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lib/luaregex.pir - Lua regex compiler
See "Lua 5.1 Reference Manual", section 5.4.1 "Patterns", http://www.lua.org/manual/5.1/manual.html#5.4.1.
A character class is used to represent a set of characters. The following combinations are allowed in describing a character class:
^$()%.[]*+-?)
represents the character x itself.'%'
when used to represent itself in a pattern.'-'
.
All classes %x
described above may also be used as components in set.
All other characters in set represent themselves.
For example,
[%w_]
(or [_%w]
) represents all alphanumeric characters plus the underscore,
[0-7]
represents the octal digits,
and [0-7%l%-]
represents the octal digits plus the lowercase letters plus the '-'
character.[%a-z]
or [a-%%]
have no meaning.For all classes represented by single letters (%a
,
%c
,
etc.),
the corresponding uppercase letter represents the complement of the class.
For instance,
%S
represents all non-space characters.
The definitions of letter,
space,
and other character groups depend on the current locale.
In particular,
the class [a-z]
may not be equivalent to %l
.
A pattern item may be
'*'
,
which matches 0 or more repetitions of characters in the class.
These repetition items will always match the longest possible sequence;'+'
,
which matches 1 or more repetitions of characters in the class.
These repetition items will always match the longest possible sequence;'-'
,
which also matches 0 or more repetitions of characters in the class.
Unlike '*'
,
these repetition items will always match the shortest possible sequence;'?'
,
which matches 0 or 1 occurrence of a character in the class;%n
,
for n between 1 and 9; such item matches a substring equal to the i<n>-th captured string (see below);%bxy
,
where x and y are two distinct characters; such item matches strings that start with x,
end with y,
and where the x and y are balanced.
This means that,
if one reads the string from left to right,
counting +1 for an x and -1 for a y,
the ending y is the first y where the count reaches 0.
For instance,
the item %b()
matches expressions with balanced parentheses.A pattern is a sequence of pattern items.
A '^'
at the beginning of a pattern anchors the match at the beginning of the subject string.
A '$'
at the end of a pattern anchors the match at the end of the subject string.
At other positions,
'^'
and '$'
have no special meaning and represent themselves.
A pattern may contain sub-patterns enclosed in parentheses; they describe captures.
When a match succeeds,
the substrings of the subject string that match captures are stored (captured) for future use.
Captures are numbered according to their left parentheses.
For instance,
in the pattern "(a*(.)%w(%s*))"
,
the part of the string matching "a*(.)%w(%s*)"
is stored as the first capture (and therefore has number 1); the character matching "."
is captured with number 2,
and the part matching "%s*"
has number 3.
As a special case,
the empty capture ()
captures the current string position (a number).
For instance,
if we apply the pattern "()aa()"
on the string "flaaap"
,
there will be two captures: 3 and 5.
A pattern cannot contain embedded zeros.
Use %z
instead.
Mostly taken from compilers/pge/PGE/P5Regex.pir.
Francois Perrad
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