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PERLREREF(1)	Perl Programmers Reference Guide     PERLREREF(1)

NAME
     perlreref - Perl Regular Expressions Reference

DESCRIPTION
     This is a quick reference to Perl's regular expressions. For
     full information see perlre and perlop, as well as the "SEE
     ALSO" section in this document.

     OPERATORS

       =~ determines to which variable the regex is applied.
	  In its absence, $_ is used.

	     $var =~ /foo/;

       !~ determines to which variable the regex is applied,
	  and negates the result of the match; it returns
	  false if the match succeeds, and true if it fails.

	    $var !~ /foo/;

       m/pattern/igmsoxc searches a string for a pattern match,
	  applying the given options.

	     i	case-Insensitive
	     g	Global - all occurrences
	     m	Multiline mode - ^ and $ match internal lines
	     s	match as a Single line - . matches \n
	     o	compile pattern Once
	     x	eXtended legibility - free whitespace and comments
	     c	don't reset pos on failed matches when using /g

	  If 'pattern' is an empty string, the last I<successfully> matched
	  regex is used. Delimiters other than '/' may be used for both this
	  operator and the following ones.

       qr/pattern/imsox lets you store a regex in a variable,
	  or pass one around. Modifiers as for m// and are stored
	  within the regex.

       s/pattern/replacement/igmsoxe substitutes matches of
	  'pattern' with 'replacement'. Modifiers as for m//
	  with one addition:

	     e	Evaluate replacement as an expression

	  'e' may be specified multiple times. 'replacement' is interpreted
	  as a double quoted string unless a single-quote (') is the delimiter.

       ?pattern? is like m/pattern/ but matches only once. No alternate
	   delimiters can be used. Must be reset with L<reset|perlfunc/reset>.

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PERLREREF(1)	Perl Programmers Reference Guide     PERLREREF(1)

     SYNTAX

	\	Escapes the character immediately following it
	.	Matches any single character except a newline (unless /s is used)
	^	Matches at the beginning of the string (or line, if /m is used)
	$	Matches at the end of the string (or line, if /m is used)
	*	Matches the preceding element 0 or more times
	+	Matches the preceding element 1 or more times
	?	Matches the preceding element 0 or 1 times
	{...}	Specifies a range of occurrences for the element preceding it
	[...]	Matches any one of the characters contained within the brackets
	(...)	Groups subexpressions for capturing to $1, $2...
	(?:...) Groups subexpressions without capturing (cluster)
	|	Matches either the subexpression preceding or following it
	\1, \2 ...  The text from the Nth group

     ESCAPE SEQUENCES

     These work as in normal strings.

	\a	 Alarm (beep)
	\e	 Escape
	\f	 Formfeed
	\n	 Newline
	\r	 Carriage return
	\t	 Tab
	\037	 Any octal ASCII value
	\x7f	 Any hexadecimal ASCII value
	\x{263a} A wide hexadecimal value
	\cx	 Control-x
	\N{name} A named character

	\l  Lowercase next character
	\u  Titlecase next character
	\L  Lowercase until \E
	\U  Uppercase until \E
	\Q  Disable pattern metacharacters until \E
	\E  End case modification

     For Titlecase, see "Titlecase".

     This one works differently from normal strings:

	\b  An assertion, not backspace, except in a character class

     CHARACTER CLASSES

	[amy]	 Match 'a', 'm' or 'y'
	[f-j]	 Dash specifies "range"
	[f-j-]	 Dash escaped or at start or end means 'dash'
	[^f-j]	 Caret indicates "match any character _except_ these"

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PERLREREF(1)	Perl Programmers Reference Guide     PERLREREF(1)

     The following sequences work within or without a character
     class. The first six are locale aware, all are Unicode
     aware.  The default character class equivalent are given.
     See perllocale and perlunicode for details.

	\d	A digit			    [0-9]
	\D	A nondigit		    [^0-9]
	\w	A word character	    [a-zA-Z0-9_]
	\W	A non-word character	    [^a-zA-Z0-9_]
	\s	A whitespace character	    [ \t\n\r\f]
	\S	A non-whitespace character  [^ \t\n\r\f]

	\C	Match a byte (with Unicode, '.' matches a character)
	\pP	Match P-named (Unicode) property
	\p{...} Match Unicode property with long name
	\PP	Match non-P
	\P{...} Match lack of Unicode property with long name
	\X	Match extended unicode sequence

     POSIX character classes and their Unicode and Perl
     equivalents:

	alnum	IsAlnum		     Alphanumeric
	alpha	IsAlpha		     Alphabetic
	ascii	IsASCII		     Any ASCII char
	blank	IsSpace	 [ \t]	     Horizontal whitespace (GNU extension)
	cntrl	IsCntrl		     Control characters
	digit	IsDigit	 \d	     Digits
	graph	IsGraph		     Alphanumeric and punctuation
	lower	IsLower		     Lowercase chars (locale and Unicode aware)
	print	IsPrint		     Alphanumeric, punct, and space
	punct	IsPunct		     Punctuation
	space	IsSpace	 [\s\ck]     Whitespace
		IsSpacePerl   \s     Perl's whitespace definition
	upper	IsUpper		     Uppercase chars (locale and Unicode aware)
	word	IsWord	 \w	     Alphanumeric plus _ (Perl extension)
	xdigit	IsXDigit [0-9A-Fa-f] Hexadecimal digit

     Within a character class:

	 POSIX	     traditional   Unicode
	 [:digit:]	 \d	   \p{IsDigit}
	 [:^digit:]	 \D	   \P{IsDigit}

     ANCHORS

     All are zero-width assertions.

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	^  Match string start (or line, if /m is used)
	$  Match string end (or line, if /m is used) or before newline
	\b Match word boundary (between \w and \W)
	\B Match except at word boundary (between \w and \w or \W and \W)
	\A Match string start (regardless of /m)
	\Z Match string end (before optional newline)
	\z Match absolute string end
	\G Match where previous m//g left off

     QUANTIFIERS

     Quantifiers are greedy by default -- match the longest left-
     most.

	Maximal Minimal Allowed range
	------- ------- -------------
	{n,m}	{n,m}?	Must occur at least n times but no more than m times
	{n,}	{n,}?	Must occur at least n times
	{n}	{n}?	Must occur exactly n times
	*	*?	0 or more times (same as {0,})
	+	+?	1 or more times (same as {1,})
	?	??	0 or 1 time (same as {0,1})

     There is no quantifier {,n} -- that gets understood as a
     literal string.

     EXTENDED CONSTRUCTS

	(?#text)	 A comment
	(?imxs-imsx:...) Enable/disable option (as per m// modifiers)
	(?=...)		 Zero-width positive lookahead assertion
	(?!...)		 Zero-width negative lookahead assertion
	(?<=...)	 Zero-width positive lookbehind assertion
	(?<!...)	 Zero-width negative lookbehind assertion
	(?>...)		 Grab what we can, prohibit backtracking
	(?{ code })	 Embedded code, return value becomes $^R
	(??{ code })	 Dynamic regex, return value used as regex
	(?(cond)yes|no)	 cond being integer corresponding to capturing parens
	(?(cond)yes)	    or a lookaround/eval zero-width assertion

     VARIABLES

	$_    Default variable for operators to use
	$*    Enable multiline matching (deprecated; not in 5.9.0 or later)

	$&    Entire matched string
	$`    Everything prior to matched string
	$'    Everything after to matched string

     The use of those last three will slow down all regex use
     within your program. Consult perlvar for @LAST_MATCH_START
     to see equivalent expressions that won't cause slow down.

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PERLREREF(1)	Perl Programmers Reference Guide     PERLREREF(1)

     See also Devel::SawAmpersand.

	$1, $2 ...  hold the Xth captured expr
	$+    Last parenthesized pattern match
	$^N   Holds the most recently closed capture
	$^R   Holds the result of the last (?{...}) expr
	@-    Offsets of starts of groups. $-[0] holds start of whole match
	@+    Offsets of ends of groups. $+[0] holds end of whole match

     Captured groups are numbered according to their opening
     paren.

     FUNCTIONS

	lc	    Lowercase a string
	lcfirst	    Lowercase first char of a string
	uc	    Uppercase a string
	ucfirst	    Titlecase first char of a string

	pos	    Return or set current match position
	quotemeta   Quote metacharacters
	reset	    Reset ?pattern? status
	study	    Analyze string for optimizing matching

	split	    Use regex to split a string into parts

     The first four of these are like the escape sequences "\L",
     "\l", "\U", and "\u".  For Titlecase, see "Titlecase".

     TERMINOLOGY

     Titlecase

     Unicode concept which most often is equal to uppercase, but
     for certain characters like the German "sharp s" there is a
     difference.

AUTHOR
     Iain Truskett.

     This document may be distributed under the same terms as
     Perl itself.

SEE ALSO
     +	 perlretut for a tutorial on regular expressions.

     +	 perlrequick for a rapid tutorial.

     +	 perlre for more details.

     +	 perlvar for details on the variables.

perl v5.8.8		   2006-06-30				5

PERLREREF(1)	Perl Programmers Reference Guide     PERLREREF(1)

     +	 perlop for details on the operators.

     +	 perlfunc for details on the functions.

     +	 perlfaq6 for FAQs on regular expressions.

     +	 The re module to alter behaviour and aid debugging.

     +	 "Debugging regular expressions" in perldebug

     +	 perluniintro, perlunicode, charnames and locale for
	 details on regexes and internationalisation.

     +	 Mastering Regular Expressions by Jeffrey Friedl
	 (http://regex.info/) for a thorough grounding and refer-
	 ence on the topic.

THANKS
     David P.C. Wollmann, Richard Soderberg, Sean M. Burke, Tom
     Christiansen, Jim Cromie, and Jeffrey Goff for useful
     advice.

perl v5.8.8		   2006-06-30				6

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