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1=head1 NAME
2
3perlrequick - Perl regular expressions quick start
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7This page covers the very basics of understanding, creating and
8using regular expressions ('regexes') in Perl.
9
10
11=head1 The Guide
12
13=head2 Simple word matching
14
15The simplest regex is simply a word, or more generally, a string of
16characters. A regex consisting of a word matches any string that
17contains that word:
18
19 "Hello World" =~ /World/; # matches
20
21In this statement, C<World> is a regex and the C<//> enclosing
22C</World/> tells Perl to search a string for a match. The operator
23C<=~> associates the string with the regex match and produces a true
24value if the regex matched, or false if the regex did not match. In
25our case, C<World> matches the second word in C<"Hello World">, so the
26expression is true. This idea has several variations.
27
28Expressions like this are useful in conditionals:
29
30 print "It matches\n" if "Hello World" =~ /World/;
31
32The sense of the match can be reversed by using C<!~> operator:
33
34 print "It doesn't match\n" if "Hello World" !~ /World/;
35
36The literal string in the regex can be replaced by a variable:
37
38 $greeting = "World";
39 print "It matches\n" if "Hello World" =~ /$greeting/;
40
41If you're matching against C<$_>, the C<$_ =~> part can be omitted:
42
43 $_ = "Hello World";
44 print "It matches\n" if /World/;
45
46Finally, the C<//> default delimiters for a match can be changed to
47arbitrary delimiters by putting an C<'m'> out front:
48
49 "Hello World" =~ m!World!; # matches, delimited by '!'
50 "Hello World" =~ m{World}; # matches, note the matching '{}'
51 "/usr/bin/perl" =~ m"/perl"; # matches after '/usr/bin',
52 # '/' becomes an ordinary char
53
54Regexes must match a part of the string I<exactly> in order for the
55statement to be true:
56
57 "Hello World" =~ /world/; # doesn't match, case sensitive
58 "Hello World" =~ /o W/; # matches, ' ' is an ordinary char
59 "Hello World" =~ /World /; # doesn't match, no ' ' at end
60
61Perl will always match at the earliest possible point in the string:
62
63 "Hello World" =~ /o/; # matches 'o' in 'Hello'
64 "That hat is red" =~ /hat/; # matches 'hat' in 'That'
65
66Not all characters can be used 'as is' in a match. Some characters,
67called B<metacharacters>, are reserved for use in regex notation.
68The metacharacters are
69
70 {}[]()^$.|*+?\
71
72A metacharacter can be matched by putting a backslash before it:
73
74 "2+2=4" =~ /2+2/; # doesn't match, + is a metacharacter
75 "2+2=4" =~ /2\+2/; # matches, \+ is treated like an ordinary +
76 'C:\WIN32' =~ /C:\\WIN/; # matches
77 "/usr/bin/perl" =~ /\/usr\/bin\/perl/; # matches
78
79In the last regex, the forward slash C<'/'> is also backslashed,
80because it is used to delimit the regex.
81
82Non-printable ASCII characters are represented by B<escape sequences>.
83Common examples are C<\t> for a tab, C<\n> for a newline, and C<\r>
84for a carriage return. Arbitrary bytes are represented by octal
85escape sequences, e.g., C<\033>, or hexadecimal escape sequences,
86e.g., C<\x1B>:
87
88 "1000\t2000" =~ m(0\t2) # matches
89 "cat" =~ /\143\x61\x74/ # matches in ASCII, but
90 # a weird way to spell cat
91
92Regexes are treated mostly as double-quoted strings, so variable
93substitution works:
94
95 $foo = 'house';
96 'cathouse' =~ /cat$foo/; # matches
97 'housecat' =~ /${foo}cat/; # matches
98
99With all of the regexes above, if the regex matched anywhere in the
100string, it was considered a match. To specify I<where> it should
101match, we would use the B<anchor> metacharacters C<^> and C<$>. The
102anchor C<^> means match at the beginning of the string and the anchor
103C<$> means match at the end of the string, or before a newline at the
104end of the string. Some examples:
105
106 "housekeeper" =~ /keeper/; # matches
107 "housekeeper" =~ /^keeper/; # doesn't match
108 "housekeeper" =~ /keeper$/; # matches
109 "housekeeper\n" =~ /keeper$/; # matches
110 "housekeeper" =~ /^housekeeper$/; # matches
111
112=head2 Using character classes
113
114A B<character class> allows a set of possible characters, rather than
115just a single character, to match at a particular point in a regex.
116Character classes are denoted by brackets C<[...]>, with the set of
117characters to be possibly matched inside. Here are some examples:
118
119 /cat/; # matches 'cat'
120 /[bcr]at/; # matches 'bat', 'cat', or 'rat'
121 "abc" =~ /[cab]/; # matches 'a'
122
123In the last statement, even though C<'c'> is the first character in
124the class, the earliest point at which the regex can match is C<'a'>.
125
126 /[yY][eE][sS]/; # match 'yes' in a case-insensitive way
127 # 'yes', 'Yes', 'YES', etc.
128 /yes/i; # also match 'yes' in a case-insensitive way
129
130The last example shows a match with an C<'i'> B<modifier>, which makes
131the match case-insensitive.
132
133Character classes also have ordinary and special characters, but the
134sets of ordinary and special characters inside a character class are
135different than those outside a character class. The special
136characters for a character class are C<-]\^$> and are matched using an
137escape:
138
139 /[\]c]def/; # matches ']def' or 'cdef'
140 $x = 'bcr';
141 /[$x]at/; # matches 'bat, 'cat', or 'rat'
142 /[\$x]at/; # matches '$at' or 'xat'
143 /[\\$x]at/; # matches '\at', 'bat, 'cat', or 'rat'
144
145The special character C<'-'> acts as a range operator within character
146classes, so that the unwieldy C<[0123456789]> and C<[abc...xyz]>
147become the svelte C<[0-9]> and C<[a-z]>:
148
149 /item[0-9]/; # matches 'item0' or ... or 'item9'
150 /[0-9a-fA-F]/; # matches a hexadecimal digit
151
152If C<'-'> is the first or last character in a character class, it is
153treated as an ordinary character.
154
155The special character C<^> in the first position of a character class
156denotes a B<negated character class>, which matches any character but
157those in the brackets. Both C<[...]> and C<[^...]> must match a
158character, or the match fails. Then
159
160 /[^a]at/; # doesn't match 'aat' or 'at', but matches
161 # all other 'bat', 'cat, '0at', '%at', etc.
162 /[^0-9]/; # matches a non-numeric character
163 /[a^]at/; # matches 'aat' or '^at'; here '^' is ordinary
164
165Perl has several abbreviations for common character classes. (These
166definitions are those that Perl uses in ASCII-safe mode with the C</a> modifier.
167Otherwise they could match many more non-ASCII Unicode characters as
168well. See L<perlrecharclass/Backslash sequences> for details.)
169
170=over 4
171
172=item *
173
174\d is a digit and represents
175
176 [0-9]
177
178=item *
179
180\s is a whitespace character and represents
181
182 [\ \t\r\n\f]
183
184=item *
185
186\w is a word character (alphanumeric or _) and represents
187
188 [0-9a-zA-Z_]
189
190=item *
191
192\D is a negated \d; it represents any character but a digit
193
194 [^0-9]
195
196=item *
197
198\S is a negated \s; it represents any non-whitespace character
199
200 [^\s]
201
202=item *
203
204\W is a negated \w; it represents any non-word character
205
206 [^\w]
207
208=item *
209
210The period '.' matches any character but "\n"
211
212=back
213
214The C<\d\s\w\D\S\W> abbreviations can be used both inside and outside
215of character classes. Here are some in use:
216
217 /\d\d:\d\d:\d\d/; # matches a hh:mm:ss time format
218 /[\d\s]/; # matches any digit or whitespace character
219 /\w\W\w/; # matches a word char, followed by a
220 # non-word char, followed by a word char
221 /..rt/; # matches any two chars, followed by 'rt'
222 /end\./; # matches 'end.'
223 /end[.]/; # same thing, matches 'end.'
224
225The S<B<word anchor> > C<\b> matches a boundary between a word
226character and a non-word character C<\w\W> or C<\W\w>:
227
228 $x = "Housecat catenates house and cat";
229 $x =~ /\bcat/; # matches cat in 'catenates'
230 $x =~ /cat\b/; # matches cat in 'housecat'
231 $x =~ /\bcat\b/; # matches 'cat' at end of string
232
233In the last example, the end of the string is considered a word
234boundary.
235
236For natural language processing (so that, for example, apostrophes are
237included in words), use instead C<\b{wb}>
238
239 "don't" =~ / .+? \b{wb} /x; # matches the whole string
240
241=head2 Matching this or that
242
243We can match different character strings with the B<alternation>
244metacharacter C<'|'>. To match C<dog> or C<cat>, we form the regex
245C<dog|cat>. As before, Perl will try to match the regex at the
246earliest possible point in the string. At each character position,
247Perl will first try to match the first alternative, C<dog>. If
248C<dog> doesn't match, Perl will then try the next alternative, C<cat>.
249If C<cat> doesn't match either, then the match fails and Perl moves to
250the next position in the string. Some examples:
251
252 "cats and dogs" =~ /cat|dog|bird/; # matches "cat"
253 "cats and dogs" =~ /dog|cat|bird/; # matches "cat"
254
255Even though C<dog> is the first alternative in the second regex,
256C<cat> is able to match earlier in the string.
257
258 "cats" =~ /c|ca|cat|cats/; # matches "c"
259 "cats" =~ /cats|cat|ca|c/; # matches "cats"
260
261At a given character position, the first alternative that allows the
262regex match to succeed will be the one that matches. Here, all the
263alternatives match at the first string position, so the first matches.
264
265=head2 Grouping things and hierarchical matching
266
267The B<grouping> metacharacters C<()> allow a part of a regex to be
268treated as a single unit. Parts of a regex are grouped by enclosing
269them in parentheses. The regex C<house(cat|keeper)> means match
270C<house> followed by either C<cat> or C<keeper>. Some more examples
271are
272
273 /(a|b)b/; # matches 'ab' or 'bb'
274 /(^a|b)c/; # matches 'ac' at start of string or 'bc' anywhere
275
276 /house(cat|)/; # matches either 'housecat' or 'house'
277 /house(cat(s|)|)/; # matches either 'housecats' or 'housecat' or
278 # 'house'. Note groups can be nested.
279
280 "20" =~ /(19|20|)\d\d/; # matches the null alternative '()\d\d',
281 # because '20\d\d' can't match
282
283=head2 Extracting matches
284
285The grouping metacharacters C<()> also allow the extraction of the
286parts of a string that matched. For each grouping, the part that
287matched inside goes into the special variables C<$1>, C<$2>, etc.
288They can be used just as ordinary variables:
289
290 # extract hours, minutes, seconds
291 $time =~ /(\d\d):(\d\d):(\d\d)/; # match hh:mm:ss format
292 $hours = $1;
293 $minutes = $2;
294 $seconds = $3;
295
296In list context, a match C</regex/> with groupings will return the
297list of matched values C<($1,$2,...)>. So we could rewrite it as
298
299 ($hours, $minutes, $second) = ($time =~ /(\d\d):(\d\d):(\d\d)/);
300
301If the groupings in a regex are nested, C<$1> gets the group with the
302leftmost opening parenthesis, C<$2> the next opening parenthesis,
303etc. For example, here is a complex regex and the matching variables
304indicated below it:
305
306 /(ab(cd|ef)((gi)|j))/;
307 1 2 34
308
309Associated with the matching variables C<$1>, C<$2>, ... are
310the B<backreferences> C<\g1>, C<\g2>, ... Backreferences are
311matching variables that can be used I<inside> a regex:
312
313 /(\w\w\w)\s\g1/; # find sequences like 'the the' in string
314
315C<$1>, C<$2>, ... should only be used outside of a regex, and C<\g1>,
316C<\g2>, ... only inside a regex.
317
318=head2 Matching repetitions
319
320The B<quantifier> metacharacters C<?>, C<*>, C<+>, and C<{}> allow us
321to determine the number of repeats of a portion of a regex we
322consider to be a match. Quantifiers are put immediately after the
323character, character class, or grouping that we want to specify. They
324have the following meanings:
325
326=over 4
327
328=item *
329
330C<a?> = match 'a' 1 or 0 times
331
332=item *
333
334C<a*> = match 'a' 0 or more times, i.e., any number of times
335
336=item *
337
338C<a+> = match 'a' 1 or more times, i.e., at least once
339
340=item *
341
342C<a{n,m}> = match at least C<n> times, but not more than C<m>
343times.
344
345=item *
346
347C<a{n,}> = match at least C<n> or more times
348
349=item *
350
351C<a{n}> = match exactly C<n> times
352
353=back
354
355Here are some examples:
356
357 /[a-z]+\s+\d*/; # match a lowercase word, at least some space, and
358 # any number of digits
359 /(\w+)\s+\g1/; # match doubled words of arbitrary length
360 $year =~ /^\d{2,4}$/; # make sure year is at least 2 but not more
361 # than 4 digits
362 $year =~ /^\d{4}$|^\d{2}$/; # better match; throw out 3 digit dates
363
364These quantifiers will try to match as much of the string as possible,
365while still allowing the regex to match. So we have
366
367 $x = 'the cat in the hat';
368 $x =~ /^(.*)(at)(.*)$/; # matches,
369 # $1 = 'the cat in the h'
370 # $2 = 'at'
371 # $3 = '' (0 matches)
372
373The first quantifier C<.*> grabs as much of the string as possible
374while still having the regex match. The second quantifier C<.*> has
375no string left to it, so it matches 0 times.
376
377=head2 More matching
378
379There are a few more things you might want to know about matching
380operators.
381The global modifier C<//g> allows the matching operator to match
382within a string as many times as possible. In scalar context,
383successive matches against a string will have C<//g> jump from match
384to match, keeping track of position in the string as it goes along.
385You can get or set the position with the C<pos()> function.
386For example,
387
388 $x = "cat dog house"; # 3 words
389 while ($x =~ /(\w+)/g) {
390 print "Word is $1, ends at position ", pos $x, "\n";
391 }
392
393prints
394
395 Word is cat, ends at position 3
396 Word is dog, ends at position 7
397 Word is house, ends at position 13
398
399A failed match or changing the target string resets the position. If
400you don't want the position reset after failure to match, add the
401C<//c>, as in C</regex/gc>.
402
403In list context, C<//g> returns a list of matched groupings, or if
404there are no groupings, a list of matches to the whole regex. So
405
406 @words = ($x =~ /(\w+)/g); # matches,
407 # $word[0] = 'cat'
408 # $word[1] = 'dog'
409 # $word[2] = 'house'
410
411=head2 Search and replace
412
413Search and replace is performed using C<s/regex/replacement/modifiers>.
414The C<replacement> is a Perl double-quoted string that replaces in the
415string whatever is matched with the C<regex>. The operator C<=~> is
416also used here to associate a string with C<s///>. If matching
417against C<$_>, the S<C<$_ =~>> can be dropped. If there is a match,
418C<s///> returns the number of substitutions made; otherwise it returns
419false. Here are a few examples:
420
421 $x = "Time to feed the cat!";
422 $x =~ s/cat/hacker/; # $x contains "Time to feed the hacker!"
423 $y = "'quoted words'";
424 $y =~ s/^'(.*)'$/$1/; # strip single quotes,
425 # $y contains "quoted words"
426
427With the C<s///> operator, the matched variables C<$1>, C<$2>, etc.
428are immediately available for use in the replacement expression. With
429the global modifier, C<s///g> will search and replace all occurrences
430of the regex in the string:
431
432 $x = "I batted 4 for 4";
433 $x =~ s/4/four/; # $x contains "I batted four for 4"
434 $x = "I batted 4 for 4";
435 $x =~ s/4/four/g; # $x contains "I batted four for four"
436
437The non-destructive modifier C<s///r> causes the result of the substitution
438to be returned instead of modifying C<$_> (or whatever variable the
439substitute was bound to with C<=~>):
440
441 $x = "I like dogs.";
442 $y = $x =~ s/dogs/cats/r;
443 print "$x $y\n"; # prints "I like dogs. I like cats."
444
445 $x = "Cats are great.";
446 print $x =~ s/Cats/Dogs/r =~ s/Dogs/Frogs/r =~
447 s/Frogs/Hedgehogs/r, "\n";
448 # prints "Hedgehogs are great."
449
450 @foo = map { s/[a-z]/X/r } qw(a b c 1 2 3);
451 # @foo is now qw(X X X 1 2 3)
452
453The evaluation modifier C<s///e> wraps an C<eval{...}> around the
454replacement string and the evaluated result is substituted for the
455matched substring. Some examples:
456
457 # reverse all the words in a string
458 $x = "the cat in the hat";
459 $x =~ s/(\w+)/reverse $1/ge; # $x contains "eht tac ni eht tah"
460
461 # convert percentage to decimal
462 $x = "A 39% hit rate";
463 $x =~ s!(\d+)%!$1/100!e; # $x contains "A 0.39 hit rate"
464
465The last example shows that C<s///> can use other delimiters, such as
466C<s!!!> and C<s{}{}>, and even C<s{}//>. If single quotes are used
467C<s'''>, then the regex and replacement are treated as single-quoted
468strings.
469
470=head2 The split operator
471
472C<split /regex/, string> splits C<string> into a list of substrings
473and returns that list. The regex determines the character sequence
474that C<string> is split with respect to. For example, to split a
475string into words, use
476
477 $x = "Calvin and Hobbes";
478 @word = split /\s+/, $x; # $word[0] = 'Calvin'
479 # $word[1] = 'and'
480 # $word[2] = 'Hobbes'
481
482To extract a comma-delimited list of numbers, use
483
484 $x = "1.618,2.718, 3.142";
485 @const = split /,\s*/, $x; # $const[0] = '1.618'
486 # $const[1] = '2.718'
487 # $const[2] = '3.142'
488
489If the empty regex C<//> is used, the string is split into individual
490characters. If the regex has groupings, then the list produced contains
491the matched substrings from the groupings as well:
492
493 $x = "/usr/bin";
494 @parts = split m!(/)!, $x; # $parts[0] = ''
495 # $parts[1] = '/'
496 # $parts[2] = 'usr'
497 # $parts[3] = '/'
498 # $parts[4] = 'bin'
499
500Since the first character of $x matched the regex, C<split> prepended
501an empty initial element to the list.
502
503=head2 C<use re 'strict'>
504
505New in v5.22, this applies stricter rules than otherwise when compiling
506regular expression patterns. It can find things that, while legal, may
507not be what you intended.
508
509See L<'strict' in re|re/'strict' mode>.
510
511=head1 BUGS
512
513None.
514
515=head1 SEE ALSO
516
517This is just a quick start guide. For a more in-depth tutorial on
518regexes, see L<perlretut> and for the reference page, see L<perlre>.
519
520=head1 AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
521
522Copyright (c) 2000 Mark Kvale
523All rights reserved.
524
525This document may be distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.
526
527=head2 Acknowledgments
528
529The author would like to thank Mark-Jason Dominus, Tom Christiansen,
530Ilya Zakharevich, Brad Hughes, and Mike Giroux for all their helpful
531comments.
532
533=cut
534