by following them with a question mark. In other words, it inverts the
1583     default behaviour.
1584     </P>
1585     <P>
1586     When a parenthesized subpattern is quantified with a minimum repeat count that
1587 nigel 75 is greater than 1 or with a limited maximum, more memory is required for the
1588 nigel 63 compiled pattern, in proportion to the size of the minimum or maximum.
1589     </P>
1590     <P>
1591     If a pattern starts with .* or .{0,} and the PCRE_DOTALL option (equivalent
1592 nigel 93 to Perl's /s) is set, thus allowing the dot to match newlines, the pattern is
1593 nigel 63 implicitly anchored, because whatever follows will be tried against every
1594     character position in the subject string, so there is no point in retrying the
1595     overall match at any position after the first. PCRE normally treats such a
1596     pattern as though it were preceded by \A.
1597     </P>
1598     <P>
1599     In cases where it is known that the subject string contains no newlines, it is
1600     worth setting PCRE_DOTALL in order to obtain this optimization, or
1601     alternatively using ^ to indicate anchoring explicitly.
1602     </P>
1603     <P>
1604     However, there is one situation where the optimization cannot be used. When .*
1605 ph10 488 is inside capturing parentheses that are the subject of a back reference
1606 nigel 93 elsewhere in the pattern, a match at the start may fail where a later one
1607     succeeds. Consider, for example:
1608 nigel 63 <pre>
1609     (.*)abc\1
1610 nigel 75 </pre>
1611 nigel 63 If the subject is "xyz123abc123" the match point is the fourth character. For
1612     this reason, such a pattern is not implicitly anchored.
1613     </P>
1614     <P>
1615     When a capturing subpattern is repeated, the value captured is the substring
1616     that matched the final iteration. For example, after
1617     <pre>
1618     (tweedle[dume]{3}\s*)+
1619 nigel 75 </pre>
1620 nigel 63 has matched "tweedledum tweedledee" the value of the captured substring is
1621     "tweedledee". However, if there are nested capturing subpatterns, the
1622     corresponding captured values may have been set in previous iterations. For
1623     example, after
1624     <pre>
1625     /(a|(b))+/
1626 nigel 75 </pre>
1627 nigel 63 matches "aba" the value of the second captured substring is "b".
1628 nigel 75 <a name="atomicgroup"></a></P>
1629 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC16" href="#TOC1">ATOMIC GROUPING AND POSSESSIVE QUANTIFIERS</a><br>
1630 nigel 63 <P>
1631 nigel 93 With both maximizing ("greedy") and minimizing ("ungreedy" or "lazy")
1632     repetition, failure of what follows normally causes the repeated item to be
1633     re-evaluated to see if a different number of repeats allows the rest of the
1634     pattern to match. Sometimes it is useful to prevent this, either to change the
1635     nature of the match, or to cause it fail earlier than it otherwise might, when
1636     the author of the pattern knows there is no point in carrying on.
1637 nigel 63 </P>
1638     <P>
1639     Consider, for example, the pattern \d+foo when applied to the subject line
1640     <pre>
1641     123456bar
1642 nigel 75 </pre>
1643 nigel 63 After matching all 6 digits and then failing to match "foo", the normal
1644     action of the matcher is to try again with only 5 digits matching the \d+
1645     item, and then with 4, and so on, before ultimately failing. "Atomic grouping"
1646     (a term taken from Jeffrey Friedl's book) provides the means for specifying
1647     that once a subpattern has matched, it is not to be re-evaluated in this way.
1648     </P>
1649     <P>
1650 nigel 93 If we use atomic grouping for the previous example, the matcher gives up
1651 nigel 63 immediately on failing to match "foo" the first time. The notation is a kind of
1652     special parenthesis, starting with (?&#62; as in this example:
1653     <pre>
1654 nigel 73 (?&#62;\d+)foo
1655 nigel 75 </pre>
1656 nigel 63 This kind of parenthesis "locks up" the part of the pattern it contains once
1657     it has matched, and a failure further into the pattern is prevented from
1658     backtracking into it. Backtracking past it to previous items, however, works as
1659     normal.
1660     </P>
1661     <P>
1662     An alternative description is that a subpattern of this type matches the string
1663     of characters that an identical standalone pattern would match, if anchored at
1664     the current point in the subject string.
1665     </P>
1666     <P>
1667     Atomic grouping subpatterns are not capturing subpatterns. Simple cases such as
1668     the above example can be thought of as a maximizing repeat that must swallow
1669     everything it can. So, while both \d+ and \d+? are prepared to adjust the
1670     number of digits they match in order to make the rest of the pattern match,
1671     (?&#62;\d+) can only match an entire sequence of digits.
1672     </P>
1673     <P>
1674     Atomic groups in general can of course contain arbitrarily complicated
1675     subpatterns, and can be nested. However, when the subpattern for an atomic
1676     group is just a single repeated item, as in the example above, a simpler
1677     notation, called a "possessive quantifier" can be used. This consists of an
1678     additional + character following a quantifier. Using this notation, the
1679     previous example can be rewritten as
1680     <pre>
1681 nigel 75 \d++foo
1682     </pre>
1683 ph10 208 Note that a possessive quantifier can be used with an entire group, for
1684     example:
1685     <pre>
1686     (abc|xyz){2,3}+
1687     </pre>
1688 nigel 63 Possessive quantifiers are always greedy; the setting of the PCRE_UNGREEDY
1689     option is ignored. They are a convenient notation for the simpler forms of
1690 nigel 93 atomic group. However, there is no difference in the meaning of a possessive
1691     quantifier and the equivalent atomic group, though there may be a performance
1692     difference; possessive quantifiers should be slightly faster.
1693 nigel 63 </P>
1694     <P>
1695 nigel 93 The possessive quantifier syntax is an extension to the Perl 5.8 syntax.
1696     Jeffrey Friedl originated the idea (and the name) in the first edition of his
1697     book. Mike McCloskey liked it, so implemented it when he built Sun's Java
1698     package, and PCRE copied it from there. It ultimately found its way into Perl
1699     at release 5.10.
1700 nigel 63 </P>
1701     <P>
1702 nigel 93 PCRE has an optimization that automatically "possessifies" certain simple
1703     pattern constructs. For example, the sequence A+B is treated as A++B because
1704     there is no point in backtracking into a sequence of A's when B must follow.
1705     </P>
1706     <P>
1707 nigel 63 When a pattern contains an unlimited repeat inside a subpattern that can itself
1708     be repeated an unlimited number of times, the use of an atomic group is the
1709     only way to avoid some failing matches taking a very long time indeed. The
1710     pattern
1711     <pre>
1712     (\D+|&#60;\d+&#62;)*[!?]
1713 nigel 75 </pre>
1714 nigel 63 matches an unlimited number of substrings that either consist of non-digits, or
1715     digits enclosed in &#60;&#62;, followed by either ! or ?. When it matches, it runs
1716     quickly. However, if it is applied to
1717     <pre>
1718     aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
1719 nigel 75 </pre>
1720 nigel 63 it takes a long time before reporting failure. This is because the string can
1721 nigel 75 be divided between the internal \D+ repeat and the external * repeat in a
1722     large number of ways, and all have to be tried. (The example uses [!?] rather
1723     than a single character at the end, because both PCRE and Perl have an
1724     optimization that allows for fast failure when a single character is used. They
1725     remember the last single character that is required for a match, and fail early
1726     if it is not present in the string.) If the pattern is changed so that it uses
1727     an atomic group, like this:
1728 nigel 63 <pre>
1729     ((?&#62;\D+)|&#60;\d+&#62;)*[!?]
1730 nigel 75 </pre>
1731 nigel 63 sequences of non-digits cannot be broken, and failure happens quickly.
1732 nigel 75 <a name="backreferences"></a></P>
1733 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC17" href="#TOC1">BACK REFERENCES</a><br>
1734 nigel 63 <P>
1735     Outside a character class, a backslash followed by a digit greater than 0 (and
1736     possibly further digits) is a back reference to a capturing subpattern earlier
1737     (that is, to its left) in the pattern, provided there have been that many
1738     previous capturing left parentheses.
1739     </P>
1740     <P>
1741     However, if the decimal number following the backslash is less than 10, it is
1742     always taken as a back reference, and causes an error only if there are not
1743     that many capturing left parentheses in the entire pattern. In other words, the
1744     parentheses that are referenced need not be to the left of the reference for
1745 nigel 91 numbers less than 10. A "forward back reference" of this type can make sense
1746     when a repetition is involved and the subpattern to the right has participated
1747     in an earlier iteration.
1748     </P>
1749     <P>
1750 nigel 93 It is not possible to have a numerical "forward back reference" to a subpattern
1751     whose number is 10 or more using this syntax because a sequence such as \50 is
1752     interpreted as a character defined in octal. See the subsection entitled
1753 nigel 91 "Non-printing characters"
1754 nigel 75 <a href="#digitsafterbackslash">above</a>
1755 nigel 93 for further details of the handling of digits following a backslash. There is
1756     no such problem when named parentheses are used. A back reference to any
1757     subpattern is possible using named parentheses (see below).
1758 nigel 63 </P>
1759     <P>
1760 nigel 93 Another way of avoiding the ambiguity inherent in the use of digits following a
1761 ph10 572 backslash is to use the \g escape sequence. This escape must be followed by an
1762     unsigned number or a negative number, optionally enclosed in braces. These
1763     examples are all identical:
1764 nigel 93 <pre>
1765     (ring), \1
1766     (ring), \g1
1767     (ring), \g{1}
1768     </pre>
1769 ph10 208 An unsigned number specifies an absolute reference without the ambiguity that
1770     is present in the older syntax. It is also useful when literal digits follow
1771     the reference. A negative number is a relative reference. Consider this
1772     example:
1773 nigel 93 <pre>
1774     (abc(def)ghi)\g{-1}
1775     </pre>
1776     The sequence \g{-1} is a reference to the most recently started capturing
1777 ph10 579 subpattern before \g, that is, is it equivalent to \2 in this example.
1778     Similarly, \g{-2} would be equivalent to \1. The use of relative references
1779     can be helpful in long patterns, and also in patterns that are created by
1780     joining together fragments that contain references within themselves.
1781 nigel 93 </P>
1782     <P>
1783 nigel 63 A back reference matches whatever actually matched the capturing subpattern in
1784     the current subject string, rather than anything matching the subpattern
1785     itself (see
1786     <a href="#subpatternsassubroutines">"Subpatterns as subroutines"</a>
1787     below for a way of doing that). So the pattern
1788     <pre>
1789     (sens|respons)e and \1ibility
1790 nigel 75 </pre>
1791 nigel 63 matches "sense and sensibility" and "response and responsibility", but not
1792     "sense and responsibility". If caseful matching is in force at the time of the
1793     back reference, the case of letters is relevant. For example,
1794     <pre>
1795     ((?i)rah)\s+\1
1796 nigel 75 </pre>
1797 nigel 63 matches "rah rah" and "RAH RAH", but not "RAH rah", even though the original
1798     capturing subpattern is matched caselessly.
1799     </P>
1800     <P>
1801 ph10 172 There are several different ways of writing back references to named
1802     subpatterns. The .NET syntax \k{name} and the Perl syntax \k&#60;name&#62; or
1803     \k'name' are supported, as is the Python syntax (?P=name). Perl 5.10's unified
1804     back reference syntax, in which \g can be used for both numeric and named
1805     references, is also supported. We could rewrite the above example in any of
1806 nigel 93 the following ways:
1807 nigel 63 <pre>
1808 nigel 93 (?&#60;p1&#62;(?i)rah)\s+\k&#60;p1&#62;
1809 ph10 172 (?'p1'(?i)rah)\s+\k{p1}
1810 nigel 91 (?P&#60;p1&#62;(?i)rah)\s+(?P=p1)
1811 ph10 172 (?&#60;p1&#62;(?i)rah)\s+\g{p1}
1812 nigel 75 </pre>
1813 nigel 91 A subpattern that is referenced by name may appear in the pattern before or
1814     after the reference.
1815     </P>
1816     <P>
1817 nigel 63 There may be more than one back reference to the same subpattern. If a
1818     subpattern has not actually been used in a particular match, any back
1819 ph10 461 references to it always fail by default. For example, the pattern
1820 nigel 63 <pre>
1821     (a|(bc))\2
1822 nigel 75 </pre>
1823 ph10 461 always fails if it starts to match "a" rather than "bc". However, if the
1824     PCRE_JAVASCRIPT_COMPAT option is set at compile time, a back reference to an
1825     unset value matches an empty string.
1826     </P>
1827     <P>
1828     Because there may be many capturing parentheses in a pattern, all digits
1829     following a backslash are taken as part of a potential back reference number.
1830     If the pattern continues with a digit character, some delimiter must be used to
1831     terminate the back reference. If the PCRE_EXTENDED option is set, this can be
1832 ph10 975 white space. Otherwise, the \g{ syntax or an empty comment (see
1833 nigel 75 <a href="#comments">"Comments"</a>
1834     below) can be used.
1835 nigel 63 </P>
1836 ph10 488 <br><b>
1837     Recursive back references
1838     </b><br>
1839 nigel 63 <P>
1840     A back reference that occurs inside the parentheses to which it refers fails
1841     when the subpattern is first used, so, for example, (a\1) never matches.
1842     However, such references can be useful inside repeated subpatterns. For
1843     example, the pattern
1844     <pre>
1845     (a|b\1)+
1846 nigel 75 </pre>
1847 nigel 63 matches any number of "a"s and also "aba", "ababbaa" etc. At each iteration of
1848     the subpattern, the back reference matches the character string corresponding
1849     to the previous iteration. In order for this to work, the pattern must be such
1850     that the first iteration does not need to match the back reference. This can be
1851     done using alternation, as in the example above, or by a quantifier with a
1852     minimum of zero.
1853 ph10 488 </P>
1854     <P>
1855     Back references of this type cause the group that they reference to be treated
1856     as an
1857     <a href="#atomicgroup">atomic group.</a>
1858     Once the whole group has been matched, a subsequent matching failure cannot
1859     cause backtracking into the middle of the group.
1860 nigel 75 <a name="bigassertions"></a></P>
1861 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC18" href="#TOC1">ASSERTIONS</a><br>
1862 nigel 63 <P>
1863     An assertion is a test on the characters following or preceding the current
1864     matching point that does not actually consume any characters. The simple
1865 nigel 75 assertions coded as \b, \B, \A, \G, \Z, \z, ^ and $ are described
1866     <a href="#smallassertions">above.</a>
1867     </P>
1868     <P>
1869 nigel 63 More complicated assertions are coded as subpatterns. There are two kinds:
1870     those that look ahead of the current position in the subject string, and those
1871 nigel 75 that look behind it. An assertion subpattern is matched in the normal way,
1872     except that it does not cause the current matching position to be changed.
1873 nigel 63 </P>
1874     <P>
1875 ph10 654 Assertion subpatterns are not capturing subpatterns. If such an assertion
1876     contains capturing subpatterns within it, these are counted for the purposes of
1877     numbering the capturing subpatterns in the whole pattern. However, substring
1878     capturing is carried out only for positive assertions, because it does not make
1879     sense for negative assertions.
1880 nigel 63 </P>
1881 ph10 654 <P>
1882     For compatibility with Perl, assertion subpatterns may be repeated; though
1883     it makes no sense to assert the same thing several times, the side effect of
1884     capturing parentheses may occasionally be useful. In practice, there only three
1885     cases:
1886     <br>
1887     <br>
1888     (1) If the quantifier is {0}, the assertion is never obeyed during matching.
1889     However, it may contain internal capturing parenthesized groups that are called
1890     from elsewhere via the
1891     <a href="#subpatternsassubroutines">subroutine mechanism.</a>
1892     <br>
1893     <br>
1894     (2) If quantifier is {0,n} where n is greater than zero, it is treated as if it
1895     were {0,1}. At run time, the rest of the pattern match is tried with and
1896     without the assertion, the order depending on the greediness of the quantifier.
1897     <br>
1898     <br>
1899     (3) If the minimum repetition is greater than zero, the quantifier is ignored.
1900     The assertion is obeyed just once when encountered during matching.
1901     </P>
1902 nigel 75 <br><b>
1903     Lookahead assertions
1904     </b><br>
1905 nigel 63 <P>
1906 nigel 91 Lookahead assertions start with (?= for positive assertions and (?! for
1907     negative assertions. For example,
1908 nigel 63 <pre>
1909     \w+(?=;)
1910 nigel 75 </pre>
1911 nigel 63 matches a word followed by a semicolon, but does not include the semicolon in
1912     the match, and
1913     <pre>
1914     foo(?!bar)
1915 nigel 75 </pre>
1916 nigel 63 matches any occurrence of "foo" that is not followed by "bar". Note that the
1917     apparently similar pattern
1918     <pre>
1919     (?!foo)bar
1920 nigel 75 </pre>
1921 nigel 63 does not find an occurrence of "bar" that is preceded by something other than
1922     "foo"; it finds any occurrence of "bar" whatsoever, because the assertion
1923     (?!foo) is always true when the next three characters are "bar". A
1924 nigel 75 lookbehind assertion is needed to achieve the other effect.
1925 nigel 63 </P>
1926     <P>
1927     If you want to force a matching failure at some point in a pattern, the most
1928     convenient way to do it is with (?!) because an empty string always matches, so
1929     an assertion that requires there not to be an empty string must always fail.
1930 ph10 579 The backtracking control verb (*FAIL) or (*F) is a synonym for (?!).
1931 nigel 75 <a name="lookbehind"></a></P>
1932     <br><b>
1933     Lookbehind assertions
1934     </b><br>
1935 nigel 63 <P>
1936     Lookbehind assertions start with (?&#60;= for positive assertions and (?&#60;! for
1937     negative assertions. For example,
1938     <pre>
1939     (?&#60;!foo)bar
1940 nigel 75 </pre>
1941 nigel 63 does find an occurrence of "bar" that is not preceded by "foo". The contents of
1942     a lookbehind assertion are restricted such that all the strings it matches must
1943 nigel 91 have a fixed length. However, if there are several top-level alternatives, they
1944     do not all have to have the same fixed length. Thus
1945 nigel 63 <pre>
1946     (?&#60;=bullock|donkey)
1947 nigel 75 </pre>
1948 nigel 63 is permitted, but
1949     <pre>
1950     (?&#60;!dogs?|cats?)
1951 nigel 75 </pre>
1952 nigel 63 causes an error at compile time. Branches that match different length strings
1953     are permitted only at the top level of a lookbehind assertion. This is an
1954 ph10 572 extension compared with Perl, which requires all branches to match the same
1955     length of string. An assertion such as
1956 nigel 63 <pre>
1957     (?&#60;=ab(c|de))
1958 nigel 75 </pre>
1959 nigel 63 is not permitted, because its single top-level branch can match two different
1960 ph10 454 lengths, but it is acceptable to PCRE if rewritten to use two top-level
1961     branches:
1962 nigel 63 <pre>
1963     (?&#60;=abc|abde)
1964 nigel 75 </pre>
1965 ph10 572 In some cases, the escape sequence \K
1966 ph10 172 <a href="#resetmatchstart">(see above)</a>
1967 ph10 461 can be used instead of a lookbehind assertion to get round the fixed-length
1968 ph10 454 restriction.
1969 ph10 172 </P>
1970     <P>
1971 nigel 63 The implementation of lookbehind assertions is, for each alternative, to
1972 nigel 93 temporarily move the current position back by the fixed length and then try to
1973 nigel 63 match. If there are insufficient characters before the current position, the
1974 nigel 93 assertion fails.
1975 nigel 63 </P>
1976     <P>
1977 ph10 869 In a UTF mode, PCRE does not allow the \C escape (which matches a single data
1978     unit even in a UTF mode) to appear in lookbehind assertions, because it makes
1979     it impossible to calculate the length of the lookbehind. The \X and \R
1980     escapes, which can match different numbers of data units, are also not
1981     permitted.
1982 nigel 63 </P>
1983     <P>
1984 ph10 454 <a href="#subpatternsassubroutines">"Subroutine"</a>
1985     calls (see below) such as (?2) or (?&X) are permitted in lookbehinds, as long
1986 ph10 461 as the subpattern matches a fixed-length string.
1987 ph10 454 <a href="#recursion">Recursion,</a>
1988     however, is not supported.
1989     </P>
1990     <P>
1991 nigel 93 Possessive quantifiers can be used in conjunction with lookbehind assertions to
1992 ph10 461 specify efficient matching of fixed-length strings at the end of subject
1993     strings. Consider a simple pattern such as
1994 nigel 63 <pre>
1995     abcd$
1996 nigel 75 </pre>
1997 nigel 63 when applied to a long string that does not match. Because matching proceeds
1998     from left to right, PCRE will look for each "a" in the subject and then see if
1999     what follows matches the rest of the pattern. If the pattern is specified as
2000     <pre>
2001     ^.*abcd$
2002 nigel 75 </pre>
2003 nigel 63 the initial .* matches the entire string at first, but when this fails (because
2004     there is no following "a"), it backtracks to match all but the last character,
2005     then all but the last two characters, and so on. Once again the search for "a"
2006     covers the entire string, from right to left, so we are no better off. However,
2007     if the pattern is written as
2008     <pre>
2009     ^.*+(?&#60;=abcd)
2010 nigel 75 </pre>
2011 nigel 93 there can be no backtracking for the .*+ item; it can match only the entire
2012 nigel 63 string. The subsequent lookbehind assertion does a single test on the last four
2013     characters. If it fails, the match fails immediately. For long strings, this
2014     approach makes a significant difference to the processing time.
2015     </P>
2016 nigel 75 <br><b>
2017     Using multiple assertions
2018     </b><br>
2019 nigel 63 <P>
2020     Several assertions (of any sort) may occur in succession. For example,
2021     <pre>
2022     (?&#60;=\d{3})(?&#60;!999)foo
2023 nigel 75 </pre>
2024 nigel 63 matches "foo" preceded by three digits that are not "999". Notice that each of
2025     the assertions is applied independently at the same point in the subject
2026     string. First there is a check that the previous three characters are all
2027     digits, and then there is a check that the same three characters are not "999".
2028     This pattern does <i>not</i> match "foo" preceded by six characters, the first
2029     of which are digits and the last three of which are not "999". For example, it
2030     doesn't match "123abcfoo". A pattern to do that is
2031     <pre>
2032     (?&#60;=\d{3}...)(?&#60;!999)foo
2033 nigel 75 </pre>
2034 nigel 63 This time the first assertion looks at the preceding six characters, checking
2035     that the first three are digits, and then the second assertion checks that the
2036     preceding three characters are not "999".
2037     </P>
2038     <P>
2039     Assertions can be nested in any combination. For example,
2040     <pre>
2041     (?&#60;=(?&#60;!foo)bar)baz
2042 nigel 75 </pre>
2043 nigel 63 matches an occurrence of "baz" that is preceded by "bar" which in turn is not
2044     preceded by "foo", while
2045     <pre>
2046     (?&#60;=\d{3}(?!999)...)foo
2047 nigel 75 </pre>
2048     is another pattern that matches "foo" preceded by three digits and any three
2049 nigel 63 characters that are not "999".
2050 nigel 91 <a name="conditions"></a></P>
2051 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC19" href="#TOC1">CONDITIONAL SUBPATTERNS</a><br>
2052 nigel 63 <P>
2053     It is possible to cause the matching process to obey a subpattern
2054     conditionally or to choose between two alternative subpatterns, depending on
2055 ph10 461 the result of an assertion, or whether a specific capturing subpattern has
2056     already been matched. The two possible forms of conditional subpattern are:
2057 nigel 63 <pre>
2058     (?(condition)yes-pattern)
2059     (?(condition)yes-pattern|no-pattern)
2060 nigel 75 </pre>
2061 nigel 63 If the condition is satisfied, the yes-pattern is used; otherwise the
2062     no-pattern (if present) is used. If there are more than two alternatives in the
2063 ph10 567 subpattern, a compile-time error occurs. Each of the two alternatives may
2064 ph10 579 itself contain nested subpatterns of any form, including conditional
2065 ph10 567 subpatterns; the restriction to two alternatives applies only at the level of
2066 ph10 579 the condition. This pattern fragment is an example where the alternatives are
2067 ph10 567 complex:
2068     <pre>
2069     (?(1) (A|B|C) | (D | (?(2)E|F) | E) )
2070    
2071     </PRE>
2072 nigel 63 </P>
2073     <P>
2074 nigel 93 There are four kinds of condition: references to subpatterns, references to
2075     recursion, a pseudo-condition called DEFINE, and assertions.
2076 nigel 91 </P>
2077 nigel 93 <br><b>
2078     Checking for a used subpattern by number
2079     </b><br>
2080 nigel 91 <P>
2081 nigel 93 If the text between the parentheses consists of a sequence of digits, the
2082 ph10 461 condition is true if a capturing subpattern of that number has previously
2083     matched. If there is more than one capturing subpattern with the same number
2084     (see the earlier
2085     <a href="#recursion">section about duplicate subpattern numbers),</a>
2086 ph10 579 the condition is true if any of them have matched. An alternative notation is
2087 ph10 461 to precede the digits with a plus or minus sign. In this case, the subpattern
2088     number is relative rather than absolute. The most recently opened parentheses
2089 ph10 579 can be referenced by (?(-1), the next most recent by (?(-2), and so on. Inside
2090     loops it can also make sense to refer to subsequent groups. The next
2091     parentheses to be opened can be referenced as (?(+1), and so on. (The value
2092     zero in any of these forms is not used; it provokes a compile-time error.)
2093 nigel 93 </P>
2094     <P>
2095 nigel 91 Consider the following pattern, which contains non-significant white space to
2096     make it more readable (assume the PCRE_EXTENDED option) and to divide it into
2097     three parts for ease of discussion:
2098 nigel 63 <pre>
2099     ( \( )? [^()]+ (?(1) \) )
2100 nigel 75 </pre>
2101 nigel 63 The first part matches an optional opening parenthesis, and if that
2102     character is present, sets it as the first captured substring. The second part
2103     matches one or more characters that are not parentheses. The third part is a
2104 ph10 579 conditional subpattern that tests whether or not the first set of parentheses
2105     matched. If they did, that is, if subject started with an opening parenthesis,
2106 nigel 63 the condition is true, and so the yes-pattern is executed and a closing
2107     parenthesis is required. Otherwise, since no-pattern is not present, the
2108     subpattern matches nothing. In other words, this pattern matches a sequence of
2109 nigel 93 non-parentheses, optionally enclosed in parentheses.
2110     </P>
2111 ph10 172 <P>
2112     If you were embedding this pattern in a larger one, you could use a relative
2113     reference:
2114     <pre>
2115     ...other stuff... ( \( )? [^()]+ (?(-1) \) ) ...
2116     </pre>
2117     This makes the fragment independent of the parentheses in the larger pattern.
2118     </P>
2119 nigel 93 <br><b>
2120     Checking for a used subpattern by name
2121     </b><br>
2122     <P>
2123     Perl uses the syntax (?(&#60;name&#62;)...) or (?('name')...) to test for a used
2124     subpattern by name. For compatibility with earlier versions of PCRE, which had
2125     this facility before Perl, the syntax (?(name)...) is also recognized. However,
2126     there is a possible ambiguity with this syntax, because subpattern names may
2127     consist entirely of digits. PCRE looks first for a named subpattern; if it
2128     cannot find one and the name consists entirely of digits, PCRE looks for a
2129     subpattern of that number, which must be greater than zero. Using subpattern
2130     names that consist entirely of digits is not recommended.
2131     </P>
2132     <P>
2133     Rewriting the above example to use a named subpattern gives this:
2134 nigel 91 <pre>
2135 nigel 93 (?&#60;OPEN&#62; \( )? [^()]+ (?(&#60;OPEN&#62;) \) )
2136 ph10 461 </pre>
2137     If the name used in a condition of this kind is a duplicate, the test is
2138     applied to all subpatterns of the same name, and is true if any one of them has
2139     matched.
2140 nigel 93 </P>
2141     <br><b>
2142     Checking for pattern recursion
2143     </b><br>
2144     <P>
2145     If the condition is the string (R), and there is no subpattern with the name R,
2146     the condition is true if a recursive call to the whole pattern or any
2147     subpattern has been made. If digits or a name preceded by ampersand follow the
2148     letter R, for example:
2149     <pre>
2150     (?(R3)...) or (?(R&name)...)
2151 nigel 91 </pre>
2152 ph10 461 the condition is true if the most recent recursion is into a subpattern whose
2153 nigel 93 number or name is given. This condition does not check the entire recursion
2154 ph10 461 stack. If the name used in a condition of this kind is a duplicate, the test is
2155     applied to all subpatterns of the same name, and is true if any one of them is
2156     the most recent recursion.
2157 nigel 63 </P>
2158     <P>
2159 ph10 461 At "top level", all these recursion test conditions are false.
2160     <a href="#recursion">The syntax for recursive patterns</a>
2161     is described below.
2162 ph10 572 <a name="subdefine"></a></P>
2163 nigel 93 <br><b>
2164     Defining subpatterns for use by reference only
2165     </b><br>
2166     <P>
2167     If the condition is the string (DEFINE), and there is no subpattern with the
2168     name DEFINE, the condition is always false. In this case, there may be only one
2169     alternative in the subpattern. It is always skipped if control reaches this
2170     point in the pattern; the idea of DEFINE is that it can be used to define
2171 ph10 733 subroutines that can be referenced from elsewhere. (The use of
2172     <a href="#subpatternsassubroutines">subroutines</a>
2173 ph10 579 is described below.) For example, a pattern to match an IPv4 address such as
2174 ph10 975 "192.168.23.245" could be written like this (ignore white space and line
2175 ph10 579 breaks):
2176 nigel 93 <pre>
2177     (?(DEFINE) (?&#60;byte&#62; 2[0-4]\d | 25[0-5] | 1\d\d | [1-9]?\d) )
2178     \b (?&byte) (\.(?&byte)){3} \b
2179     </pre>
2180     The first part of the pattern is a DEFINE group inside which a another group
2181     named "byte" is defined. This matches an individual component of an IPv4
2182     address (a number less than 256). When matching takes place, this part of the
2183 ph10 461 pattern is skipped because DEFINE acts like a false condition. The rest of the
2184     pattern uses references to the named group to match the four dot-separated
2185     components of an IPv4 address, insisting on a word boundary at each end.
2186 nigel 93 </P>
2187     <br><b>
2188     Assertion conditions
2189     </b><br>
2190     <P>
2191     If the condition is not in any of the above formats, it must be an assertion.
2192 nigel 63 This may be a positive or negative lookahead or lookbehind assertion. Consider
2193     this pattern, again containing non-significant white space, and with the two
2194     alternatives on the second line:
2195     <pre>
2196     (?(?=[^a-z]*[a-z])
2197     \d{2}-[a-z]{3}-\d{2} | \d{2}-\d{2}-\d{2} )
2198 nigel 75 </pre>
2199 nigel 63 The condition is a positive lookahead assertion that matches an optional
2200     sequence of non-letters followed by a letter. In other words, it tests for the
2201     presence of at least one letter in the subject. If a letter is found, the
2202     subject is matched against the first alternative; otherwise it is matched
2203     against the second. This pattern matches strings in one of the two forms
2204     dd-aaa-dd or dd-dd-dd, where aaa are letters and dd are digits.
2205 nigel 75 <a name="comments"></a></P>
2206 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC20" href="#TOC1">COMMENTS</a><br>
2207 nigel 63 <P>
2208 ph10 579 There are two ways of including comments in patterns that are processed by
2209 ph10 567 PCRE. In both cases, the start of the comment must not be in a character class,
2210     nor in the middle of any other sequence of related characters such as (?: or a
2211     subpattern name or number. The characters that make up a comment play no part
2212     in the pattern matching.
2213 nigel 63 </P>
2214     <P>
2215 ph10 567 The sequence (?# marks the start of a comment that continues up to the next
2216     closing parenthesis. Nested parentheses are not permitted. If the PCRE_EXTENDED
2217     option is set, an unescaped # character also introduces a comment, which in
2218     this case continues to immediately after the next newline character or
2219     character sequence in the pattern. Which characters are interpreted as newlines
2220 ph10 869 is controlled by the options passed to a compiling function or by a special
2221 ph10 567 sequence at the start of the pattern, as described in the section entitled
2222 ph10 572 <a href="#newlines">"Newline conventions"</a>
2223     above. Note that the end of this type of comment is a literal newline sequence
2224     in the pattern; escape sequences that happen to represent a newline do not
2225     count. For example, consider this pattern when PCRE_EXTENDED is set, and the
2226     default newline convention is in force:
2227 ph10 567 <pre>
2228     abc #comment \n still comment
2229     </pre>
2230 ph10 579 On encountering the # character, <b>pcre_compile()</b> skips along, looking for
2231 ph10 567 a newline in the pattern. The sequence \n is still literal at this stage, so
2232     it does not terminate the comment. Only an actual character with the code value
2233     0x0a (the default newline) does so.
2234 nigel 91 <a name="recursion"></a></P>
2235 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC21" href="#TOC1">RECURSIVE PATTERNS</a><br>
2236 nigel 63 <P>
2237     Consider the problem of matching a string in parentheses, allowing for
2238     unlimited nested parentheses. Without the use of recursion, the best that can
2239     be done is to use a pattern that matches up to some fixed depth of nesting. It
2240 nigel 93 is not possible to handle an arbitrary nesting depth.
2241     </P>
2242     <P>
2243     For some time, Perl has provided a facility that allows regular expressions to
2244     recurse (amongst other things). It does this by interpolating Perl code in the
2245     expression at run time, and the code can refer to the expression itself. A Perl
2246     pattern using code interpolation to solve the parentheses problem can be
2247     created like this:
2248 nigel 63 <pre>
2249     $re = qr{\( (?: (?&#62;[^()]+) | (?p{$re}) )* \)}x;
2250 nigel 75 </pre>
2251 nigel 63 The (?p{...}) item interpolates Perl code at run time, and in this case refers
2252 nigel 93 recursively to the pattern in which it appears.
2253 nigel 63 </P>
2254     <P>
2255 nigel 93 Obviously, PCRE cannot support the interpolation of Perl code. Instead, it
2256     supports special syntax for recursion of the entire pattern, and also for
2257     individual subpattern recursion. After its introduction in PCRE and Python,
2258 ph10 453 this kind of recursion was subsequently introduced into Perl at release 5.10.
2259 nigel 63 </P>
2260     <P>
2261 nigel 93 A special item that consists of (? followed by a number greater than zero and a
2262 ph10 733 closing parenthesis is a recursive subroutine call of the subpattern of the
2263     given number, provided that it occurs inside that subpattern. (If not, it is a
2264     <a href="#subpatternsassubroutines">non-recursive subroutine</a>
2265 nigel 93 call, which is described in the next section.) The special item (?R) or (?0) is
2266     a recursive call of the entire regular expression.
2267 nigel 87 </P>
2268     <P>
2269     This PCRE pattern solves the nested parentheses problem (assume the
2270     PCRE_EXTENDED option is set so that white space is ignored):
2271 nigel 63 <pre>
2272 ph10 461 \( ( [^()]++ | (?R) )* \)
2273 nigel 75 </pre>
2274 nigel 63 First it matches an opening parenthesis. Then it matches any number of
2275     substrings which can either be a sequence of non-parentheses, or a recursive
2276 nigel 87 match of the pattern itself (that is, a correctly parenthesized substring).
2277 ph10 461 Finally there is a closing parenthesis. Note the use of a possessive quantifier
2278     to avoid backtracking into sequences of non-parentheses.
2279 nigel 63 </P>
2280     <P>
2281     If this were part of a larger pattern, you would not want to recurse the entire
2282     pattern, so instead you could use this:
2283     <pre>
2284 ph10 461 ( \( ( [^()]++ | (?1) )* \) )
2285 nigel 75 </pre>
2286 nigel 63 We have put the pattern into parentheses, and caused the recursion to refer to
2287 ph10 172 them instead of the whole pattern.
2288     </P>
2289     <P>
2290     In a larger pattern, keeping track of parenthesis numbers can be tricky. This
2291 ph10 572 is made easier by the use of relative references. Instead of (?1) in the
2292     pattern above you can write (?-2) to refer to the second most recently opened
2293     parentheses preceding the recursion. In other words, a negative number counts
2294     capturing parentheses leftwards from the point at which it is encountered.
2295 ph10 172 </P>
2296     <P>
2297     It is also possible to refer to subsequently opened parentheses, by writing
2298     references such as (?+2). However, these cannot be recursive because the
2299     reference is not inside the parentheses that are referenced. They are always
2300 ph10 733 <a href="#subpatternsassubroutines">non-recursive subroutine</a>
2301 ph10 454 calls, as described in the next section.
2302 ph10 172 </P>
2303     <P>
2304     An alternative approach is to use named parentheses instead. The Perl syntax
2305     for this is (?&name); PCRE's earlier syntax (?P&#62;name) is also supported. We
2306     could rewrite the above example as follows:
2307 nigel 63 <pre>
2308 ph10 461 (?&#60;pn&#62; \( ( [^()]++ | (?&pn) )* \) )
2309 nigel 75 </pre>
2310 nigel 93 If there is more than one subpattern with the same name, the earliest one is
2311 ph10 172 used.
2312     </P>
2313     <P>
2314     This particular example pattern that we have been looking at contains nested
2315 ph10 461 unlimited repeats, and so the use of a possessive quantifier for matching
2316     strings of non-parentheses is important when applying the pattern to strings
2317     that do not match. For example, when this pattern is applied to
2318 nigel 63 <pre>
2319     (aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa()
2320 nigel 75 </pre>
2321 ph10 461 it yields "no match" quickly. However, if a possessive quantifier is not used,
2322 nigel 63 the match runs for a very long time indeed because there are so many different
2323     ways the + and * repeats can carve up the subject, and all have to be tested
2324     before failure can be reported.
2325     </P>
2326     <P>
2327 ph10 469 At the end of a match, the values of capturing parentheses are those from
2328     the outermost level. If you want to obtain intermediate values, a callout
2329     function can be used (see below and the
2330 nigel 63 <a href="pcrecallout.html"><b>pcrecallout</b></a>
2331     documentation). If the pattern above is matched against
2332     <pre>
2333     (ab(cd)ef)
2334 nigel 75 </pre>
2335 ph10 469 the value for the inner capturing parentheses (numbered 2) is "ef", which is
2336     the last value taken on at the top level. If a capturing subpattern is not
2337 ph10 733 matched at the top level, its final captured value is unset, even if it was
2338     (temporarily) set at a deeper level during the matching process.
2339 nigel 63 </P>
2340     <P>
2341 ph10 469 If there are more than 15 capturing parentheses in a pattern, PCRE has to
2342     obtain extra memory to store data during a recursion, which it does by using
2343     <b>pcre_malloc</b>, freeing it via <b>pcre_free</b> afterwards. If no memory can
2344     be obtained, the match fails with the PCRE_ERROR_NOMEMORY error.
2345     </P>
2346     <P>
2347 nigel 63 Do not confuse the (?R) item with the condition (R), which tests for recursion.
2348     Consider this pattern, which matches text in angle brackets, allowing for
2349     arbitrary nesting. Only digits are allowed in nested brackets (that is, when
2350     recursing), whereas any characters are permitted at the outer level.
2351     <pre>
2352     &#60; (?: (?(R) \d++ | [^&#60;&#62;]*+) | (?R)) * &#62;
2353 nigel 75 </pre>
2354 nigel 63 In this pattern, (?(R) is the start of a conditional subpattern, with two
2355     different alternatives for the recursive and non-recursive cases. The (?R) item
2356     is the actual recursive call.
2357 ph10 453 <a name="recursiondifference"></a></P>
2358     <br><b>
2359 ph10 733 Differences in recursion processing between PCRE and Perl
2360 ph10 453 </b><br>
2361     <P>
2362 ph10 733 Recursion processing in PCRE differs from Perl in two important ways. In PCRE
2363     (like Python, but unlike Perl), a recursive subpattern call is always treated
2364     as an atomic group. That is, once it has matched some of the subject string, it
2365     is never re-entered, even if it contains untried alternatives and there is a
2366     subsequent matching failure. This can be illustrated by the following pattern,
2367     which purports to match a palindromic string that contains an odd number of
2368     characters (for example, "a", "aba", "abcba", "abcdcba"):
2369 ph10 453 <pre>
2370     ^(.|(.)(?1)\2)$
2371     </pre>
2372 ph10 461 The idea is that it either matches a single character, or two identical
2373     characters surrounding a sub-palindrome. In Perl, this pattern works; in PCRE
2374 ph10 453 it does not if the pattern is longer than three characters. Consider the
2375     subject string "abcba":
2376     </P>
2377     <P>
2378 ph10 461 At the top level, the first character is matched, but as it is not at the end
2379 ph10 453 of the string, the first alternative fails; the second alternative is taken
2380     and the recursion kicks in. The recursive call to subpattern 1 successfully
2381     matches the next character ("b"). (Note that the beginning and end of line
2382     tests are not part of the recursion).
2383     </P>
2384     <P>
2385     Back at the top level, the next character ("c") is compared with what
2386 ph10 461 subpattern 2 matched, which was "a". This fails. Because the recursion is
2387 ph10 453 treated as an atomic group, there are now no backtracking points, and so the
2388     entire match fails. (Perl is able, at this point, to re-enter the recursion and
2389     try the second alternative.) However, if the pattern is written with the
2390     alternatives in the other order, things are different:
2391     <pre>
2392     ^((.)(?1)\2|.)$
2393     </pre>
2394 ph10 461 This time, the recursing alternative is tried first, and continues to recurse
2395     until it runs out of characters, at which point the recursion fails. But this
2396     time we do have another alternative to try at the higher level. That is the big
2397 ph10 453 difference: in the previous case the remaining alternative is at a deeper
2398     recursion level, which PCRE cannot use.
2399     </P>
2400     <P>
2401 ph10 579 To change the pattern so that it matches all palindromic strings, not just
2402     those with an odd number of characters, it is tempting to change the pattern to
2403     this:
2404 ph10 453 <pre>
2405     ^((.)(?1)\2|.?)$
2406     </pre>
2407 ph10 461 Again, this works in Perl, but not in PCRE, and for the same reason. When a
2408     deeper recursion has matched a single character, it cannot be entered again in
2409     order to match an empty string. The solution is to separate the two cases, and
2410 ph10 453 write out the odd and even cases as alternatives at the higher level:
2411     <pre>
2412     ^(?:((.)(?1)\2|)|((.)(?3)\4|.))
2413     </pre>
2414 ph10 461 If you want to match typical palindromic phrases, the pattern has to ignore all
2415 ph10 453 non-word characters, which can be done like this:
2416     <pre>
2417     ^\W*+(?:((.)\W*+(?1)\W*+\2|)|((.)\W*+(?3)\W*+\4|\W*+.\W*+))\W*+$
2418     </pre>
2419 ph10 461 If run with the PCRE_CASELESS option, this pattern matches phrases such as "A
2420     man, a plan, a canal: Panama!" and it works well in both PCRE and Perl. Note
2421     the use of the possessive quantifier *+ to avoid backtracking into sequences of
2422 ph10 453 non-word characters. Without this, PCRE takes a great deal longer (ten times or
2423     more) to match typical phrases, and Perl takes so long that you think it has
2424     gone into a loop.
2425 ph10 461 </P>
2426     <P>
2427     <b>WARNING</b>: The palindrome-matching patterns above work only if the subject
2428     string does not start with a palindrome that is shorter than the entire string.
2429     For example, although "abcba" is correctly matched, if the subject is "ababa",
2430     PCRE finds the palindrome "aba" at the start, then fails at top level because
2431     the end of the string does not follow. Once again, it cannot jump back into the
2432     recursion to try other alternatives, so the entire match fails.
2433 ph10 733 </P>
2434     <P>
2435     The second way in which PCRE and Perl differ in their recursion processing is
2436     in the handling of captured values. In Perl, when a subpattern is called
2437     recursively or as a subpattern (see the next section), it has no access to any
2438     values that were captured outside the recursion, whereas in PCRE these values
2439     can be referenced. Consider this pattern:
2440     <pre>
2441     ^(.)(\1|a(?2))
2442     </pre>
2443     In PCRE, this pattern matches "bab". The first capturing parentheses match "b",
2444     then in the second group, when the back reference \1 fails to match "b", the
2445     second alternative matches "a" and then recurses. In the recursion, \1 does
2446     now match "b" and so the whole match succeeds. In Perl, the pattern fails to
2447     match because inside the recursive call \1 cannot access the externally set
2448     value.
2449 nigel 75 <a name="subpatternsassubroutines"></a></P>
2450 ph10 227 <br><a name="SEC22" href="#TOC1">SUBPATTERNS AS SUBROUTINES</a><br>
2451 nigel 63 <P>
2452 ph10 733 If the syntax for a recursive subpattern call (either by number or by
2453 nigel 63 name) is used outside the parentheses to which it refers, it operates like a
2454 ph10 733 subroutine in a programming language. The called subpattern may be defined
2455 ph10 172 before or after the reference. A numbered reference can be absolute or
2456     relative, as in these examples:
2457 nigel 63 <pre>
2458 ph10 172 (...(absolute)...)...(?2)...
2459     (...(relative)...)...(?-1)...
2460     (...(?+1)...(relative)...
2461     </pre>
2462     An earlier example pointed out that the pattern
2463     <pre>
2464 nigel 63 (sens|respons)e and \1ibility
2465 nigel 75 </pre>
2466 nigel 63 matches "sense and sensibility" and "response and responsibility", but not
2467     "sense and responsibility". If instead the pattern
2468     <pre>
2469     (sens|respons)e and (?1)ibility
2470 nigel 75 </pre>
2471 nigel 63 is used, it does match "sense and responsibility" as well as the other two
2472 nigel 93 strings. Another example is given in the discussion of DEFINE above.
2473 nigel 63 </P>
2474 nigel 87 <P>
2475 ph10 733 All subroutine calls, whether recursive or not, are always treated as atomic
2476     groups. That is, once a subroutine has matched some of the subject string, it
2477     is never re-entered, even if it contains untried alternatives and there is a
2478     subsequent matching failure. Any capturing parentheses that are set during the
2479     subroutine call revert to their previous values afterwards.
2480 nigel 87 </P>
2481 nigel 63 <P>
2482 ph10 733 Processing options such as case-independence are fixed when a subpattern is
2483     defined, so if it is used as a subroutine, such options cannot be changed for
2484     different calls. For example, consider this pattern:
2485 nigel 93 <pre>
2486 ph10 172 (abc)(?i:(?-1))
2487 nigel 93 </pre>
2488     It matches "abcabc". It does not match "abcABC" because the change of
2489     processing option does not affect the called subpattern.
2490 ph10 345 <a name="onigurumasubroutines"></a></P>
2491     <br><a name="SEC23" href="#TOC1">ONIGURUMA SUBROUTINE SYNTAX</a><br>
2492     <P>
2493     For compatibility with Oniguruma, the non-Perl syntax \g followed by a name or
2494     a number enclosed either in angle brackets or single quotes, is an alternative
2495     syntax for referencing a subpattern as a subroutine, possibly recursively. Here
2496     are two of the examples used above, rewritten using this syntax:
2497     <pre>
2498     (?&#60;pn&#62; \( ( (?&#62;[^()]+) | \g&#60;pn&#62; )* \) )
2499     (sens|respons)e and \g'1'ibility
2500     </pre>
2501     PCRE supports an extension to Oniguruma: if a number is preceded by a
2502     plus or a minus sign it is taken as a relative reference. For example:
2503     <pre>
2504     (abc)(?i:\g&#60;-1&#62;)
2505     </pre>
2506     Note that \g{...} (Perl syntax) and \g&#60;...&#62; (Oniguruma syntax) are <i>not</i>
2507     synonymous. The former is a back reference; the latter is a subroutine call.
2508 nigel 93 </P>
2509 ph10 345 <br><a name="SEC24" href="#TOC1">CALLOUTS</a><br>
2510 nigel 93 <P>
2511 nigel 63 Perl has a feature whereby using the sequence (?{...}) causes arbitrary Perl
2512     code to be obeyed in the middle of matching a regular expression. This makes it
2513     possible, amongst other things, to extract different substrings that match the
2514     same pair of parentheses when there is a repetition.
2515     </P>
2516     <P>
2517     PCRE provides a similar feature, but of course it cannot obey arbitrary Perl
2518     code. The feature is called "callout". The caller of PCRE provides an external
2519 ph10 903 function by putting its entry point in the global variable <i>pcre_callout</i>
2520 ph10 869 (8-bit library) or <i>pcre16_callout</i> (16-bit library). By default, this
2521     variable contains NULL, which disables all calling out.
2522 nigel 63 </P>
2523     <P>
2524     Within a regular expression, (?C) indicates the points at which the external
2525     function is to be called. If you want to identify different callout points, you
2526     can put a number less than 256 after the letter C. The default value is zero.
2527     For example, this pattern has two callout points:
2528     <pre>
2529 ph10 155 (?C1)abc(?C2)def
2530 nigel 75 </pre>
2531 ph10 869 If the PCRE_AUTO_CALLOUT flag is passed to a compiling function, callouts are
2532 nigel 75 automatically installed before each item in the pattern. They are all numbered
2533     255.
2534 nigel 63 </P>
2535     <P>
2536 ph10 869 During matching, when PCRE reaches a callout point, the external function is
2537     called. It is provided with the number of the callout, the position in the
2538     pattern, and, optionally, one item of data originally supplied by the caller of
2539     the matching function. The callout function may cause matching to proceed, to
2540     backtrack, or to fail altogether. A complete description of the interface to
2541     the callout function is given in the
2542 nigel 63 <a href="pcrecallout.html"><b>pcrecallout</b></a>
2543     documentation.
2544 ph10 512 <a name="backtrackcontrol"></a></P>
2545 ph10 345 <br><a name="SEC25" href="#TOC1">BACKTRACKING CONTROL</a><br>
2546 nigel 63 <P>
2547 ph10 211 Perl 5.10 introduced a number of "Special Backtracking Control Verbs", which
2548     are described in the Perl documentation as "experimental and subject to change
2549     or removal in a future version of Perl". It goes on to say: "Their usage in
2550     production code should be noted to avoid problems during upgrades." The same
2551     remarks apply to the PCRE features described in this section.
2552     </P>
2553     <P>
2554 ph10 345 Since these verbs are specifically related to backtracking, most of them can be
2555 ph10 869 used only when the pattern is to be matched using one of the traditional
2556     matching functions, which use a backtracking algorithm. With the exception of
2557     (*FAIL), which behaves like a failing negative assertion, they cause an error
2558     if encountered by a DFA matching function.
2559 ph10 211 </P>
2560     <P>
2561 ph10 733 If any of these verbs are used in an assertion or in a subpattern that is
2562     called as a subroutine (whether or not recursively), their effect is confined
2563     to that subpattern; it does not extend to the surrounding pattern, with one
2564 ph10 836 exception: the name from a *(MARK), (*PRUNE), or (*THEN) that is encountered in
2565     a successful positive assertion <i>is</i> passed back when a match succeeds
2566     (compare capturing parentheses in assertions). Note that such subpatterns are
2567     processed as anchored at the point where they are tested. Note also that Perl's
2568 ph10 975 treatment of subroutines and assertions is different in some cases.
2569 ph10 453 </P>
2570     <P>
2571 ph10 211 The new verbs make use of what was previously invalid syntax: an opening
2572 ph10 512 parenthesis followed by an asterisk. They are generally of the form
2573     (*VERB) or (*VERB:NAME). Some may take either form, with differing behaviour,
2574 ph10 733 depending on whether or not an argument is present. A name is any sequence of
2575 ph10 975 characters that does not include a closing parenthesis. The maximum length of
2576     name is 255 in the 8-bit library and 65535 in the 16-bit library. If the name
2577     is empty, that is, if the closing parenthesis immediately follows the colon,
2578     the effect is as if the colon were not there. Any number of these verbs may
2579     occur in a pattern.
2580 ph10 930 <a name="nooptimize"></a></P>
2581     <br><b>
2582     Optimizations that affect backtracking verbs
2583     </b><br>
2584 ph10 512 <P>
2585     PCRE contains some optimizations that are used to speed up matching by running
2586     some checks at the start of each match attempt. For example, it may know the
2587     minimum length of matching subject, or that a particular character must be
2588     present. When one of these optimizations suppresses the running of a match, any
2589     included backtracking verbs will not, of course, be processed. You can suppress
2590     the start-of-match optimizations by setting the PCRE_NO_START_OPTIMIZE option
2591 ph10 579 when calling <b>pcre_compile()</b> or <b>pcre_exec()</b>, or by starting the
2592 ph10 930 pattern with (*NO_START_OPT). There is more discussion of this option in the
2593     section entitled
2594     <a href="pcreapi.html#execoptions">"Option bits for <b>pcre_exec()</b>"</a>
2595     in the
2596     <a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
2597 ph10 975 documentation.
2598 ph10 512 </P>
2599 ph10 836 <P>
2600     Experiments with Perl suggest that it too has similar optimizations, sometimes
2601     leading to anomalous results.
2602     </P>
2603 ph10 211 <br><b>
2604     Verbs that act immediately
2605     </b><br>
2606     <P>
2607 ph10 512 The following verbs act as soon as they are encountered. They may not be
2608     followed by a name.
2609 ph10 211 <pre>
2610     (*ACCEPT)
2611     </pre>
2612     This verb causes the match to end successfully, skipping the remainder of the
2613 ph10 733 pattern. However, when it is inside a subpattern that is called as a
2614     subroutine, only that subpattern is ended successfully. Matching then continues
2615     at the outer level. If (*ACCEPT) is inside capturing parentheses, the data so
2616     far is captured. For example:
2617 ph10 211 <pre>
2618 ph10 453 A((?:A|B(*ACCEPT)|C)D)
2619 ph10 211 </pre>
2620 ph10 461 This matches "AB", "AAD", or "ACD"; when it matches "AB", "B" is captured by
2621 ph10 453 the outer parentheses.
2622 ph10 211 <pre>
2623     (*FAIL) or (*F)
2624     </pre>
2625 ph10 733 This verb causes a matching failure, forcing backtracking to occur. It is
2626 ph10 211 equivalent to (?!) but easier to read. The Perl documentation notes that it is
2627     probably useful only when combined with (?{}) or (??{}). Those are, of course,
2628     Perl features that are not present in PCRE. The nearest equivalent is the
2629     callout feature, as for example in this pattern:
2630     <pre>
2631     a+(?C)(*FAIL)
2632     </pre>
2633     A match with the string "aaaa" always fails, but the callout is taken before
2634     each backtrack happens (in this example, 10 times).
2635     </P>
2636     <br><b>
2637 ph10 512 Recording which path was taken
2638     </b><br>
2639     <P>
2640     There is one verb whose main purpose is to track how a match was arrived at,
2641     though it also has a secondary use in conjunction with advancing the match
2642     starting point (see (*SKIP) below).
2643     <pre>
2644     (*MARK:NAME) or (*:NAME)
2645     </pre>
2646     A name is always required with this verb. There may be as many instances of
2647     (*MARK) as you like in a pattern, and their names do not have to be unique.
2648     </P>
2649     <P>
2650 ph10 836 When a match succeeds, the name of the last-encountered (*MARK) on the matching
2651 ph10 869 path is passed back to the caller as described in the section entitled
2652     <a href="pcreapi.html#extradata">"Extra data for <b>pcre_exec()</b>"</a>
2653 ph10 512 in the
2654     <a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
2655 ph10 836 documentation. Here is an example of <b>pcretest</b> output, where the /K
2656     modifier requests the retrieval and outputting of (*MARK) data:
2657 ph10 512 <pre>
2658 ph10 836 re&#62; /X(*MARK:A)Y|X(*MARK:B)Z/K
2659     data&#62; XY
2660 ph10 512 0: XY
2661     MK: A
2662     XZ
2663     0: XZ
2664     MK: B
2665     </pre>
2666     The (*MARK) name is tagged with "MK:" in this output, and in this example it
2667     indicates which of the two alternatives matched. This is a more efficient way
2668     of obtaining this information than putting each alternative in its own
2669     capturing parentheses.
2670     </P>
2671     <P>
2672 ph10 654 If (*MARK) is encountered in a positive assertion, its name is recorded and
2673     passed back if it is the last-encountered. This does not happen for negative
2674 ph10 733 assertions.
2675 ph10 654 </P>
2676     <P>
2677 ph10 836 After a partial match or a failed match, the name of the last encountered
2678     (*MARK) in the entire match process is returned. For example:
2679 ph10 512 <pre>
2680 ph10 836 re&#62; /X(*MARK:A)Y|X(*MARK:B)Z/K
2681     data&#62; XP
2682 ph10 512 No match, mark = B
2683     </pre>
2684 ph10 836 Note that in this unanchored example the mark is retained from the match
2685 ph10 930 attempt that started at the letter "X" in the subject. Subsequent match
2686     attempts starting at "P" and then with an empty string do not get as far as the
2687     (*MARK) item, but nevertheless do not reset it.
2688 ph10 512 </P>
2689 ph10 930 <P>
2690     If you are interested in (*MARK) values after failed matches, you should
2691 ph10 975 probably set the PCRE_NO_START_OPTIMIZE option
2692 ph10 930 <a href="#nooptimize">(see above)</a>
2693     to ensure that the match is always attempted.
2694     </P>
2695 ph10 512 <br><b>
2696 ph10 211 Verbs that act after backtracking
2697     </b><br>
2698     <P>
2699     The following verbs do nothing when they are encountered. Matching continues
2700 ph10 512 with what follows, but if there is no subsequent match, causing a backtrack to
2701     the verb, a failure is forced. That is, backtracking cannot pass to the left of
2702     the verb. However, when one of these verbs appears inside an atomic group, its
2703     effect is confined to that group, because once the group has been matched,
2704     there is never any backtracking into it. In this situation, backtracking can
2705     "jump back" to the left of the entire atomic group. (Remember also, as stated
2706     above, that this localization also applies in subroutine calls and assertions.)
2707     </P>
2708     <P>
2709     These verbs differ in exactly what kind of failure occurs when backtracking
2710     reaches them.
2711 ph10 211 <pre>
2712     (*COMMIT)
2713     </pre>
2714 ph10 512 This verb, which may not be followed by a name, causes the whole match to fail
2715     outright if the rest of the pattern does not match. Even if the pattern is
2716     unanchored, no further attempts to find a match by advancing the starting point
2717     take place. Once (*COMMIT) has been passed, <b>pcre_exec()</b> is committed to
2718     finding a match at the current starting point, or not at all. For example:
2719 ph10 211 <pre>
2720     a+(*COMMIT)b
2721     </pre>
2722     This matches "xxaab" but not "aacaab". It can be thought of as a kind of
2723 ph10 512 dynamic anchor, or "I've started, so I must finish." The name of the most
2724     recently passed (*MARK) in the path is passed back when (*COMMIT) forces a
2725     match failure.
2726     </P>
2727     <P>
2728     Note that (*COMMIT) at the start of a pattern is not the same as an anchor,
2729     unless PCRE's start-of-match optimizations are turned off, as shown in this
2730     <b>pcretest</b> example:
2731 ph10 211 <pre>
2732 ph10 836 re&#62; /(*COMMIT)abc/
2733     data&#62; xyzabc
2734 ph10 512 0: abc
2735     xyzabc\Y
2736     No match
2737 ph10 211 </pre>
2738 ph10 512 PCRE knows that any match must start with "a", so the optimization skips along
2739     the subject to "a" before running the first match attempt, which succeeds. When
2740     the optimization is disabled by the \Y escape in the second subject, the match
2741     starts at "x" and so the (*COMMIT) causes it to fail without trying any other
2742     starting points.
2743 ph10 211 <pre>
2744 ph10 512 (*PRUNE) or (*PRUNE:NAME)
2745     </pre>
2746     This verb causes the match to fail at the current starting position in the
2747     subject if the rest of the pattern does not match. If the pattern is
2748     unanchored, the normal "bumpalong" advance to the next starting character then
2749     happens. Backtracking can occur as usual to the left of (*PRUNE), before it is
2750     reached, or when matching to the right of (*PRUNE), but if there is no match to
2751     the right, backtracking cannot cross (*PRUNE). In simple cases, the use of
2752     (*PRUNE) is just an alternative to an atomic group or possessive quantifier,
2753     but there are some uses of (*PRUNE) that cannot be expressed in any other way.
2754 ph10 836 The behaviour of (*PRUNE:NAME) is the same as (*MARK:NAME)(*PRUNE). In an
2755     anchored pattern (*PRUNE) has the same effect as (*COMMIT).
2756 ph10 512 <pre>
2757 ph10 211 (*SKIP)
2758     </pre>
2759 ph10 512 This verb, when given without a name, is like (*PRUNE), except that if the
2760     pattern is unanchored, the "bumpalong" advance is not to the next character,
2761     but to the position in the subject where (*SKIP) was encountered. (*SKIP)
2762     signifies that whatever text was matched leading up to it cannot be part of a
2763     successful match. Consider:
2764 ph10 211 <pre>
2765     a+(*SKIP)b
2766     </pre>
2767     If the subject is "aaaac...", after the first match attempt fails (starting at
2768     the first character in the string), the starting point skips on to start the
2769     next attempt at "c". Note that a possessive quantifer does not have the same
2770 ph10 461 effect as this example; although it would suppress backtracking during the
2771 ph10 211 first match attempt, the second attempt would start at the second character
2772     instead of skipping on to "c".
2773     <pre>
2774 ph10 512 (*SKIP:NAME)
2775 ph10 211 </pre>
2776 ph10 512 When (*SKIP) has an associated name, its behaviour is modified. If the
2777     following pattern fails to match, the previous path through the pattern is
2778     searched for the most recent (*MARK) that has the same name. If one is found,
2779     the "bumpalong" advance is to the subject position that corresponds to that
2780     (*MARK) instead of to where (*SKIP) was encountered. If no (*MARK) with a
2781 ph10 836 matching name is found, the (*SKIP) is ignored.
2782 ph10 512 <pre>
2783     (*THEN) or (*THEN:NAME)
2784     </pre>
2785 ph10 733 This verb causes a skip to the next innermost alternative if the rest of the
2786     pattern does not match. That is, it cancels pending backtracking, but only
2787     within the current alternative. Its name comes from the observation that it can
2788     be used for a pattern-based if-then-else block:
2789 ph10 211 <pre>
2790     ( COND1 (*THEN) FOO | COND2 (*THEN) BAR | COND3 (*THEN) BAZ ) ...
2791     </pre>
2792     If the COND1 pattern matches, FOO is tried (and possibly further items after
2793 ph10 733 the end of the group if FOO succeeds); on failure, the matcher skips to the
2794 ph10 512 second alternative and tries COND2, without backtracking into COND1. The
2795 ph10 836 behaviour of (*THEN:NAME) is exactly the same as (*MARK:NAME)(*THEN).
2796     If (*THEN) is not inside an alternation, it acts like (*PRUNE).
2797 ph10 211 </P>
2798 ph10 567 <P>
2799 ph10 733 Note that a subpattern that does not contain a | character is just a part of
2800     the enclosing alternative; it is not a nested alternation with only one
2801     alternative. The effect of (*THEN) extends beyond such a subpattern to the
2802     enclosing alternative. Consider this pattern, where A, B, etc. are complex
2803     pattern fragments that do not contain any | characters at this level:
2804     <pre>
2805     A (B(*THEN)C) | D
2806     </pre>
2807     If A and B are matched, but there is a failure in C, matching does not
2808     backtrack into A; instead it moves to the next alternative, that is, D.
2809     However, if the subpattern containing (*THEN) is given an alternative, it
2810     behaves differently:
2811     <pre>
2812     A (B(*THEN)C | (*FAIL)) | D
2813     </pre>
2814     The effect of (*THEN) is now confined to the inner subpattern. After a failure
2815     in C, matching moves to (*FAIL), which causes the whole subpattern to fail
2816     because there are no more alternatives to try. In this case, matching does now
2817     backtrack into A.
2818 ph10 567 </P>
2819     <P>
2820 ph10 733 Note also that a conditional subpattern is not considered as having two
2821     alternatives, because only one is ever used. In other words, the | character in
2822     a conditional subpattern has a different meaning. Ignoring white space,
2823     consider:
2824 ph10 567 <pre>
2825 ph10 733 ^.*? (?(?=a) a | b(*THEN)c )
2826     </pre>
2827     If the subject is "ba", this pattern does not match. Because .*? is ungreedy,
2828     it initially matches zero characters. The condition (?=a) then fails, the
2829     character "b" is matched, but "c" is not. At this point, matching does not
2830     backtrack to .*? as might perhaps be expected from the presence of the |
2831     character. The conditional subpattern is part of the single alternative that
2832     comprises the whole pattern, and so the match fails. (If there was a backtrack
2833     into .*?, allowing it to match "b", the match would succeed.)
2834     </P>
2835     <P>
2836     The verbs just described provide four different "strengths" of control when
2837     subsequent matching fails. (*THEN) is the weakest, carrying on the match at the
2838     next alternative. (*PRUNE) comes next, failing the match at the current
2839     starting position, but allowing an advance to the next character (for an
2840     unanchored pattern). (*SKIP) is similar, except that the advance may be more
2841     than one character. (*COMMIT) is the strongest, causing the entire match to
2842     fail.
2843     </P>
2844     <P>
2845     If more than one such verb is present in a pattern, the "strongest" one wins.
2846     For example, consider this pattern, where A, B, etc. are complex pattern
2847     fragments:
2848     <pre>
2849 ph10 567 (A(*COMMIT)B(*THEN)C|D)
2850     </pre>
2851     Once A has matched, PCRE is committed to this match, at the current starting
2852     position. If subsequently B matches, but C does not, the normal (*THEN) action
2853 ph10 733 of trying the next alternative (that is, D) does not happen because (*COMMIT)
2854 ph10 567 overrides.
2855     </P>
2856 ph10 345 <br><a name="SEC26" href="#TOC1">SEE ALSO</a><br>
2857 ph10 211 <P>
2858 ph10 461 <b>pcreapi</b>(3), <b>pcrecallout</b>(3), <b>pcrematching</b>(3),
2859 ph10 869 <b>pcresyntax</b>(3), <b>pcre</b>(3), <b>pcre16(3)</b>.
2860 nigel 93 </P>
2861 ph10 345 <br><a name="SEC27" href="#TOC1">AUTHOR</a><br>
2862 nigel 93 <P>
2863 ph10 99 Philip Hazel
2864 nigel 63 <br>
2865 ph10 99 University Computing Service
2866     <br>
2867     Cambridge CB2 3QH, England.
2868     <br>
2869     </P>
2870 ph10 345 <br><a name="SEC28" href="#TOC1">REVISION</a><br>
2871 ph10 99 <P>
2872 ph10 975 Last updated: 01 June 2012
2873 ph10 99 <br>
2874 ph10 869 Copyright &copy; 1997-2012 University of Cambridge.
2875 ph10 99 <br>
2876 nigel 75 <p>
2877     Return to the <a href="index.html">PCRE index page</a>.
2878     </p>

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