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PCRE2PATTERN(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual PCRE2PATTERN(3)
NAME
PCRE2 - Perl-compatible regular expressions (revised API)
PCRE2 REGULAR EXPRESSION DETAILS
The syntax and semantics of the regular expressions that are supported
by PCRE2 are described in detail below. There is a quick-reference
syntax summary in the pcre2syntax page. PCRE2 tries to match Perl
syntax and semantics as closely as it can. PCRE2 also supports some
alternative regular expression syntax (which does not conflict with the
Perl syntax) in order to provide some compatibility with regular
expressions in Python, .NET, and Oniguruma.
Perl's regular expressions are described in its own documentation, and
regular expressions in general are covered in a number of books, some
of which have copious examples. Jeffrey Friedl's "Mastering Regular
Expressions", published by O'Reilly, covers regular expressions in
great detail. This description of PCRE2's regular expressions is
intended as reference material.
This document discusses the regular expression patterns that are
supported by PCRE2 when its main matching function, pcre2_match(), is
used. PCRE2 also has an alternative matching function,
pcre2_dfa_match(), which matches using a different algorithm that is
not Perl-compatible. Some of the features discussed below are not
available when DFA matching is used. The advantages and disadvantages
of the alternative function, and how it differs from the normal
function, are discussed in the pcre2matching page.
SPECIAL START-OF-PATTERN ITEMS
A number of options that can be passed to pcre2_compile() can also be
set by special items at the start of a pattern. These are not Perl-
compatible, but are provided to make these options accessible to
pattern writers who are not able to change the program that processes
the pattern. Any number of these items may appear, but they must all be
together right at the start of the pattern string, and the letters must
be in upper case.
UTF support
In the 8-bit and 16-bit PCRE2 libraries, characters may be coded either
as single code units, or as multiple UTF-8 or UTF-16 code units. UTF-32
can be specified for the 32-bit library, in which case it constrains
the character values to valid Unicode code points. To process UTF
strings, PCRE2 must be built to include Unicode support (which is the
default). When using UTF strings you must either call the compiling
function with one or both of the PCRE2_UTF or PCRE2_MATCH_INVALID_UTF
options, or the pattern must start with the special sequence (*UTF),
which is equivalent to setting the relevant PCRE2_UTF. How setting a
UTF mode affects pattern matching is mentioned in several places below.
There is also a summary of features in the pcre2unicode page.
Some applications that allow their users to supply patterns may wish to
restrict them to non-UTF data for security reasons. If the
PCRE2_NEVER_UTF option is passed to pcre2_compile(), (*UTF) is not
allowed, and its appearance in a pattern causes an error.
Unicode property support
Another special sequence that may appear at the start of a pattern is
Some applications that allow their users to supply patterns may wish to
restrict them for security reasons. If the PCRE2_NEVER_UCP option is
passed to pcre2_compile(), (*UCP) is not allowed, and its appearance in
a pattern causes an error.
Locking out empty string matching
Starting a pattern with (*NOTEMPTY) or (*NOTEMPTY_ATSTART) has the same
effect as passing the PCRE2_NOTEMPTY or PCRE2_NOTEMPTY_ATSTART option
to whichever matching function is subsequently called to match the
pattern. These options lock out the matching of empty strings, either
entirely, or only at the start of the subject.
Disabling auto-possessification
If a pattern starts with (*NO_AUTO_POSSESS), it has the same effect as
setting the PCRE2_NO_AUTO_POSSESS option. This stops PCRE2 from making
quantifiers possessive when what follows cannot match the repeated
item. For example, by default a+b is treated as a++b. For more details,
see the pcre2api documentation.
Disabling start-up optimizations
If a pattern starts with (*NO_START_OPT), it has the same effect as
setting the PCRE2_NO_START_OPTIMIZE option. This disables several
optimizations for quickly reaching "no match" results. For more
details, see the pcre2api documentation.
Disabling automatic anchoring
If a pattern starts with (*NO_DOTSTAR_ANCHOR), it has the same effect
as setting the PCRE2_NO_DOTSTAR_ANCHOR option. This disables
optimizations that apply to patterns whose top-level branches all start
with .* (match any number of arbitrary characters). For more details,
see the pcre2api documentation.
Disabling JIT compilation
If a pattern that starts with (*NO_JIT) is successfully compiled, an
attempt by the application to apply the JIT optimization by calling
pcre2_jit_compile() is ignored.
Setting match resource limits
The pcre2_match() function contains a counter that is incremented every
time it goes round its main loop. The caller of pcre2_match() can set a
limit on this counter, which therefore limits the amount of computing
resource used for a match. The maximum depth of nested backtracking can
also be limited; this indirectly restricts the amount of heap memory
that is used, but there is also an explicit memory limit that can be
set.
These facilities are provided to catch runaway matches that are
provoked by patterns with huge matching trees. A common example is a
pattern with nested unlimited repeats applied to a long string that
does not match. When one of these limits is reached, pcre2_match()
gives an error return. The limits can also be set by items at the start
of the pattern of the form
(*LIMIT_HEAP=d)
(*LIMIT_MATCH=d)
(*LIMIT_DEPTH=d)
where d is any number of decimal digits. However, the value of the
setting must be less than the value set (or defaulted) by the caller of
name is still recognized for backwards compatibility.
The heap limit applies only when the pcre2_match() or pcre2_dfa_match()
interpreters are used for matching. It does not apply to JIT. The match
limit is used (but in a different way) when JIT is being used, or when
pcre2_dfa_match() is called, to limit computing resource usage by those
matching functions. The depth limit is ignored by JIT but is relevant
for DFA matching, which uses function recursion for recursions within
the pattern and for lookaround assertions and atomic groups. In this
case, the depth limit controls the depth of such recursion.
Newline conventions
PCRE2 supports six different conventions for indicating line breaks in
strings: a single CR (carriage return) character, a single LF
(linefeed) character, the two-character sequence CRLF, any of the three
preceding, any Unicode newline sequence, or the NUL character (binary
zero). The pcre2api page has further discussion about newlines, and
shows how to set the newline convention when calling pcre2_compile().
It is also possible to specify a newline convention by starting a
pattern string with one of the following sequences:
(*CR) carriage return
(*LF) linefeed
(*CRLF) carriage return, followed by linefeed
(*ANYCRLF) any of the three above
(*ANY) all Unicode newline sequences
(*NUL) the NUL character (binary zero)
These override the default and the options given to the compiling
function. For example, on a Unix system where LF is the default newline
sequence, the pattern
(*CR)a.b
changes the convention to CR. That pattern matches "a\nb" because LF is
no longer a newline. If more than one of these settings is present, the
last one is used.
The newline convention affects where the circumflex and dollar
assertions are true. It also affects the interpretation of the dot
metacharacter when PCRE2_DOTALL is not set, and the behaviour of \N
when not followed by an opening brace. However, it does not affect what
the \R escape sequence matches. By default, this is any Unicode newline
sequence, for Perl compatibility. However, this can be changed; see the
next section and the description of \R in the section entitled "Newline
sequences" below. A change of \R setting can be combined with a change
of newline convention.
Specifying what \R matches
It is possible to restrict \R to match only CR, LF, or CRLF (instead of
the complete set of Unicode line endings) by setting the option
PCRE2_BSR_ANYCRLF at compile time. This effect can also be achieved by
starting a pattern with (*BSR_ANYCRLF). For completeness,
(*BSR_UNICODE) is also recognized, corresponding to PCRE2_BSR_UNICODE.
EBCDIC CHARACTER CODES
PCRE2 can be compiled to run in an environment that uses EBCDIC as its
character code instead of ASCII or Unicode (typically a mainframe
pattern, and match the corresponding characters in the subject. As a
trivial example, the pattern
The quick brown fox
matches a portion of a subject string that is identical to itself. When
caseless matching is specified (the PCRE2_CASELESS option or (?i)
within the pattern), letters are matched independently of case. Note
that there are two ASCII characters, K and S, that, in addition to
their lower case ASCII equivalents, are case-equivalent with Unicode
U+212A (Kelvin sign) and U+017F (long S) respectively when either
PCRE2_UTF or PCRE2_UCP is set.
The power of regular expressions comes from the ability to include wild
cards, character classes, alternatives, and repetitions in the pattern.
These are encoded in the pattern by the use of metacharacters, which do
not stand for themselves but instead are interpreted in some special
way.
There are two different sets of metacharacters: those that are
recognized anywhere in the pattern except within square brackets, and
those that are recognized within square brackets. Outside square
brackets, the metacharacters are as follows:
\ general escape character with several uses
^ assert start of string (or line, in multiline mode)
$ assert end of string (or line, in multiline mode)
. match any character except newline (by default)
[ start character class definition
| start of alternative branch
( start group or control verb
) end group or control verb
* 0 or more quantifier
+ 1 or more quantifier; also "possessive quantifier"
? 0 or 1 quantifier; also quantifier minimizer
{ start min/max quantifier
Part of a pattern that is in square brackets is called a "character
class". In a character class the only metacharacters are:
\ general escape character
^ negate the class, but only if the first character
- indicates character range
[ POSIX character class (if followed by POSIX syntax)
] terminates the character class
If a pattern is compiled with the PCRE2_EXTENDED option, most white
space in the pattern, other than in a character class, and characters
between a # outside a character class and the next newline, inclusive,
are ignored. An escaping backslash can be used to include a white space
or a # character as part of the pattern. If the PCRE2_EXTENDED_MORE
option is set, the same applies, but in addition unescaped space and
horizontal tab characters are ignored inside a character class. Note:
only these two characters are ignored, not the full set of pattern
white space characters that are ignored outside a character class.
Option settings can be changed within a pattern; see the section
entitled "Internal Option Setting" below.
The following sections describe the use of each of the metacharacters.
For example, if you want to match a * character, you must write \* in
the pattern. This escaping action applies whether or not the following
character would otherwise be interpreted as a metacharacter, so it is
always safe to precede a non-alphanumeric with backslash to specify
that it stands for itself. In particular, if you want to match a
backslash, you write \\.
Only ASCII digits and letters have any special meaning after a
backslash. All other characters (in particular, those whose code points
are greater than 127) are treated as literals.
If you want to treat all characters in a sequence as literals, you can
do so by putting them between \Q and \E. This is different from Perl in
that $ and @ are handled as literals in \Q...\E sequences in PCRE2,
whereas in Perl, $ and @ cause variable interpolation. Also, Perl does
"double-quotish backslash interpolation" on any backslashes between \Q
and \E which, its documentation says, "may lead to confusing results".
PCRE2 treats a backslash between \Q and \E just like any other
character. Note the following examples:
Pattern PCRE2 matches Perl matches
\Qabc$xyz\E abc$xyz abc followed by the
contents of $xyz
\Qabc\$xyz\E abc\$xyz abc\$xyz
\Qabc\E\$\Qxyz\E abc$xyz abc$xyz
\QA\B\E A\B A\B
\Q\\E \ \\E
The \Q...\E sequence is recognized both inside and outside character
classes. An isolated \E that is not preceded by \Q is ignored. If \Q
is not followed by \E later in the pattern, the literal interpretation
continues to the end of the pattern (that is, \E is assumed at the
end). If the isolated \Q is inside a character class, this causes an
error, because the character class is not terminated by a closing
square bracket.
Non-printing characters
A second use of backslash provides a way of encoding non-printing
characters in patterns in a visible manner. There is no restriction on
the appearance of non-printing characters in a pattern, but when a
pattern is being prepared by text editing, it is often easier to use
one of the following escape sequences instead of the binary character
it represents. In an ASCII or Unicode environment, these escapes are as
follows:
\a alarm, that is, the BEL character (hex 07)
\cx "control-x", where x is any printable ASCII character
\e escape (hex 1B)
\f form feed (hex 0C)
\n linefeed (hex 0A)
\r carriage return (hex 0D) (but see below)
\t tab (hex 09)
\0dd character with octal code 0dd
\ddd character with octal code ddd, or backreference
\o{ddd..} character with octal code ddd..
\xhh character with hex code hh
\x{hhh..} character with hex code hhh..
\N{U+hhh..} character with Unicode hex code point hhh..
Characters whose code points are less than 256 can be defined by either
of the two syntaxes for \x or by an octal sequence. There is no
difference in the way they are handled. For example, \xdc is exactly
the same as \x{dc} or \334. However, using the braced versions does
make such sequences easier to read.
Support is available for some ECMAScript (aka JavaScript) escape
sequences via two compile-time options. If PCRE2_ALT_BSUX is set, the
sequence \x followed by { is not recognized. Only if \x is followed by
two hexadecimal digits is it recognized as a character escape.
Otherwise it is interpreted as a literal "x" character. In this mode,
support for code points greater than 256 is provided by \u, which must
be followed by four hexadecimal digits; otherwise it is interpreted as
a literal "u" character.
PCRE2_EXTRA_ALT_BSUX has the same effect as PCRE2_ALT_BSUX and, in
addition, \u{hhh..} is recognized as the character specified by
hexadecimal code point. There may be any number of hexadecimal digits.
This syntax is from ECMAScript 6.
The \N{U+hhh..} escape sequence is recognized only when PCRE2 is
operating in UTF mode. Perl also uses \N{name} to specify characters by
Unicode name; PCRE2 does not support this. Note that when \N is not
followed by an opening brace (curly bracket) it has an entirely
different meaning, matching any character that is not a newline.
There are some legacy applications where the escape sequence \r is
expected to match a newline. If the PCRE2_EXTRA_ESCAPED_CR_IS_LF option
is set, \r in a pattern is converted to \n so that it matches a LF
(linefeed) instead of a CR (carriage return) character.
The precise effect of \cx on ASCII characters is as follows: if x is a
lower case letter, it is converted to upper case. Then bit 6 of the
character (hex 40) is inverted. Thus \cA to \cZ become hex 01 to hex 1A
(A is 41, Z is 5A), but \c{ becomes hex 3B ({ is 7B), and \c; becomes
hex 7B (; is 3B). If the code unit following \c has a value less than
32 or greater than 126, a compile-time error occurs.
When PCRE2 is compiled in EBCDIC mode, \N{U+hhh..} is not supported.
\a, \e, \f, \n, \r, and \t generate the appropriate EBCDIC code values.
The \c escape is processed as specified for Perl in the perlebcdic
document. The only characters that are allowed after \c are A-Z, a-z,
or one of @, [, \, ], ^, _, or ?. Any other character provokes a
compile-time error. The sequence \c@ encodes character code 0; after \c
the letters (in either case) encode characters 1-26 (hex 01 to hex 1A);
[, \, ], ^, and _ encode characters 27-31 (hex 1B to hex 1F), and \c?
becomes either 255 (hex FF) or 95 (hex 5F).
Thus, apart from \c?, these escapes generate the same character code
values as they do in an ASCII environment, though the meanings of the
values mostly differ. For example, \cG always generates code value 7,
which is BEL in ASCII but DEL in EBCDIC.
The sequence \c? generates DEL (127, hex 7F) in an ASCII environment,
but because 127 is not a control character in EBCDIC, Perl makes it
generate the APC character. Unfortunately, there are several variants
of EBCDIC. In most of them the APC character has the value 255 (hex
FF), but in the one Perl calls POSIX-BC its value is 95 (hex 5F). If
certain other characters have POSIX-BC values, PCRE2 makes \c? generate
The escape \o must be followed by a sequence of octal digits, enclosed
in braces. An error occurs if this is not the case. This escape is a
recent addition to Perl; it provides way of specifying character code
points as octal numbers greater than 0777, and it also allows octal
numbers and backreferences to be unambiguously specified.
For greater clarity and unambiguity, it is best to avoid following \ by
a digit greater than zero. Instead, use \o{} or \x{} to specify
numerical character code points, and \g{} to specify backreferences.
The following paragraphs describe the old, ambiguous syntax.
The handling of a backslash followed by a digit other than 0 is
complicated, and Perl has changed over time, causing PCRE2 also to
change.
Outside a character class, PCRE2 reads the digit and any following
digits as a decimal number. If the number is less than 10, begins with
the digit 8 or 9, or if there are at least that many previous capture
groups in the expression, the entire sequence is taken as a
backreference. A description of how this works is given later,
following the discussion of parenthesized groups. Otherwise, up to
three octal digits are read to form a character code.
Inside a character class, PCRE2 handles \8 and \9 as the literal
characters "8" and "9", and otherwise reads up to three octal digits
following the backslash, using them to generate a data character. Any
subsequent digits stand for themselves. For example, outside a
character class:
\040 is another way of writing an ASCII space
\40 is the same, provided there are fewer than 40
previous capture groups
\7 is always a backreference
\11 might be a backreference, or another way of
writing a tab
\011 is always a tab
\0113 is a tab followed by the character "3"
\113 might be a backreference, otherwise the
character with octal code 113
\377 might be a backreference, otherwise
the value 255 (decimal)
\81 is always a backreference
Note that octal values of 100 or greater that are specified using this
syntax must not be introduced by a leading zero, because no more than
three octal digits are ever read.
Constraints on character values
Characters that are specified using octal or hexadecimal numbers are
limited to certain values, as follows:
8-bit non-UTF mode no greater than 0xff
16-bit non-UTF mode no greater than 0xffff
32-bit non-UTF mode no greater than 0xffffffff
All UTF modes no greater than 0x10ffff and a valid code point
Invalid Unicode code points are all those in the range 0xd800 to 0xdfff
(the so-called "surrogate" code points). The check for these can be
inside and outside character classes. In addition, inside a character
class, \b is interpreted as the backspace character (hex 08).
When not followed by an opening brace, \N is not allowed in a character
class. \B, \R, and \X are not special inside a character class. Like
other unrecognized alphabetic escape sequences, they cause an error.
Outside a character class, these sequences have different meanings.
Unsupported escape sequences
In Perl, the sequences \F, \l, \L, \u, and \U are recognized by its
string handler and used to modify the case of following characters. By
default, PCRE2 does not support these escape sequences in patterns.
However, if either of the PCRE2_ALT_BSUX or PCRE2_EXTRA_ALT_BSUX
options is set, \U matches a "U" character, and \u can be used to
define a character by code point, as described above.
Absolute and relative backreferences
The sequence \g followed by a signed or unsigned number, optionally
enclosed in braces, is an absolute or relative backreference. A named
backreference can be coded as \g{name}. Backreferences are discussed
later, following the discussion of parenthesized groups.
Absolute and relative subroutine calls
For compatibility with Oniguruma, the non-Perl syntax \g followed by a
name or a number enclosed either in angle brackets or single quotes, is
an alternative syntax for referencing a capture group as a subroutine.
Details are discussed later. Note that \g{...} (Perl syntax) and
\g<...> (Oniguruma syntax) are not synonymous. The former is a
backreference; the latter is a subroutine call.
Generic character types
Another use of backslash is for specifying generic character types:
\d any decimal digit
\D any character that is not a decimal digit
\h any horizontal white space character
\H any character that is not a horizontal white space character
\N any character that is not a newline
\s any white space character
\S any character that is not a white space character
\v any vertical white space character
\V any character that is not a vertical white space character
\w any "word" character
\W any "non-word" character
The \N escape sequence has the same meaning as the "." metacharacter
when PCRE2_DOTALL is not set, but setting PCRE2_DOTALL does not change
the meaning of \N. Note that when \N is followed by an opening brace it
has a different meaning. See the section entitled "Non-printing
characters" above for details. Perl also uses \N{name} to specify
characters by Unicode name; PCRE2 does not support this.
Each pair of lower and upper case escape sequences partitions the
complete set of characters into two disjoint sets. Any given character
matches one, and only one, of each pair. The sequences can appear both
inside and outside character classes. They each match one character of
the appropriate type. If the current matching point is at the end of
the subject string, all of them fail, because there is no character to
match.
A "word" character is an underscore or any character that is a letter
or digit. By default, the definition of letters and digits is
controlled by PCRE2's low-valued character tables, and may vary if
locale-specific matching is taking place (see "Locale support" in the
pcre2api page). For example, in a French locale such as "fr_FR" in
Unix-like systems, or "french" in Windows, some character codes greater
than 127 are used for accented letters, and these are then matched by
\w. The use of locales with Unicode is discouraged.
By default, characters whose code points are greater than 127 never
match \d, \s, or \w, and always match \D, \S, and \W, although this may
be different for characters in the range 128-255 when locale-specific
matching is happening. These escape sequences retain their original
meanings from before Unicode support was available, mainly for
efficiency reasons. If the PCRE2_UCP option is set, the behaviour is
changed so that Unicode properties are used to determine character
types, as follows:
\d any character that matches \p{Nd} (decimal digit)
\s any character that matches \p{Z} or \h or \v
\w any character that matches \p{L} or \p{N}, plus underscore
The upper case escapes match the inverse sets of characters. Note that
\d matches only decimal digits, whereas \w matches any Unicode digit,
as well as any Unicode letter, and underscore. Note also that PCRE2_UCP
affects \b, and \B because they are defined in terms of \w and \W.
Matching these sequences is noticeably slower when PCRE2_UCP is set.
The sequences \h, \H, \v, and \V, in contrast to the other sequences,
which match only ASCII characters by default, always match a specific
list of code points, whether or not PCRE2_UCP is set. The horizontal
space characters are:
U+0009 Horizontal tab (HT)
U+0020 Space
U+00A0 Non-break space
U+1680 Ogham space mark
U+180E Mongolian vowel separator
U+2000 En quad
U+2001 Em quad
U+2002 En space
U+2003 Em space
U+2004 Three-per-em space
U+2005 Four-per-em space
U+2006 Six-per-em space
U+2007 Figure space
U+2008 Punctuation space
U+2009 Thin space
U+200A Hair space
U+202F Narrow no-break space
U+205F Medium mathematical space
U+3000 Ideographic space
The vertical space characters are:
U+000A Linefeed (LF)
U+000B Vertical tab (VT)
U+000C Form feed (FF)
U+000D Carriage return (CR)
Newline sequences
Outside a character class, by default, the escape sequence \R matches
any Unicode newline sequence. In 8-bit non-UTF-8 mode \R is equivalent
to the following:
(?>\r\n|\n|\x0b|\f|\r|\x85)
This is an example of an "atomic group", details of which are given
below. This particular group matches either the two-character sequence
CR followed by LF, or one of the single characters LF (linefeed,
U+000A), VT (vertical tab, U+000B), FF (form feed, U+000C), CR
(carriage return, U+000D), or NEL (next line, U+0085). Because this is
an atomic group, the two-character sequence is treated as a single unit
that cannot be split.
In other modes, two additional characters whose code points are greater
than 255 are added: LS (line separator, U+2028) and PS (paragraph
separator, U+2029). Unicode support is not needed for these characters
to be recognized.
It is possible to restrict \R to match only CR, LF, or CRLF (instead of
the complete set of Unicode line endings) by setting the option
PCRE2_BSR_ANYCRLF at compile time. (BSR is an abbreviation for
"backslash R".) This can be made the default when PCRE2 is built; if
this is the case, the other behaviour can be requested via the
PCRE2_BSR_UNICODE option. It is also possible to specify these settings
by starting a pattern string with one of the following sequences:
(*BSR_ANYCRLF) CR, LF, or CRLF only
(*BSR_UNICODE) any Unicode newline sequence
These override the default and the options given to the compiling
function. Note that these special settings, which are not Perl-
compatible, are recognized only at the very start of a pattern, and
that they must be in upper case. If more than one of them is present,
the last one is used. They can be combined with a change of newline
convention; for example, a pattern can start with:
(*ANY)(*BSR_ANYCRLF)
They can also be combined with the (*UTF) or (*UCP) special sequences.
Inside a character class, \R is treated as an unrecognized escape
sequence, and causes an error.
Unicode character properties
When PCRE2 is built with Unicode support (the default), three
additional escape sequences that match characters with specific
properties are available. They can be used in any mode, though in 8-bit
and 16-bit non-UTF modes these sequences are of course limited to
testing characters whose code points are less than U+0100 and U+10000,
respectively. In 32-bit non-UTF mode, code points greater than 0x10ffff
(the Unicode limit) may be encountered. These are all treated as being
in the Unknown script and with an unassigned type.
Matching characters by Unicode property is not fast, because PCRE2 has
to do a multistage table lookup in order to find a character's
property. That is why the traditional escape sequences such as \d and
\w do not use Unicode properties in PCRE2 by default, though you can
make them do so by setting the PCRE2_UCP option or by starting the
The property names represented by xx above are not case-sensitive, and
in accordance with Unicode's "loose matching" rules, spaces, hyphens,
and underscores are ignored. There is support for Unicode script names,
Unicode general category properties, "Any", which matches any character
(including newline), Bidi_Class, a number of binary (yes/no)
properties, and some special PCRE2 properties (described below).
Certain other Perl properties such as "InMusicalSymbols" are not
supported by PCRE2. Note that \P{Any} does not match any characters, so
always causes a match failure.
Script properties for \p and \P
There are three different syntax forms for matching a script. Each
Unicode character has a basic script and, optionally, a list of other
scripts ("Script Extensions") with which it is commonly used. Using the
Adlam script as an example, \p{sc:Adlam} matches characters whose basic
script is Adlam, whereas \p{scx:Adlam} matches, in addition, characters
that have Adlam in their extensions list. The full names "script" and
"script extensions" for the property types are recognized, and a equals
sign is an alternative to the colon. If a script name is given without
a property type, for example, \p{Adlam}, it is treated as
\p{scx:Adlam}. Perl changed to this interpretation at release 5.26 and
PCRE2 changed at release 10.40.
Unassigned characters (and in non-UTF 32-bit mode, characters with code
points greater than 0x10FFFF) are assigned the "Unknown" script. Others
that are not part of an identified script are lumped together as
"Common". The current list of recognized script names and their
4-character abbreviations can be obtained by running this command:
pcre2test -LS
The general category property for \p and \P
Each character has exactly one Unicode general category property,
specified by a two-letter abbreviation. For compatibility with Perl,
negation can be specified by including a circumflex between the opening
brace and the property name. For example, \p{^Lu} is the same as
\P{Lu}.
If only one letter is specified with \p or \P, it includes all the
general category properties that start with that letter. In this case,
in the absence of negation, the curly brackets in the escape sequence
are optional; these two examples have the same effect:
\p{L}
\pL
The following general category property codes are supported:
C Other
Cc Control
Cf Format
Cn Unassigned
Co Private use
Cs Surrogate
L Letter
Ll Lower case letter
Me Enclosing mark
Mn Non-spacing mark
N Number
Nd Decimal number
Nl Letter number
No Other number
P Punctuation
Pc Connector punctuation
Pd Dash punctuation
Pe Close punctuation
Pf Final punctuation
Pi Initial punctuation
Po Other punctuation
Ps Open punctuation
S Symbol
Sc Currency symbol
Sk Modifier symbol
Sm Mathematical symbol
So Other symbol
Z Separator
Zl Line separator
Zp Paragraph separator
Zs Space separator
The special property LC, which has the synonym L&, is also supported:
it matches a character that has the Lu, Ll, or Lt property, in other
words, a letter that is not classified as a modifier or "other".
The Cs (Surrogate) property applies only to characters whose code
points are in the range U+D800 to U+DFFF. These characters are no
different to any other character when PCRE2 is not in UTF mode (using
the 16-bit or 32-bit library). However, they are not valid in Unicode
strings and so cannot be tested by PCRE2 in UTF mode, unless UTF
validity checking has been turned off (see the discussion of
PCRE2_NO_UTF_CHECK in the pcre2api page).
The long synonyms for property names that Perl supports (such as
\p{Letter}) are not supported by PCRE2, nor is it permitted to prefix
any of these properties with "Is".
No character that is in the Unicode table has the Cn (unassigned)
property. Instead, this property is assumed for any code point that is
not in the Unicode table.
Specifying caseless matching does not affect these escape sequences.
For example, \p{Lu} always matches only upper case letters. This is
different from the behaviour of current versions of Perl.
Binary (yes/no) properties for \p and \P
Unicode defines a number of binary properties, that is, properties
whose only values are true or false. You can obtain a list of those
that are recognized by \p and \P, along with their abbreviations, by
running this command:
pcre2test -LP
AL Arabic letter
AN Arabic number
B paragraph separator
BN boundary neutral
CS common separator
EN European number
ES European separator
ET European terminator
FSI first strong isolate
L left-to-right
LRE left-to-right embedding
LRI left-to-right isolate
LRO left-to-right override
NSM non-spacing mark
ON other neutral
PDF pop directional format
PDI pop directional isolate
R right-to-left
RLE right-to-left embedding
RLI right-to-left isolate
RLO right-to-left override
S segment separator
WS which space
An equals sign may be used instead of a colon. The class names are
case-insensitive; only the short names listed above are recognized.
Extended grapheme clusters
The \X escape matches any number of Unicode characters that form an
"extended grapheme cluster", and treats the sequence as an atomic group
(see below). Unicode supports various kinds of composite character by
giving each character a grapheme breaking property, and having rules
that use these properties to define the boundaries of extended grapheme
clusters. The rules are defined in Unicode Standard Annex 29, "Unicode
Text Segmentation". Unicode 11.0.0 abandoned the use of some previous
properties that had been used for emojis. Instead it introduced
various emoji-specific properties. PCRE2 uses only the Extended
Pictographic property.
\X always matches at least one character. Then it decides whether to
add additional characters according to the following rules for ending a
cluster:
1. End at the end of the subject string.
2. Do not end between CR and LF; otherwise end after any control
character.
3. Do not break Hangul (a Korean script) syllable sequences. Hangul
characters are of five types: L, V, T, LV, and LVT. An L character may
be followed by an L, V, LV, or LVT character; an LV or V character may
be followed by a V or T character; an LVT or T character may be
followed only by a T character.
4. Do not end before extending characters or spacing marks or the
"zero-width joiner" character. Characters with the "mark" property
always have the "extend" grapheme breaking property.
7. Do not break within emoji flag sequences. That is, do not break
between regional indicator (RI) characters if there are an odd number
of RI characters before the break point.
8. Otherwise, end the cluster.
PCRE2's additional properties
As well as the standard Unicode properties described above, PCRE2
supports four more that make it possible to convert traditional escape
sequences such as \w and \s to use Unicode properties. PCRE2 uses these
non-standard, non-Perl properties internally when PCRE2_UCP is set.
However, they may also be used explicitly. These properties are:
Xan Any alphanumeric character
Xps Any POSIX space character
Xsp Any Perl space character
Xwd Any Perl "word" character
Xan matches characters that have either the L (letter) or the N
(number) property. Xps matches the characters tab, linefeed, vertical
tab, form feed, or carriage return, and any other character that has
the Z (separator) property. Xsp is the same as Xps; in PCRE1 it used
to exclude vertical tab, for Perl compatibility, but Perl changed. Xwd
matches the same characters as Xan, plus underscore.
There is another non-standard property, Xuc, which matches any
character that can be represented by a Universal Character Name in C++
and other programming languages. These are the characters $, @, `
(grave accent), and all characters with Unicode code points greater
than or equal to U+00A0, except for the surrogates U+D800 to U+DFFF.
Note that most base (ASCII) characters are excluded. (Universal
Character Names are of the form \uHHHH or \UHHHHHHHH where H is a
hexadecimal digit. Note that the Xuc property does not match these
sequences but the characters that they represent.)
Resetting the match start
In normal use, the escape sequence \K causes any previously matched
characters not to be included in the final matched sequence that is
returned. For example, the pattern:
foo\Kbar
matches "foobar", but reports that it has matched "bar". \K does not
interact with anchoring in any way. The pattern:
^foo\Kbar
matches only when the subject begins with "foobar" (in single line
mode), though it again reports the matched string as "bar". This
feature is similar to a lookbehind assertion (described below).
However, in this case, the part of the subject before the real match
does not have to be of fixed length, as lookbehind assertions do. The
use of \K does not interfere with the setting of captured substrings.
For example, when the pattern
(foo)\Kbar
matches "foobar", the first substring is still set to "foo".
be greater than the end of the match. Using \K in a lookbehind
assertion at the start of a pattern can also lead to odd effects. For
example, consider this pattern:
(?<=\Kfoo)bar
If the subject is "foobar", a call to pcre2_match() with a starting
offset of 3 succeeds and reports the matching string as "foobar", that
is, the start of the reported match is earlier than where the match
started.
Simple assertions
The final use of backslash is for certain simple assertions. An
assertion specifies a condition that has to be met at a particular
point in a match, without consuming any characters from the subject
string. The use of groups for more complicated assertions is described
below. The backslashed assertions are:
\b matches at a word boundary
\B matches when not at a word boundary
\A matches at the start of the subject
\Z matches at the end of the subject
also matches before a newline at the end of the subject
\z matches only at the end of the subject
\G matches at the first matching position in the subject
Inside a character class, \b has a different meaning; it matches the
backspace character. If any other of these assertions appears in a
character class, an "invalid escape sequence" error is generated.
A word boundary is a position in the subject string where the current
character and the previous character do not both match \w or \W (i.e.
one matches \w and the other matches \W), or the start or end of the
string if the first or last character matches \w, respectively. When
PCRE2 is built with Unicode support, the meanings of \w and \W can be
changed by setting the PCRE2_UCP option. When this is done, it also
affects \b and \B. Neither PCRE2 nor Perl has a separate "start of
word" or "end of word" metasequence. However, whatever follows \b
normally determines which it is. For example, the fragment \ba matches
"a" at the start of a word.
The \A, \Z, and \z assertions differ from the traditional circumflex
and dollar (described in the next section) in that they only ever match
at the very start and end of the subject string, whatever options are
set. Thus, they are independent of multiline mode. These three
assertions are not affected by the PCRE2_NOTBOL or PCRE2_NOTEOL
options, which affect only the behaviour of the circumflex and dollar
metacharacters. However, if the startoffset argument of pcre2_match()
is non-zero, indicating that matching is to start at a point other than
the beginning of the subject, \A can never match. The difference
between \Z and \z is that \Z matches before a newline at the end of the
string as well as at the very end, whereas \z matches only at the end.
The \G assertion is true only when the current matching position is at
the start point of the matching process, as specified by the
startoffset argument of pcre2_match(). It differs from \A when the
value of startoffset is non-zero. By calling pcre2_match() multiple
times with appropriate arguments, you can mimic Perl's /g option, and
it is in this kind of implementation where \G can be useful.
If all the alternatives of a pattern begin with \G, the expression is
anchored to the starting match position, and the "anchored" flag is set
in the compiled regular expression.
CIRCUMFLEX AND DOLLAR
The circumflex and dollar metacharacters are zero-width assertions.
That is, they test for a particular condition being true without
consuming any characters from the subject string. These two
metacharacters are concerned with matching the starts and ends of
lines. If the newline convention is set so that only the two-character
sequence CRLF is recognized as a newline, isolated CR and LF characters
are treated as ordinary data characters, and are not recognized as
newlines.
Outside a character class, in the default matching mode, the circumflex
character is an assertion that is true only if the current matching
point is at the start of the subject string. If the startoffset
argument of pcre2_match() is non-zero, or if PCRE2_NOTBOL is set,
circumflex can never match if the PCRE2_MULTILINE option is unset.
Inside a character class, circumflex has an entirely different meaning
(see below).
Circumflex need not be the first character of the pattern if a number
of alternatives are involved, but it should be the first thing in each
alternative in which it appears if the pattern is ever to match that
branch. If all possible alternatives start with a circumflex, that is,
if the pattern is constrained to match only at the start of the
subject, it is said to be an "anchored" pattern. (There are also other
constructs that can cause a pattern to be anchored.)
The dollar character is an assertion that is true only if the current
matching point is at the end of the subject string, or immediately
before a newline at the end of the string (by default), unless
PCRE2_NOTEOL is set. Note, however, that it does not actually match the
newline. Dollar need not be the last character of the pattern if a
number of alternatives are involved, but it should be the last item in
any branch in which it appears. Dollar has no special meaning in a
character class.
The meaning of dollar can be changed so that it matches only at the
very end of the string, by setting the PCRE2_DOLLAR_ENDONLY option at
compile time. This does not affect the \Z assertion.
The meanings of the circumflex and dollar metacharacters are changed if
the PCRE2_MULTILINE option is set. When this is the case, a dollar
character matches before any newlines in the string, as well as at the
very end, and a circumflex matches immediately after internal newlines
as well as at the start of the subject string. It does not match after
a newline that ends the string, for compatibility with Perl. However,
this can be changed by setting the PCRE2_ALT_CIRCUMFLEX option.
For example, the pattern /^abc$/ matches the subject string "def\nabc"
(where \n represents a newline) in multiline mode, but not otherwise.
Consequently, patterns that are anchored in single line mode because
all branches start with ^ are not anchored in multiline mode, and a
match for circumflex is possible when the startoffset argument of
pcre2_match() is non-zero. The PCRE2_DOLLAR_ENDONLY option is ignored
if PCRE2_MULTILINE is set.
newline. (It also matches at the very start of the string, of course.)
Note that the sequences \A, \Z, and \z can be used to match the start
and end of the subject in both modes, and if all branches of a pattern
start with \A it is always anchored, whether or not PCRE2_MULTILINE is
set.
FULL STOP (PERIOD, DOT) AND \N
Outside a character class, a dot in the pattern matches any one
character in the subject string except (by default) a character that
signifies the end of a line. One or more characters may be specified as
line terminators (see "Newline conventions" above).
Dot never matches a single line-ending character. When the two-
character sequence CRLF is the only line ending, dot does not match CR
if it is immediately followed by LF, but otherwise it matches all
characters (including isolated CRs and LFs). When ANYCRLF is selected
for line endings, no occurences of CR of LF match dot. When all Unicode
line endings are being recognized, dot does not match CR or LF or any
of the other line ending characters.
The behaviour of dot with regard to newlines can be changed. If the
PCRE2_DOTALL option is set, a dot matches any one character, without
exception. If the two-character sequence CRLF is present in the
subject string, it takes two dots to match it.
The handling of dot is entirely independent of the handling of
circumflex and dollar, the only relationship being that they both
involve newlines. Dot has no special meaning in a character class.
The escape sequence \N when not followed by an opening brace behaves
like a dot, except that it is not affected by the PCRE2_DOTALL option.
In other words, it matches any character except one that signifies the
end of a line.
When \N is followed by an opening brace it has a different meaning. See
the section entitled "Non-printing characters" above for details. Perl
also uses \N{name} to specify characters by Unicode name; PCRE2 does
not support this.
MATCHING A SINGLE CODE UNIT
Outside a character class, the escape sequence \C matches any one code
unit, whether or not a UTF mode is set. In the 8-bit library, one code
unit is one byte; in the 16-bit library it is a 16-bit unit; in the
32-bit library it is a 32-bit unit. Unlike a dot, \C always matches
line-ending characters. The feature is provided in Perl in order to
match individual bytes in UTF-8 mode, but it is unclear how it can
usefully be used.
Because \C breaks up characters into individual code units, matching
one unit with \C in UTF-8 or UTF-16 mode means that the rest of the
string may start with a malformed UTF character. This has undefined
results, because PCRE2 assumes that it is matching character by
character in a valid UTF string (by default it checks the subject
string's validity at the start of processing unless the
PCRE2_NO_UTF_CHECK or PCRE2_MATCH_INVALID_UTF option is used).
An application can lock out the use of \C by setting the
PCRE2_NEVER_BACKSLASH_C option when compiling a pattern. It is also
to optimize and so the match is always run using the interpreter.
In the 32-bit library, however, \C is always supported (when not
explicitly locked out) because it always matches a single code unit,
whether or not UTF-32 is specified.
In general, the \C escape sequence is best avoided. However, one way of
using it that avoids the problem of malformed UTF-8 or UTF-16
characters is to use a lookahead to check the length of the next
character, as in this pattern, which could be used with a UTF-8 string
(ignore white space and line breaks):
(?| (?=[\x00-\x7f])(\C) |
(?=[\x80-\x{7ff}])(\C)(\C) |
(?=[\x{800}-\x{ffff}])(\C)(\C)(\C) |
(?=[\x{10000}-\x{1fffff}])(\C)(\C)(\C)(\C))
In this example, a group that starts with (?| resets the capturing
parentheses numbers in each alternative (see "Duplicate Group Numbers"
below). The assertions at the start of each branch check the next UTF-8
character for values whose encoding uses 1, 2, 3, or 4 bytes,
respectively. The character's individual bytes are then captured by the
appropriate number of \C groups.
SQUARE BRACKETS AND CHARACTER CLASSES
An opening square bracket introduces a character class, terminated by a
closing square bracket. A closing square bracket on its own is not
special by default. If a closing square bracket is required as a
member of the class, it should be the first data character in the class
(after an initial circumflex, if present) or escaped with a backslash.
This means that, by default, an empty class cannot be defined. However,
if the PCRE2_ALLOW_EMPTY_CLASS option is set, a closing square bracket
at the start does end the (empty) class.
A character class matches a single character in the subject. A matched
character must be in the set of characters defined by the class, unless
the first character in the class definition is a circumflex, in which
case the subject character must not be in the set defined by the class.
If a circumflex is actually required as a member of the class, ensure
it is not the first character, or escape it with a backslash.
For example, the character class [aeiou] matches any lower case vowel,
while [^aeiou] matches any character that is not a lower case vowel.
Note that a circumflex is just a convenient notation for specifying the
characters that are in the class by enumerating those that are not. A
class that starts with a circumflex is not an assertion; it still
consumes a character from the subject string, and therefore it fails if
the current pointer is at the end of the string.
Characters in a class may be specified by their code points using \o,
\x, or \N{U+hh..} in the usual way. When caseless matching is set, any
letters in a class represent both their upper case and lower case
versions, so for example, a caseless [aeiou] matches "A" as well as
"a", and a caseless [^aeiou] does not match "A", whereas a caseful
version would. Note that there are two ASCII characters, K and S, that,
in addition to their lower case ASCII equivalents, are case-equivalent
with Unicode U+212A (Kelvin sign) and U+017F (long S) respectively when
either PCRE2_UTF or PCRE2_UCP is set.
\S, \v, \V, \w, and \W may appear in a character class, and add the
characters that they match to the class. For example, [\dABCDEF]
matches any hexadecimal digit. In UTF modes, the PCRE2_UCP option
affects the meanings of \d, \s, \w and their upper case partners, just
as it does when they appear outside a character class, as described in
the section entitled "Generic character types" above. The escape
sequence \b has a different meaning inside a character class; it
matches the backspace character. The sequences \B, \R, and \X are not
special inside a character class. Like any other unrecognized escape
sequences, they cause an error. The same is true for \N when not
followed by an opening brace.
The minus (hyphen) character can be used to specify a range of
characters in a character class. For example, [d-m] matches any letter
between d and m, inclusive. If a minus character is required in a
class, it must be escaped with a backslash or appear in a position
where it cannot be interpreted as indicating a range, typically as the
first or last character in the class, or immediately after a range. For
example, [b-d-z] matches letters in the range b to d, a hyphen
character, or z.
Perl treats a hyphen as a literal if it appears before or after a POSIX
class (see below) or before or after a character type escape such as as
\d or \H. However, unless the hyphen is the last character in the
class, Perl outputs a warning in its warning mode, as this is most
likely a user error. As PCRE2 has no facility for warning, an error is
given in these cases.
It is not possible to have the literal character "]" as the end
character of a range. A pattern such as [W-]46] is interpreted as a
class of two characters ("W" and "-") followed by a literal string
"46]", so it would match "W46]" or "-46]". However, if the "]" is
escaped with a backslash it is interpreted as the end of range, so
[W-\]46] is interpreted as a class containing a range followed by two
other characters. The octal or hexadecimal representation of "]" can
also be used to end a range.
Ranges normally include all code points between the start and end
characters, inclusive. They can also be used for code points specified
numerically, for example [\000-\037]. Ranges can include any characters
that are valid for the current mode. In any UTF mode, the so-called
"surrogate" characters (those whose code points lie between 0xd800 and
0xdfff inclusive) may not be specified explicitly by default (the
PCRE2_EXTRA_ALLOW_SURROGATE_ESCAPES option disables this check).
However, ranges such as [\x{d7ff}-\x{e000}], which include the
surrogates, are always permitted.
There is a special case in EBCDIC environments for ranges whose end
points are both specified as literal letters in the same case. For
compatibility with Perl, EBCDIC code points within the range that are
not letters are omitted. For example, [h-k] matches only four
characters, even though the codes for h and k are 0x88 and 0x92, a
range of 11 code points. However, if the range is specified
numerically, for example, [\x88-\x92] or [h-\x92], all code points are
included.
If a range that includes letters is used when caseless matching is set,
it matches the letters in either case. For example, [W-c] is equivalent
to [][\\^_`wxyzabc], matched caselessly, and in a non-UTF mode, if
character class should be read as "something OR something OR ..." and a
negative class as "NOT something AND NOT something AND NOT ...".
The only metacharacters that are recognized in character classes are
backslash, hyphen (only where it can be interpreted as specifying a
range), circumflex (only at the start), opening square bracket (only
when it can be interpreted as introducing a POSIX class name, or for a
special compatibility feature - see the next two sections), and the
terminating closing square bracket. However, escaping other non-
alphanumeric characters does no harm.
POSIX CHARACTER CLASSES
Perl supports the POSIX notation for character classes. This uses names
enclosed by [: and :] within the enclosing square brackets. PCRE2 also
supports this notation. For example,
[01[:alpha:]%]
matches "0", "1", any alphabetic character, or "%". The supported class
names are:
alnum letters and digits
alpha letters
ascii character codes 0 - 127
blank space or tab only
cntrl control characters
digit decimal digits (same as \d)
graph printing characters, excluding space
lower lower case letters
print printing characters, including space
punct printing characters, excluding letters and digits and space
space white space (the same as \s from PCRE2 8.34)
upper upper case letters
word "word" characters (same as \w)
xdigit hexadecimal digits
The default "space" characters are HT (9), LF (10), VT (11), FF (12),
CR (13), and space (32). If locale-specific matching is taking place,
the list of space characters may be different; there may be fewer or
more of them. "Space" and \s match the same set of characters.
The name "word" is a Perl extension, and "blank" is a GNU extension
from Perl 5.8. Another Perl extension is negation, which is indicated
by a ^ character after the colon. For example,
[12[:^digit:]]
matches "1", "2", or any non-digit. PCRE2 (and Perl) also recognize the
POSIX syntax [.ch.] and [=ch=] where "ch" is a "collating element", but
these are not supported, and an error is given if they are encountered.
By default, characters with values greater than 127 do not match any of
the POSIX character classes, although this may be different for
characters in the range 128-255 when locale-specific matching is
happening. However, if the PCRE2_UCP option is passed to
pcre2_compile(), some of the classes are changed so that Unicode
character properties are used. This is achieved by replacing certain
POSIX classes with other sequences, as follows:
[:upper:] becomes \p{Lu}
[:word:] becomes \p{Xwd}
Negated versions, such as [:^alpha:] use \P instead of \p. Three other
POSIX classes are handled specially in UCP mode:
[:graph:] This matches characters that have glyphs that mark the page
when printed. In Unicode property terms, it matches all
characters with the L, M, N, P, S, or Cf properties, except
for:
U+061C Arabic Letter Mark
U+180E Mongolian Vowel Separator
U+2066 - U+2069 Various "isolate"s
[:print:] This matches the same characters as [:graph:] plus space
characters that are not controls, that is, characters with
the Zs property.
[:punct:] This matches all characters that have the Unicode P
(punctuation) property, plus those characters with code
points less than 256 that have the S (Symbol) property.
The other POSIX classes are unchanged, and match only characters with
code points less than 256.
COMPATIBILITY FEATURE FOR WORD BOUNDARIES
In the POSIX.2 compliant library that was included in 4.4BSD Unix, the
ugly syntax [[:<:]] and [[:>:]] is used for matching "start of word"
and "end of word". PCRE2 treats these items as follows:
[[:<:]] is converted to \b(?=\w)
[[:>:]] is converted to \b(?<=\w)
Only these exact character sequences are recognized. A sequence such as
[a[:<:]b] provokes error for an unrecognized POSIX class name. This
support is not compatible with Perl. It is provided to help migrations
from other environments, and is best not used in any new patterns. Note
that \b matches at the start and the end of a word (see "Simple
assertions" above), and in a Perl-style pattern the preceding or
following character normally shows which is wanted, without the need
for the assertions that are used above in order to give exactly the
POSIX behaviour.
VERTICAL BAR
Vertical bar characters are used to separate alternative patterns. For
example, the pattern
gilbert|sullivan
matches either "gilbert" or "sullivan". Any number of alternatives may
appear, and an empty alternative is permitted (matching the empty
string). The matching process tries each alternative in turn, from left
to right, and the first one that succeeds is used. If the alternatives
are within a group (defined below), "succeeds" means matching the rest
of the main pattern as well as the alternative in the group.
INTERNAL OPTION SETTING
i for PCRE2_CASELESS
m for PCRE2_MULTILINE
n for PCRE2_NO_AUTO_CAPTURE
s for PCRE2_DOTALL
x for PCRE2_EXTENDED
xx for PCRE2_EXTENDED_MORE
For example, (?im) sets caseless, multiline matching. It is also
possible to unset these options by preceding the relevant letters with
a hyphen, for example (?-im). The two "extended" options are not
independent; unsetting either one cancels the effects of both of them.
A combined setting and unsetting such as (?im-sx), which sets
PCRE2_CASELESS and PCRE2_MULTILINE while unsetting PCRE2_DOTALL and
PCRE2_EXTENDED, is also permitted. Only one hyphen may appear in the
options string. If a letter appears both before and after the hyphen,
the option is unset. An empty options setting "(?)" is allowed.
Needless to say, it has no effect.
If the first character following (? is a circumflex, it causes all of
the above options to be unset. Thus, (?^) is equivalent to (?-imnsx).
Letters may follow the circumflex to cause some options to be re-
instated, but a hyphen may not appear.
The PCRE2-specific options PCRE2_DUPNAMES and PCRE2_UNGREEDY can be
changed in the same way as the Perl-compatible options by using the
characters J and U respectively. However, these are not unset by (?^).
When one of these option changes occurs at top level (that is, not
inside group parentheses), the change applies to the remainder of the
pattern that follows. An option change within a group (see below for a
description of groups) affects only that part of the group that follows
it, so
(a(?i)b)c
matches abc and aBc and no other strings (assuming PCRE2_CASELESS is
not used). By this means, options can be made to have different
settings in different parts of the pattern. Any changes made in one
alternative do carry on into subsequent branches within the same group.
For example,
(a(?i)b|c)
matches "ab", "aB", "c", and "C", even though when matching "C" the
first branch is abandoned before the option setting. This is because
the effects of option settings happen at compile time. There would be
some very weird behaviour otherwise.
As a convenient shorthand, if any option settings are required at the
start of a non-capturing group (see the next section), the option
letters may appear between the "?" and the ":". Thus the two patterns
(?i:saturday|sunday)
(?:(?i)saturday|sunday)
match exactly the same set of strings.
Note: There are other PCRE2-specific options, applying to the whole
PCRE2_UCP options, respectively. However, the application can set the
PCRE2_NEVER_UTF and PCRE2_NEVER_UCP options, which lock out the use of
the (*UTF) and (*UCP) sequences.
GROUPS
Groups are delimited by parentheses (round brackets), which can be
nested. Turning part of a pattern into a group does two things:
1. It localizes a set of alternatives. For example, the pattern
cat(aract|erpillar|)
matches "cataract", "caterpillar", or "cat". Without the parentheses,
it would match "cataract", "erpillar" or an empty string.
2. It creates a "capture group". This means that, when the whole
pattern matches, the portion of the subject string that matched the
group is passed back to the caller, separately from the portion that
matched the whole pattern. (This applies only to the traditional
matching function; the DFA matching function does not support
capturing.)
Opening parentheses are counted from left to right (starting from 1) to
obtain numbers for capture groups. For example, if the string "the red
king" is matched against the pattern
the ((red|white) (king|queen))
the captured substrings are "red king", "red", and "king", and are
numbered 1, 2, and 3, respectively.
The fact that plain parentheses fulfil two functions is not always
helpful. There are often times when grouping is required without
capturing. If an opening parenthesis is followed by a question mark and
a colon, the group does not do any capturing, and is not counted when
computing the number of any subsequent capture groups. For example, if
the string "the white queen" is matched against the pattern
the ((?:red|white) (king|queen))
the captured substrings are "white queen" and "queen", and are numbered
1 and 2. The maximum number of capture groups is 65535.
As a convenient shorthand, if any option settings are required at the
start of a non-capturing group, the option letters may appear between
the "?" and the ":". Thus the two patterns
(?i:saturday|sunday)
(?:(?i)saturday|sunday)
match exactly the same set of strings. Because alternative branches are
tried from left to right, and options are not reset until the end of
the group is reached, an option setting in one branch does affect
subsequent branches, so the above patterns match "SUNDAY" as well as
"Saturday".
DUPLICATE GROUP NUMBERS
Perl 5.10 introduced a feature whereby each alternative in a group uses
the same numbers for its capturing parentheses. Such a group starts
you can look at captured substring number one, whichever alternative
matched. This construct is useful when you want to capture part, but
not all, of one of a number of alternatives. Inside a (?| group,
parentheses are numbered as usual, but the number is reset at the start
of each branch. The numbers of any capturing parentheses that follow
the whole group start after the highest number used in any branch. The
following example is taken from the Perl documentation. The numbers
underneath show in which buffer the captured content will be stored.
# before ---------------branch-reset----------- after
/ ( a ) (?| x ( y ) z | (p (q) r) | (t) u (v) ) ( z ) /x
# 1 2 2 3 2 3 4
A backreference to a capture group uses the most recent value that is
set for the group. The following pattern matches "abcabc" or "defdef":
/(?|(abc)|(def))\1/
In contrast, a subroutine call to a capture group always refers to the
first one in the pattern with the given number. The following pattern
matches "abcabc" or "defabc":
/(?|(abc)|(def))(?1)/
A relative reference such as (?-1) is no different: it is just a
convenient way of computing an absolute group number.
If a condition test for a group's having matched refers to a non-unique
number, the test is true if any group with that number has matched.
An alternative approach to using this "branch reset" feature is to use
duplicate named groups, as described in the next section.
NAMED CAPTURE GROUPS
Identifying capture groups by number is simple, but it can be very hard
to keep track of the numbers in complicated patterns. Furthermore, if
an expression is modified, the numbers may change. To help with this
difficulty, PCRE2 supports the naming of capture groups. This feature
was not added to Perl until release 5.10. Python had the feature
earlier, and PCRE1 introduced it at release 4.0, using the Python
syntax. PCRE2 supports both the Perl and the Python syntax.
In PCRE2, a capture group can be named in one of three ways:
(?<name>...) or (?'name'...) as in Perl, or (?P<name>...) as in Python.
Names may be up to 32 code units long. When PCRE2_UTF is not set, they
may contain only ASCII alphanumeric characters and underscores, but
must start with a non-digit. When PCRE2_UTF is set, the syntax of group
names is extended to allow any Unicode letter or Unicode decimal digit.
In other words, group names must match one of these patterns:
^[_A-Za-z][_A-Za-z0-9]*\z when PCRE2_UTF is not set
^[_\p{L}][_\p{L}\p{Nd}]*\z when PCRE2_UTF is set
References to capture groups from other parts of the pattern, such as
backreferences, recursion, and conditions, can all be made by name as
well as by number.
Named capture groups are allocated numbers as well as names, exactly as
if the names were not present. In both PCRE2 and Perl, capture groups
described in the previous section, a name given to one of them applies
to all of them. Perl allows identically numbered groups to have
different names. Consider this pattern, where there are two capture
groups, both numbered 1:
(?|(?<AA>aa)|(?<BB>bb))
Perl allows this, with both names AA and BB as aliases of group 1.
Thus, after a successful match, both names yield the same value (either
"aa" or "bb").
In an attempt to reduce confusion, PCRE2 does not allow the same group
number to be associated with more than one name. The example above
provokes a compile-time error. However, there is still scope for
confusion. Consider this pattern:
(?|(?<AA>aa)|(bb))
Although the second group number 1 is not explicitly named, the name AA
is still an alias for any group 1. Whether the pattern matches "aa" or
"bb", a reference by name to group AA yields the matched string.
By default, a name must be unique within a pattern, except that
duplicate names are permitted for groups with the same number, for
example:
(?|(?<AA>aa)|(?<AA>bb))
The duplicate name constraint can be disabled by setting the
PCRE2_DUPNAMES option at compile time, or by the use of (?J) within the
pattern, as described in the section entitled "Internal Option Setting"
above.
Duplicate names can be useful for patterns where only one instance of
the named capture group can match. Suppose you want to match the name
of a weekday, either as a 3-letter abbreviation or as the full name,
and in both cases you want to extract the abbreviation. This pattern
(ignoring the line breaks) does the job:
(?J)
(?<DN>Mon|Fri|Sun)(?:day)?|
(?<DN>Tue)(?:sday)?|
(?<DN>Wed)(?:nesday)?|
(?<DN>Thu)(?:rsday)?|
(?<DN>Sat)(?:urday)?
There are five capture groups, but only one is ever set after a match.
The convenience functions for extracting the data by name returns the
substring for the first (and in this example, the only) group of that
name that matched. This saves searching to find which numbered group it
was. (An alternative way of solving this problem is to use a "branch
reset" group, as described in the previous section.)
If you make a backreference to a non-unique named group from elsewhere
in the pattern, the groups to which the name refers are checked in the
order in which they appear in the overall pattern. The first one that
is set is used for the reference. For example, this pattern matches
both "foofoo" and "barbar" but not "foobar" or "barfoo":
If you use a named reference in a condition test (see the section about
conditions below), either to check whether a capture group has matched,
or to check for recursion, all groups with the same name are tested. If
the condition is true for any one of them, the overall condition is
true. This is the same behaviour as testing by number. For further
details of the interfaces for handling named capture groups, see the
pcre2api documentation.
REPETITION
Repetition is specified by quantifiers, which can follow any of the
following items:
a literal data character
the dot metacharacter
the \C escape sequence
the \R escape sequence
the \X escape sequence
an escape such as \d or \pL that matches a single character
a character class
a backreference
a parenthesized group (including lookaround assertions)
a subroutine call (recursive or otherwise)
The general repetition quantifier specifies a minimum and maximum
number of permitted matches, by giving the two numbers in curly
brackets (braces), separated by a comma. The numbers must be less than
65536, and the first must be less than or equal to the second. For
example,
z{2,4}
matches "zz", "zzz", or "zzzz". A closing brace on its own is not a
special character. If the second number is omitted, but the comma is
present, there is no upper limit; if the second number and the comma
are both omitted, the quantifier specifies an exact number of required
matches. Thus
[aeiou]{3,}
matches at least 3 successive vowels, but may match many more, whereas
\d{8}
matches exactly 8 digits. An opening curly bracket that appears in a
position where a quantifier is not allowed, or one that does not match
the syntax of a quantifier, is taken as a literal character. For
example, {,6} is not a quantifier, but a literal string of four
characters.
In UTF modes, quantifiers apply to characters rather than to individual
code units. Thus, for example, \x{100}{2} matches two characters, each
of which is represented by a two-byte sequence in a UTF-8 string.
Similarly, \X{3} matches three Unicode extended grapheme clusters, each
of which may be several code units long (and they may be of different
lengths).
The quantifier {0} is permitted, causing the expression to behave as if
the previous item and the quantifier were not present. This may be
useful for capture groups that are referenced as subroutines from
* is equivalent to {0,}
+ is equivalent to {1,}
? is equivalent to {0,1}
It is possible to construct infinite loops by following a group that
can match no characters with a quantifier that has no upper limit, for
example:
(a?)*
Earlier versions of Perl and PCRE1 used to give an error at compile
time for such patterns. However, because there are cases where this can
be useful, such patterns are now accepted, but whenever an iteration of
such a group matches no characters, matching moves on to the next item
in the pattern instead of repeatedly matching an empty string. This
does not prevent backtracking into any of the iterations if a
subsequent item fails to match.
By default, quantifiers are "greedy", that is, they match as much as
possible (up to the maximum number of permitted times), without causing
the rest of the pattern to fail. The classic example of where this
gives problems is in trying to match comments in C programs. These
appear between /* and */ and within the comment, individual * and /
characters may appear. An attempt to match C comments by applying the
pattern
/\*.*\*/
to the string
/* first comment */ not comment /* second comment */
fails, because it matches the entire string owing to the greediness of
the .* item. However, if a quantifier is followed by a question mark,
it ceases to be greedy, and instead matches the minimum number of times
possible, so the pattern
/\*.*?\*/
does the right thing with the C comments. The meaning of the various
quantifiers is not otherwise changed, just the preferred number of
matches. Do not confuse this use of question mark with its use as a
quantifier in its own right. Because it has two uses, it can sometimes
appear doubled, as in
\d??\d
which matches one digit by preference, but can match two if that is the
only way the rest of the pattern matches.
If the PCRE2_UNGREEDY option is set (an option that is not available in
Perl), the quantifiers are not greedy by default, but individual ones
can be made greedy by following them with a question mark. In other
words, it inverts the default behaviour.
When a parenthesized group is quantified with a minimum repeat count
that is greater than 1 or with a limited maximum, more memory is
required for the compiled pattern, in proportion to the size of the
after the first. PCRE2 normally treats such a pattern as though it were
preceded by \A.
In cases where it is known that the subject string contains no
newlines, it is worth setting PCRE2_DOTALL in order to obtain this
optimization, or alternatively, using ^ to indicate anchoring
explicitly.
However, there are some cases where the optimization cannot be used.
When .* is inside capturing parentheses that are the subject of a
backreference elsewhere in the pattern, a match at the start may fail
where a later one succeeds. Consider, for example:
(.*)abc\1
If the subject is "xyz123abc123" the match point is the fourth
character. For this reason, such a pattern is not implicitly anchored.
Another case where implicit anchoring is not applied is when the
leading .* is inside an atomic group. Once again, a match at the start
may fail where a later one succeeds. Consider this pattern:
(?>.*?a)b
It matches "ab" in the subject "aab". The use of the backtracking
control verbs (*PRUNE) and (*SKIP) also disable this optimization, and
there is an option, PCRE2_NO_DOTSTAR_ANCHOR, to do so explicitly.
When a capture group is repeated, the value captured is the substring
that matched the final iteration. For example, after
(tweedle[dume]{3}\s*)+
has matched "tweedledum tweedledee" the value of the captured substring
is "tweedledee". However, if there are nested capture groups, the
corresponding captured values may have been set in previous iterations.
For example, after
(a|(b))+
matches "aba" the value of the second captured substring is "b".
ATOMIC GROUPING AND POSSESSIVE QUANTIFIERS
With both maximizing ("greedy") and minimizing ("ungreedy" or "lazy")
repetition, failure of what follows normally causes the repeated item
to be re-evaluated to see if a different number of repeats allows the
rest of the pattern to match. Sometimes it is useful to prevent this,
either to change the nature of the match, or to cause it fail earlier
than it otherwise might, when the author of the pattern knows there is
no point in carrying on.
Consider, for example, the pattern \d+foo when applied to the subject
line
123456bar
After matching all 6 digits and then failing to match "foo", the normal
action of the matcher is to try again with only 5 digits matching the
\d+ item, and then with 4, and so on, before ultimately failing.
(?>\d+)foo
Perl 5.28 introduced an experimental alphabetic form starting with (*
which may be easier to remember:
(*atomic:\d+)foo
This kind of parenthesized group "locks up" the part of the pattern it
contains once it has matched, and a failure further into the pattern is
prevented from backtracking into it. Backtracking past it to previous
items, however, works as normal.
An alternative description is that a group of this type matches exactly
the string of characters that an identical standalone pattern would
match, if anchored at the current point in the subject string.
Atomic groups are not capture groups. Simple cases such as the above
example can be thought of as a maximizing repeat that must swallow
everything it can. So, while both \d+ and \d+? are prepared to adjust
the number of digits they match in order to make the rest of the
pattern match, (?>\d+) can only match an entire sequence of digits.
Atomic groups in general can of course contain arbitrarily complicated
expressions, and can be nested. However, when the contents of an atomic
group is just a single repeated item, as in the example above, a
simpler notation, called a "possessive quantifier" can be used. This
consists of an additional + character following a quantifier. Using
this notation, the previous example can be rewritten as
\d++foo
Note that a possessive quantifier can be used with an entire group, for
example:
(abc|xyz){2,3}+
Possessive quantifiers are always greedy; the setting of the
PCRE2_UNGREEDY option is ignored. They are a convenient notation for
the simpler forms of atomic group. However, there is no difference in
the meaning of a possessive quantifier and the equivalent atomic group,
though there may be a performance difference; possessive quantifiers
should be slightly faster.
The possessive quantifier syntax is an extension to the Perl 5.8
syntax. Jeffrey Friedl originated the idea (and the name) in the first
edition of his book. Mike McCloskey liked it, so implemented it when he
built Sun's Java package, and PCRE1 copied it from there. It found its
way into Perl at release 5.10.
PCRE2 has an optimization that automatically "possessifies" certain
simple pattern constructs. For example, the sequence A+B is treated as
A++B because there is no point in backtracking into a sequence of A's
when B must follow. This feature can be disabled by the
PCRE2_NO_AUTOPOSSESS option, or starting the pattern with
(*NO_AUTO_POSSESS).
When a pattern contains an unlimited repeat inside a group that can
itself be repeated an unlimited number of times, the use of an atomic
matches, it runs quickly. However, if it is applied to
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
it takes a long time before reporting failure. This is because the
string can be divided between the internal \D+ repeat and the external
* repeat in a large number of ways, and all have to be tried. (The
example uses [!?] rather than a single character at the end, because
both PCRE2 and Perl have an optimization that allows for fast failure
when a single character is used. They remember the last single
character that is required for a match, and fail early if it is not
present in the string.) If the pattern is changed so that it uses an
atomic group, like this:
((?>\D+)|<\d+>)*[!?]
sequences of non-digits cannot be broken, and failure happens quickly.
BACKREFERENCES
Outside a character class, a backslash followed by a digit greater than
0 (and possibly further digits) is a backreference to a capture group
earlier (that is, to its left) in the pattern, provided there have been
that many previous capture groups.
However, if the decimal number following the backslash is less than 8,
it is always taken as a backreference, and causes an error only if
there are not that many capture groups in the entire pattern. In other
words, the group that is referenced need not be to the left of the
reference for numbers less than 8. A "forward backreference" of this
type can make sense when a repetition is involved and the group to the
right has participated in an earlier iteration.
It is not possible to have a numerical "forward backreference" to a
group whose number is 8 or more using this syntax because a sequence
such as \50 is interpreted as a character defined in octal. See the
subsection entitled "Non-printing characters" above for further details
of the handling of digits following a backslash. Other forms of
backreferencing do not suffer from this restriction. In particular,
there is no problem when named capture groups are used (see below).
Another way of avoiding the ambiguity inherent in the use of digits
following a backslash is to use the \g escape sequence. This escape
must be followed by a signed or unsigned number, optionally enclosed in
braces. These examples are all identical:
(ring), \1
(ring), \g1
(ring), \g{1}
An unsigned number specifies an absolute reference without the
ambiguity that is present in the older syntax. It is also useful when
literal digits follow the reference. A signed number is a relative
reference. Consider this example:
(abc(def)ghi)\g{-1}
The sequence \g{-1} is a reference to the most recently started capture
group before \g, that is, is it equivalent to \2 in this example.
Similarly, \g{-2} would be equivalent to \1. The use of relative
A backreference matches whatever actually most recently matched the
capture group in the current subject string, rather than anything at
all that matches the group (see "Groups as subroutines" below for a way
of doing that). So the pattern
(sens|respons)e and \1ibility
matches "sense and sensibility" and "response and responsibility", but
not "sense and responsibility". If caseful matching is in force at the
time of the backreference, the case of letters is relevant. For
example,
((?i)rah)\s+\1
matches "rah rah" and "RAH RAH", but not "RAH rah", even though the
original capture group is matched caselessly.
There are several different ways of writing backreferences to named
capture groups. The .NET syntax \k{name} and the Perl syntax \k<name>
or \k'name' are supported, as is the Python syntax (?P=name). Perl
5.10's unified backreference syntax, in which \g can be used for both
numeric and named references, is also supported. We could rewrite the
above example in any of the following ways:
(?<p1>(?i)rah)\s+\k<p1>
(?'p1'(?i)rah)\s+\k{p1}
(?P<p1>(?i)rah)\s+(?P=p1)
(?<p1>(?i)rah)\s+\g{p1}
A capture group that is referenced by name may appear in the pattern
before or after the reference.
There may be more than one backreference to the same group. If a group
has not actually been used in a particular match, backreferences to it
always fail by default. For example, the pattern
(a|(bc))\2
always fails if it starts to match "a" rather than "bc". However, if
the PCRE2_MATCH_UNSET_BACKREF option is set at compile time, a
backreference to an unset value matches an empty string.
Because there may be many capture groups in a pattern, all digits
following a backslash are taken as part of a potential backreference
number. If the pattern continues with a digit character, some delimiter
must be used to terminate the backreference. If the PCRE2_EXTENDED or
PCRE2_EXTENDED_MORE option is set, this can be white space. Otherwise,
the \g{} syntax or an empty comment (see "Comments" below) can be used.
Recursive backreferences
A backreference that occurs inside the group to which it refers fails
when the group is first used, so, for example, (a\1) never matches.
However, such references can be useful inside repeated groups. For
example, the pattern
(a|b\1)+
matches any number of "a"s and also "aba", "ababbaa" etc. At each
to cause the group that they reference to be treated as an atomic
group. This restriction no longer applies, and backtracking into such
groups can occur as normal.
ASSERTIONS
An assertion is a test on the characters following or preceding the
current matching point that does not consume any characters. The simple
assertions coded as \b, \B, \A, \G, \Z, \z, ^ and $ are described
above.
More complicated assertions are coded as parenthesized groups. There
are two kinds: those that look ahead of the current position in the
subject string, and those that look behind it, and in each case an
assertion may be positive (must match for the assertion to be true) or
negative (must not match for the assertion to be true). An assertion
group is matched in the normal way, and if it is true, matching
continues after it, but with the matching position in the subject
string reset to what it was before the assertion was processed.
The Perl-compatible lookaround assertions are atomic. If an assertion
is true, but there is a subsequent matching failure, there is no
backtracking into the assertion. However, there are some cases where
non-atomic assertions can be useful. PCRE2 has some support for these,
described in the section entitled "Non-atomic assertions" below, but
they are not Perl-compatible.
A lookaround assertion may appear as the condition in a conditional
group (see below). In this case, the result of matching the assertion
determines which branch of the condition is followed.
Assertion groups are not capture groups. If an assertion contains
capture groups within it, these are counted for the purposes of
numbering the capture groups in the whole pattern. Within each branch
of an assertion, locally captured substrings may be referenced in the
usual way. For example, a sequence such as (.)\g{-1} can be used to
check that two adjacent characters are the same.
When a branch within an assertion fails to match, any substrings that
were captured are discarded (as happens with any pattern branch that
fails to match). A negative assertion is true only when all its
branches fail to match; this means that no captured substrings are ever
retained after a successful negative assertion. When an assertion
contains a matching branch, what happens depends on the type of
assertion.
For a positive assertion, internally captured substrings in the
successful branch are retained, and matching continues with the next
pattern item after the assertion. For a negative assertion, a matching
branch means that the assertion is not true. If such an assertion is
being used as a condition in a conditional group (see below), captured
substrings are retained, because matching continues with the "no"
branch of the condition. For other failing negative assertions, control
passes to the previous backtracking point, thus discarding any captured
strings within the assertion.
Most assertion groups may be repeated; though it makes no sense to
assert the same thing several times, the side effect of capturing in
positive assertions may occasionally be useful. However, an assertion
that forms the condition for a conditional group may not be quantified.
to specify lookaround assertions. Perl 5.28 introduced some
experimental alphabetic alternatives which might be easier to remember.
They all start with (* instead of (? and must be written using lower
case letters. PCRE2 supports the following synonyms:
(*positive_lookahead: or (*pla: is the same as (?=
(*negative_lookahead: or (*nla: is the same as (?!
(*positive_lookbehind: or (*plb: is the same as (?<=
(*negative_lookbehind: or (*nlb: is the same as (?<!
For example, (*pla:foo) is the same assertion as (?=foo). In the
following sections, the various assertions are described using the
original symbolic forms.
Lookahead assertions
Lookahead assertions start with (?= for positive assertions and (?! for
negative assertions. For example,
\w+(?=;)
matches a word followed by a semicolon, but does not include the
semicolon in the match, and
foo(?!bar)
matches any occurrence of "foo" that is not followed by "bar". Note
that the apparently similar pattern
(?!foo)bar
does not find an occurrence of "bar" that is preceded by something
other than "foo"; it finds any occurrence of "bar" whatsoever, because
the assertion (?!foo) is always true when the next three characters are
"bar". A lookbehind assertion is needed to achieve the other effect.
If you want to force a matching failure at some point in a pattern, the
most convenient way to do it is with (?!) because an empty string
always matches, so an assertion that requires there not to be an empty
string must always fail. The backtracking control verb (*FAIL) or (*F)
is a synonym for (?!).
Lookbehind assertions
Lookbehind assertions start with (?<= for positive assertions and (?<!
for negative assertions. For example,
(?<!foo)bar
does find an occurrence of "bar" that is not preceded by "foo". The
contents of a lookbehind assertion are restricted such that all the
strings it matches must have a fixed length. However, if there are
several top-level alternatives, they do not all have to have the same
fixed length. Thus
(?<=bullock|donkey)
is permitted, but
(?<!dogs?|cats?)
is not permitted, because its single top-level branch can match two
different lengths, but it is acceptable to PCRE2 if rewritten to use
two top-level branches:
(?<=abc|abde)
In some cases, the escape sequence \K (see above) can be used instead
of a lookbehind assertion to get round the fixed-length restriction.
The implementation of lookbehind assertions is, for each alternative,
to temporarily move the current position back by the fixed length and
then try to match. If there are insufficient characters before the
current position, the assertion fails.
In UTF-8 and UTF-16 modes, PCRE2 does not allow the \C escape (which
matches a single code unit even in a UTF mode) to appear in lookbehind
assertions, because it makes it impossible to calculate the length of
the lookbehind. The \X and \R escapes, which can match different
numbers of code units, are never permitted in lookbehinds.
"Subroutine" calls (see below) such as (?2) or (?&X) are permitted in
lookbehinds, as long as the called capture group matches a fixed-length
string. However, recursion, that is, a "subroutine" call into a group
that is already active, is not supported.
Perl does not support backreferences in lookbehinds. PCRE2 does support
them, but only if certain conditions are met. The
PCRE2_MATCH_UNSET_BACKREF option must not be set, there must be no use
of (?| in the pattern (it creates duplicate group numbers), and if the
backreference is by name, the name must be unique. Of course, the
referenced group must itself match a fixed length substring. The
following pattern matches words containing at least two characters that
begin and end with the same character:
\b(\w)\w++(?<=\1)
Possessive quantifiers can be used in conjunction with lookbehind
assertions to specify efficient matching of fixed-length strings at the
end of subject strings. Consider a simple pattern such as
abcd$
when applied to a long string that does not match. Because matching
proceeds from left to right, PCRE2 will look for each "a" in the
subject and then see if what follows matches the rest of the pattern.
If the pattern is specified as
^.*abcd$
the initial .* matches the entire string at first, but when this fails
(because there is no following "a"), it backtracks to match all but the
last character, then all but the last two characters, and so on. Once
again the search for "a" covers the entire string, from right to left,
so we are no better off. However, if the pattern is written as
^.*+(?<=abcd)
there can be no backtracking for the .*+ item because of the possessive
quantifier; it can match only the entire string. The subsequent
(?<=\d{3})(?<!999)foo
matches "foo" preceded by three digits that are not "999". Notice that
each of the assertions is applied independently at the same point in
the subject string. First there is a check that the previous three
characters are all digits, and then there is a check that the same
three characters are not "999". This pattern does not match "foo"
preceded by six characters, the first of which are digits and the last
three of which are not "999". For example, it doesn't match
"123abcfoo". A pattern to do that is
(?<=\d{3}...)(?<!999)foo
This time the first assertion looks at the preceding six characters,
checking that the first three are digits, and then the second assertion
checks that the preceding three characters are not "999".
Assertions can be nested in any combination. For example,
(?<=(?<!foo)bar)baz
matches an occurrence of "baz" that is preceded by "bar" which in turn
is not preceded by "foo", while
(?<=\d{3}(?!999)...)foo
is another pattern that matches "foo" preceded by three digits and any
three characters that are not "999".
NON-ATOMIC ASSERTIONS
The traditional Perl-compatible lookaround assertions are atomic. That
is, if an assertion is true, but there is a subsequent matching
failure, there is no backtracking into the assertion. However, there
are some cases where non-atomic positive assertions can be useful.
PCRE2 provides these using the following syntax:
(*non_atomic_positive_lookahead: or (*napla: or (?*
(*non_atomic_positive_lookbehind: or (*naplb: or (?<*
Consider the problem of finding the right-most word in a string that
also appears earlier in the string, that is, it must appear at least
twice in total. This pattern returns the required result as captured
substring 1:
^(?x)(*napla: .* \b(\w++)) (?> .*? \b\1\b ){2}
For a subject such as "word1 word2 word3 word2 word3 word4" the result
is "word3". How does it work? At the start, ^(?x) anchors the pattern
and sets the "x" option, which causes white space (introduced for
readability) to be ignored. Inside the assertion, the greedy .* at
first consumes the entire string, but then has to backtrack until the
rest of the assertion can match a word, which is captured by group 1.
In other words, when the assertion first succeeds, it captures the
right-most word in the string.
The current matching point is then reset to the start of the subject,
and the rest of the pattern match checks for two occurrences of the
captured word, using an ungreedy .*? to scan from the left. If this
succeeds, we are done, but if the last word in the string does not
find the second-last word, and so on, until either the match succeeds,
or all words have been tested.
Two conditions must be met for a non-atomic assertion to be useful: the
contents of one or more capturing groups must change after a backtrack
into the assertion, and there must be a backreference to a changed
group later in the pattern. If this is not the case, the rest of the
pattern match fails exactly as before because nothing has changed, so
using a non-atomic assertion just wastes resources.
There is one exception to backtracking into a non-atomic assertion. If
an (*ACCEPT) control verb is triggered, the assertion succeeds
atomically. That is, a subsequent match failure cannot backtrack into
the assertion.
Non-atomic assertions are not supported by the alternative matching
function pcre2_dfa_match(). They are supported by JIT, but only if they
do not contain any control verbs such as (*ACCEPT). (This may change in
future). Note that assertions that appear as conditions for conditional
groups (see below) must be atomic.
SCRIPT RUNS
In concept, a script run is a sequence of characters that are all from
the same Unicode script such as Latin or Greek. However, because some
scripts are commonly used together, and because some diacritical and
other marks are used with multiple scripts, it is not that simple.
There is a full description of the rules that PCRE2 uses in the section
entitled "Script Runs" in the pcre2unicode documentation.
If part of a pattern is enclosed between (*script_run: or (*sr: and a
closing parenthesis, it fails if the sequence of characters that it
matches are not a script run. After a failure, normal backtracking
occurs. Script runs can be used to detect spoofing attacks using
characters that look the same, but are from different scripts. The
string "paypal.com" is an infamous example, where the letters could be
a mixture of Latin and Cyrillic. This pattern ensures that the matched
characters in a sequence of non-spaces that follow white space are a
script run:
\s+(*sr:\S+)
To be sure that they are all from the Latin script (for example), a
lookahead can be used:
\s+(?=\p{Latin})(*sr:\S+)
This works as long as the first character is expected to be a character
in that script, and not (for example) punctuation, which is allowed
with any script. If this is not the case, a more creative lookahead is
needed. For example, if digits, underscore, and dots are permitted at
the start:
\s+(?=[0-9_.]*\p{Latin})(*sr:\S+)
In many cases, backtracking into a script run pattern fragment is not
desirable. The script run can employ an atomic group to prevent this.
Because this is a common requirement, a shorthand notation is provided
by (*atomic_script_run: or (*asr:
Unicode support. A compile-time error is given if any of the above
constructs is encountered. Script runs are not supported by the
alternate matching function, pcre2_dfa_match() because they use the
same mechanism as capturing parentheses.
Warning: The (*ACCEPT) control verb (see below) should not be used
within a script run group, because it causes an immediate exit from the
group, bypassing the script run checking.
CONDITIONAL GROUPS
It is possible to cause the matching process to obey a pattern fragment
conditionally or to choose between two alternative fragments, depending
on the result of an assertion, or whether a specific capture group has
already been matched. The two possible forms of conditional group are:
(?(condition)yes-pattern)
(?(condition)yes-pattern|no-pattern)
If the condition is satisfied, the yes-pattern is used; otherwise the
no-pattern (if present) is used. An absent no-pattern is equivalent to
an empty string (it always matches). If there are more than two
alternatives in the group, a compile-time error occurs. Each of the two
alternatives may itself contain nested groups of any form, including
conditional groups; the restriction to two alternatives applies only at
the level of the condition itself. This pattern fragment is an example
where the alternatives are complex:
(?(1) (A|B|C) | (D | (?(2)E|F) | E) )
There are five kinds of condition: references to capture groups,
references to recursion, two pseudo-conditions called DEFINE and
VERSION, and assertions.
Checking for a used capture group by number
If the text between the parentheses consists of a sequence of digits,
the condition is true if a capture group of that number has previously
matched. If there is more than one capture group with the same number
(see the earlier section about duplicate group numbers), the condition
is true if any of them have matched. An alternative notation is to
precede the digits with a plus or minus sign. In this case, the group
number is relative rather than absolute. The most recently opened
capture group can be referenced by (?(-1), the next most recent by
(?(-2), and so on. Inside loops it can also make sense to refer to
subsequent groups. The next capture group can be referenced as (?(+1),
and so on. (The value zero in any of these forms is not used; it
provokes a compile-time error.)
Consider the following pattern, which contains non-significant white
space to make it more readable (assume the PCRE2_EXTENDED option) and
to divide it into three parts for ease of discussion:
( \( )? [^()]+ (?(1) \) )
The first part matches an optional opening parenthesis, and if that
character is present, sets it as the first captured substring. The
second part matches one or more characters that are not parentheses.
The third part is a conditional group that tests whether or not the
first capture group matched. If it did, that is, if subject started
relative reference:
...other stuff... ( \( )? [^()]+ (?(-1) \) ) ...
This makes the fragment independent of the parentheses in the larger
pattern.
Checking for a used capture group by name
Perl uses the syntax (?(<name>)...) or (?('name')...) to test for a
used capture group by name. For compatibility with earlier versions of
PCRE1, which had this facility before Perl, the syntax (?(name)...) is
also recognized. Note, however, that undelimited names consisting of
the letter R followed by digits are ambiguous (see the following
section). Rewriting the above example to use a named group gives this:
(?<OPEN> \( )? [^()]+ (?(<OPEN>) \) )
If the name used in a condition of this kind is a duplicate, the test
is applied to all groups of the same name, and is true if any one of
them has matched.
Checking for pattern recursion
"Recursion" in this sense refers to any subroutine-like call from one
part of the pattern to another, whether or not it is actually
recursive. See the sections entitled "Recursive patterns" and "Groups
as subroutines" below for details of recursion and subroutine calls.
If a condition is the string (R), and there is no capture group with
the name R, the condition is true if matching is currently in a
recursion or subroutine call to the whole pattern or any capture group.
If digits follow the letter R, and there is no group with that name,
the condition is true if the most recent call is into a group with the
given number, which must exist somewhere in the overall pattern. This
is a contrived example that is equivalent to a+b:
((?(R1)a+|(?1)b))
However, in both cases, if there is a capture group with a matching
name, the condition tests for its being set, as described in the
section above, instead of testing for recursion. For example, creating
a group with the name R1 by adding (?<R1>) to the above pattern
completely changes its meaning.
If a name preceded by ampersand follows the letter R, for example:
(?(R&name)...)
the condition is true if the most recent recursion is into a group of
that name (which must exist within the pattern).
This condition does not check the entire recursion stack. It tests only
the current level. If the name used in a condition of this kind is a
duplicate, the test is applied to all groups of the same name, and is
true if any one of them is the most recent recursion.
At "top level", all these recursion test conditions are false.
Defining capture groups for use by reference only
If the condition is the string (DEFINE), the condition is always false,
line breaks):
(?(DEFINE) (?<byte> 2[0-4]\d | 25[0-5] | 1\d\d | [1-9]?\d) )
\b (?&byte) (\.(?&byte)){3} \b
The first part of the pattern is a DEFINE group inside which another
group named "byte" is defined. This matches an individual component of
an IPv4 address (a number less than 256). When matching takes place,
this part of the pattern is skipped because DEFINE acts like a false
condition. The rest of the pattern uses references to the named group
to match the four dot-separated components of an IPv4 address,
insisting on a word boundary at each end.
Checking the PCRE2 version
Programs that link with a PCRE2 library can check the version by
calling pcre2_config() with appropriate arguments. Users of
applications that do not have access to the underlying code cannot do
this. A special "condition" called VERSION exists to allow such users
to discover which version of PCRE2 they are dealing with by using this
condition to match a string such as "yesno". VERSION must be followed
either by "=" or ">=" and a version number. For example:
(?(VERSION>=10.4)yes|no)
This pattern matches "yes" if the PCRE2 version is greater or equal to
10.4, or "no" otherwise. The fractional part of the version number may
not contain more than two digits.
Assertion conditions
If the condition is not in any of the above formats, it must be a
parenthesized assertion. This may be a positive or negative lookahead
or lookbehind assertion. However, it must be a traditional atomic
assertion, not one of the PCRE2-specific non-atomic assertions.
Consider this pattern, again containing non-significant white space,
and with the two alternatives on the second line:
(?(?=[^a-z]*[a-z])
\d{2}-[a-z]{3}-\d{2} | \d{2}-\d{2}-\d{2} )
The condition is a positive lookahead assertion that matches an
optional sequence of non-letters followed by a letter. In other words,
it tests for the presence of at least one letter in the subject. If a
letter is found, the subject is matched against the first alternative;
otherwise it is matched against the second. This pattern matches
strings in one of the two forms dd-aaa-dd or dd-dd-dd, where aaa are
letters and dd are digits.
When an assertion that is a condition contains capture groups, any
capturing that occurs in a matching branch is retained afterwards, for
both positive and negative assertions, because matching always
continues after the assertion, whether it succeeds or fails. (Compare
non-conditional assertions, for which captures are retained only for
positive assertions that succeed.)
COMMENTS
There are two ways of including comments in patterns that are processed
by PCRE2. In both cases, the start of the comment must not be in a
character class, nor in the middle of any other sequence of related
immediately after the next newline character or character sequence in
the pattern. Which characters are interpreted as newlines is controlled
by an option passed to the compiling function or by a special sequence
at the start of the pattern, as described in the section entitled
"Newline conventions" above. Note that the end of this type of comment
is a literal newline sequence in the pattern; escape sequences that
happen to represent a newline do not count. For example, consider this
pattern when PCRE2_EXTENDED is set, and the default newline convention
(a single linefeed character) is in force:
abc #comment \n still comment
On encountering the # character, pcre2_compile() skips along, looking
for a newline in the pattern. The sequence \n is still literal at this
stage, so it does not terminate the comment. Only an actual character
with the code value 0x0a (the default newline) does so.
RECURSIVE PATTERNS
Consider the problem of matching a string in parentheses, allowing for
unlimited nested parentheses. Without the use of recursion, the best
that can be done is to use a pattern that matches up to some fixed
depth of nesting. It is not possible to handle an arbitrary nesting
depth.
For some time, Perl has provided a facility that allows regular
expressions to recurse (amongst other things). It does this by
interpolating Perl code in the expression at run time, and the code can
refer to the expression itself. A Perl pattern using code interpolation
to solve the parentheses problem can be created like this:
$re = qr{\( (?: (?>[^()]+) | (?p{$re}) )* \)}x;
The (?p{...}) item interpolates Perl code at run time, and in this case
refers recursively to the pattern in which it appears.
Obviously, PCRE2 cannot support the interpolation of Perl code.
Instead, it supports special syntax for recursion of the entire
pattern, and also for individual capture group recursion. After its
introduction in PCRE1 and Python, this kind of recursion was
subsequently introduced into Perl at release 5.10.
A special item that consists of (? followed by a number greater than
zero and a closing parenthesis is a recursive subroutine call of the
capture group of the given number, provided that it occurs inside that
group. (If not, it is a non-recursive subroutine call, which is
described in the next section.) The special item (?R) or (?0) is a
recursive call of the entire regular expression.
This PCRE2 pattern solves the nested parentheses problem (assume the
PCRE2_EXTENDED option is set so that white space is ignored):
\( ( [^()]++ | (?R) )* \)
First it matches an opening parenthesis. Then it matches any number of
substrings which can either be a sequence of non-parentheses, or a
recursive match of the pattern itself (that is, a correctly
parenthesized substring). Finally there is a closing parenthesis. Note
the use of a possessive quantifier to avoid backtracking into sequences
of non-parentheses.
refer to them instead of the whole pattern.
In a larger pattern, keeping track of parenthesis numbers can be
tricky. This is made easier by the use of relative references. Instead
of (?1) in the pattern above you can write (?-2) to refer to the second
most recently opened parentheses preceding the recursion. In other
words, a negative number counts capturing parentheses leftwards from
the point at which it is encountered.
Be aware however, that if duplicate capture group numbers are in use,
relative references refer to the earliest group with the appropriate
number. Consider, for example:
(?|(a)|(b)) (c) (?-2)
The first two capture groups (a) and (b) are both numbered 1, and group
(c) is number 2. When the reference (?-2) is encountered, the second
most recently opened parentheses has the number 1, but it is the first
such group (the (a) group) to which the recursion refers. This would be
the same if an absolute reference (?1) was used. In other words,
relative references are just a shorthand for computing a group number.
It is also possible to refer to subsequent capture groups, by writing
references such as (?+2). However, these cannot be recursive because
the reference is not inside the parentheses that are referenced. They
are always non-recursive subroutine calls, as described in the next
section.
An alternative approach is to use named parentheses. The Perl syntax
for this is (?&name); PCRE1's earlier syntax (?P>name) is also
supported. We could rewrite the above example as follows:
(?<pn> \( ( [^()]++ | (?&pn) )* \) )
If there is more than one group with the same name, the earliest one is
used.
The example pattern that we have been looking at contains nested
unlimited repeats, and so the use of a possessive quantifier for
matching strings of non-parentheses is important when applying the
pattern to strings that do not match. For example, when this pattern is
applied to
(aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa()
it yields "no match" quickly. However, if a possessive quantifier is
not used, the match runs for a very long time indeed because there are
so many different ways the + and * repeats can carve up the subject,
and all have to be tested before failure can be reported.
At the end of a match, the values of capturing parentheses are those
from the outermost level. If you want to obtain intermediate values, a
callout function can be used (see below and the pcre2callout
documentation). If the pattern above is matched against
(ab(cd)ef)
the value for the inner capturing parentheses (numbered 2) is "ef",
which is the last value taken on at the top level. If a capture group
nested brackets (that is, when recursing), whereas any characters are
permitted at the outer level.
< (?: (?(R) \d++ | [^<>]*+) | (?R)) * >
In this pattern, (?(R) is the start of a conditional group, with two
different alternatives for the recursive and non-recursive cases. The
(?R) item is the actual recursive call.
Differences in recursion processing between PCRE2 and Perl
Some former differences between PCRE2 and Perl no longer exist.
Before release 10.30, recursion processing in PCRE2 differed from Perl
in that a recursive subroutine call was always treated as an atomic
group. That is, once it had matched some of the subject string, it was
never re-entered, even if it contained untried alternatives and there
was a subsequent matching failure. (Historical note: PCRE implemented
recursion before Perl did.)
Starting with release 10.30, recursive subroutine calls are no longer
treated as atomic. That is, they can be re-entered to try unused
alternatives if there is a matching failure later in the pattern. This
is now compatible with the way Perl works. If you want a subroutine
call to be atomic, you must explicitly enclose it in an atomic group.
Supporting backtracking into recursions simplifies certain types of
recursive pattern. For example, this pattern matches palindromic
strings:
^((.)(?1)\2|.?)$
The second branch in the group matches a single central character in
the palindrome when there are an odd number of characters, or nothing
when there are an even number of characters, but in order to work it
has to be able to try the second case when the rest of the pattern
match fails. If you want to match typical palindromic phrases, the
pattern has to ignore all non-word characters, which can be done like
this:
^\W*+((.)\W*+(?1)\W*+\2|\W*+.?)\W*+$
If run with the PCRE2_CASELESS option, this pattern matches phrases
such as "A man, a plan, a canal: Panama!". Note the use of the
possessive quantifier *+ to avoid backtracking into sequences of non-
word characters. Without this, PCRE2 takes a great deal longer (ten
times or more) to match typical phrases, and Perl takes so long that
you think it has gone into a loop.
Another way in which PCRE2 and Perl used to differ in their recursion
processing is in the handling of captured values. Formerly in Perl,
when a group was called recursively or as a subroutine (see the next
section), it had no access to any values that were captured outside the
recursion, whereas in PCRE2 these values can be referenced. Consider
this pattern:
^(.)(\1|a(?2))
This pattern matches "bab". The first capturing parentheses match "b",
then in the second group, when the backreference \1 fails to match "b",
like a subroutine in a programming language. More accurately, PCRE2
treats the referenced group as an independent subpattern which it tries
to match at the current matching position. The called group may be
defined before or after the reference. A numbered reference can be
absolute or relative, as in these examples:
(...(absolute)...)...(?2)...
(...(relative)...)...(?-1)...
(...(?+1)...(relative)...
An earlier example pointed out that the pattern
(sens|respons)e and \1ibility
matches "sense and sensibility" and "response and responsibility", but
not "sense and responsibility". If instead the pattern
(sens|respons)e and (?1)ibility
is used, it does match "sense and responsibility" as well as the other
two strings. Another example is given in the discussion of DEFINE
above.
Like recursions, subroutine calls used to be treated as atomic, but
this changed at PCRE2 release 10.30, so backtracking into subroutine
calls can now occur. However, any capturing parentheses that are set
during the subroutine call revert to their previous values afterwards.
Processing options such as case-independence are fixed when a group is
defined, so if it is used as a subroutine, such options cannot be
changed for different calls. For example, consider this pattern:
(abc)(?i:(?-1))
It matches "abcabc". It does not match "abcABC" because the change of
processing option does not affect the called group.
The behaviour of backtracking control verbs in groups when called as
subroutines is described in the section entitled "Backtracking verbs in
subroutines" below.
ONIGURUMA SUBROUTINE SYNTAX
For compatibility with Oniguruma, the non-Perl syntax \g followed by a
name or a number enclosed either in angle brackets or single quotes, is
an alternative syntax for calling a group as a subroutine, possibly
recursively. Here are two of the examples used above, rewritten using
this syntax:
(?<pn> \( ( (?>[^()]+) | \g<pn> )* \) )
(sens|respons)e and \g'1'ibility
PCRE2 supports an extension to Oniguruma: if a number is preceded by a
plus or a minus sign it is taken as a relative reference. For example:
(abc)(?i:\g<-1>)
Note that \g{...} (Perl syntax) and \g<...> (Oniguruma syntax) are not
synonymous. The former is a backreference; the latter is a subroutine
call.
PCRE2 provides a similar feature, but of course it cannot obey
arbitrary Perl code. The feature is called "callout". The caller of
PCRE2 provides an external function by putting its entry point in a
match context using the function pcre2_set_callout(), and then passing
that context to pcre2_match() or pcre2_dfa_match(). If no match context
is passed, or if the callout entry point is set to NULL, callouts are
disabled.
Within a regular expression, (?C<arg>) indicates a point at which the
external function is to be called. There are two kinds of callout:
those with a numerical argument and those with a string argument. (?C)
on its own with no argument is treated as (?C0). A numerical argument
allows the application to distinguish between different callouts.
String arguments were added for release 10.20 to make it possible for
script languages that use PCRE2 to embed short scripts within patterns
in a similar way to Perl.
During matching, when PCRE2 reaches a callout point, the external
function is called. It is provided with the number or string argument
of the callout, the position in the pattern, and one item of data that
is also set in the match block. The callout function may cause matching
to proceed, to backtrack, or to fail.
By default, PCRE2 implements a number of optimizations at matching
time, and one side-effect is that sometimes callouts are skipped. If
you need all possible callouts to happen, you need to set options that
disable the relevant optimizations. More details, including a complete
description of the programming interface to the callout function, are
given in the pcre2callout documentation.
Callouts with numerical arguments
If you just want to have a means of identifying different callout
points, put a number less than 256 after the letter C. For example,
this pattern has two callout points:
(?C1)abc(?C2)def
If the PCRE2_AUTO_CALLOUT flag is passed to pcre2_compile(), numerical
callouts are automatically installed before each item in the pattern.
They are all numbered 255. If there is a conditional group in the
pattern whose condition is an assertion, an additional callout is
inserted just before the condition. An explicit callout may also be set
at this position, as in this example:
(?(?C9)(?=a)abc|def)
Note that this applies only to assertion conditions, not to other types
of condition.
Callouts with string arguments
A delimited string may be used instead of a number as a callout
argument. The starting delimiter must be one of ` ' " ^ % # $ { and the
ending delimiter is the same as the start, except for {, where the
ending delimiter is }. If the ending delimiter is needed within the
string, it must be doubled. For example:
(?C'ab ''c'' d')xyz(?C{any text})pqr
verbs take either form, and may behave differently depending on whether
or not a name argument is present. The names are not required to be
unique within the pattern.
By default, for compatibility with Perl, a name is any sequence of
characters that does not include a closing parenthesis. The name is not
processed in any way, and it is not possible to include a closing
parenthesis in the name. This can be changed by setting the
PCRE2_ALT_VERBNAMES option, but the result is no longer Perl-
compatible.
When PCRE2_ALT_VERBNAMES is set, backslash processing is applied to
verb names and only an unescaped closing parenthesis terminates the
name. However, the only backslash items that are permitted are \Q, \E,
and sequences such as \x{100} that define character code points.
Character type escapes such as \d are faulted.
A closing parenthesis can be included in a name either as \) or between
\Q and \E. In addition to backslash processing, if the PCRE2_EXTENDED
or PCRE2_EXTENDED_MORE option is also set, unescaped whitespace in verb
names is skipped, and #-comments are recognized, exactly as in the rest
of the pattern. PCRE2_EXTENDED and PCRE2_EXTENDED_MORE do not affect
verb names unless PCRE2_ALT_VERBNAMES is also set.
The maximum length of a name is 255 in the 8-bit library and 65535 in
the 16-bit and 32-bit libraries. If the name is empty, that is, if the
closing parenthesis immediately follows the colon, the effect is as if
the colon were not there. Any number of these verbs may occur in a
pattern. Except for (*ACCEPT), they may not be quantified.
Since these verbs are specifically related to backtracking, most of
them can be used only when the pattern is to be matched using the
traditional matching function, because that uses a backtracking
algorithm. With the exception of (*FAIL), which behaves like a failing
negative assertion, the backtracking control verbs cause an error if
encountered by the DFA matching function.
The behaviour of these verbs in repeated groups, assertions, and in
capture groups called as subroutines (whether or not recursively) is
documented below.
Optimizations that affect backtracking verbs
PCRE2 contains some optimizations that are used to speed up matching by
running some checks at the start of each match attempt. For example, it
may know the minimum length of matching subject, or that a particular
character must be present. When one of these optimizations bypasses the
running of a match, any included backtracking verbs will not, of
course, be processed. You can suppress the start-of-match optimizations
by setting the PCRE2_NO_START_OPTIMIZE option when calling
pcre2_compile(), or by starting the pattern with (*NO_START_OPT). There
is more discussion of this option in the section entitled "Compiling a
pattern" in the pcre2api documentation.
Experiments with Perl suggest that it too has similar optimizations,
and like PCRE2, turning them off can change the result of a match.
Verbs that act immediately
The following verbs act as soon as they are encountered.
the assertion fails.
If (*ACCEPT) is inside capturing parentheses, the data so far is
captured. For example:
A((?:A|B(*ACCEPT)|C)D)
This matches "AB", "AAD", or "ACD"; when it matches "AB", "B" is
captured by the outer parentheses.
(*ACCEPT) is the only backtracking verb that is allowed to be
quantified because an ungreedy quantification with a minimum of zero
acts only when a backtrack happens. Consider, for example,
(A(*ACCEPT)??B)C
where A, B, and C may be complex expressions. After matching "A", the
matcher processes "BC"; if that fails, causing a backtrack, (*ACCEPT)
is triggered and the match succeeds. In both cases, all but C is
captured. Whereas (*COMMIT) (see below) means "fail on backtrack", a
repeated (*ACCEPT) of this type means "succeed on backtrack".
Warning: (*ACCEPT) should not be used within a script run group,
because it causes an immediate exit from the group, bypassing the
script run checking.
(*FAIL) or (*FAIL:NAME)
This verb causes a matching failure, forcing backtracking to occur. It
may be abbreviated to (*F). It is equivalent to (?!) but easier to
read. The Perl documentation notes that it is probably useful only when
combined with (?{}) or (??{}). Those are, of course, Perl features that
are not present in PCRE2. The nearest equivalent is the callout
feature, as for example in this pattern:
a+(?C)(*FAIL)
A match with the string "aaaa" always fails, but the callout is taken
before each backtrack happens (in this example, 10 times).
(*ACCEPT:NAME) and (*FAIL:NAME) behave the same as
(*MARK:NAME)(*ACCEPT) and (*MARK:NAME)(*FAIL), respectively, that is, a
(*MARK) is recorded just before the verb acts.
Recording which path was taken
There is one verb whose main purpose is to track how a match was
arrived at, though it also has a secondary use in conjunction with
advancing the match starting point (see (*SKIP) below).
(*MARK:NAME) or (*:NAME)
A name is always required with this verb. For all the other
backtracking control verbs, a NAME argument is optional.
When a match succeeds, the name of the last-encountered mark name on
the matching path is passed back to the caller as described in the
section entitled "Other information about the match" in the pcre2api
documentation. This applies to all instances of (*MARK) and other
verbs, including those inside assertions and atomic groups. However,
re> /X(*MARK:A)Y|X(*MARK:B)Z/mark
data> XY
0: XY
MK: A
XZ
0: XZ
MK: B
The (*MARK) name is tagged with "MK:" in this output, and in this
example it indicates which of the two alternatives matched. This is a
more efficient way of obtaining this information than putting each
alternative in its own capturing parentheses.
If a verb with a name is encountered in a positive assertion that is
true, the name is recorded and passed back if it is the last-
encountered. This does not happen for negative assertions or failing
positive assertions.
After a partial match or a failed match, the last encountered name in
the entire match process is returned. For example:
re> /X(*MARK:A)Y|X(*MARK:B)Z/mark
data> XP
No match, mark = B
Note that in this unanchored example the mark is retained from the
match attempt that started at the letter "X" in the subject. Subsequent
match attempts starting at "P" and then with an empty string do not get
as far as the (*MARK) item, but nevertheless do not reset it.
If you are interested in (*MARK) values after failed matches, you
should probably set the PCRE2_NO_START_OPTIMIZE option (see above) to
ensure that the match is always attempted.
Verbs that act after backtracking
The following verbs do nothing when they are encountered. Matching
continues with what follows, but if there is a subsequent match
failure, causing a backtrack to the verb, a failure is forced. That is,
backtracking cannot pass to the left of the verb. However, when one of
these verbs appears inside an atomic group or in a lookaround assertion
that is true, its effect is confined to that group, because once the
group has been matched, there is never any backtracking into it.
Backtracking from beyond an assertion or an atomic group ignores the
entire group, and seeks a preceding backtracking point.
These verbs differ in exactly what kind of failure occurs when
backtracking reaches them. The behaviour described below is what
happens when the verb is not in a subroutine or an assertion.
Subsequent sections cover these special cases.
(*COMMIT) or (*COMMIT:NAME)
This verb causes the whole match to fail outright if there is a later
matching failure that causes backtracking to reach it. Even if the
pattern is unanchored, no further attempts to find a match by advancing
the starting point take place. If (*COMMIT) is the only backtracking
verb that is encountered, once it has been passed pcre2_match() is
committed to finding a match at the current starting point, or not at
The behaviour of (*COMMIT:NAME) is not the same as
(*MARK:NAME)(*COMMIT). It is like (*MARK:NAME) in that the name is
remembered for passing back to the caller. However, (*SKIP:NAME)
searches only for names that are set with (*MARK), ignoring those set
by any of the other backtracking verbs.
If there is more than one backtracking verb in a pattern, a different
one that follows (*COMMIT) may be triggered first, so merely passing
(*COMMIT) during a match does not always guarantee that a match must be
at this starting point.
Note that (*COMMIT) at the start of a pattern is not the same as an
anchor, unless PCRE2's start-of-match optimizations are turned off, as
shown in this output from pcre2test:
re> /(*COMMIT)abc/
data> xyzabc
0: abc
data>
re> /(*COMMIT)abc/no_start_optimize
data> xyzabc
No match
For the first pattern, PCRE2 knows that any match must start with "a",
so the optimization skips along the subject to "a" before applying the
pattern to the first set of data. The match attempt then succeeds. The
second pattern disables the optimization that skips along to the first
character. The pattern is now applied starting at "x", and so the
(*COMMIT) causes the match to fail without trying any other starting
points.
(*PRUNE) or (*PRUNE:NAME)
This verb causes the match to fail at the current starting position in
the subject if there is a later matching failure that causes
backtracking to reach it. If the pattern is unanchored, the normal
"bumpalong" advance to the next starting character then happens.
Backtracking can occur as usual to the left of (*PRUNE), before it is
reached, or when matching to the right of (*PRUNE), but if there is no
match to the right, backtracking cannot cross (*PRUNE). In simple
cases, the use of (*PRUNE) is just an alternative to an atomic group or
possessive quantifier, but there are some uses of (*PRUNE) that cannot
be expressed in any other way. In an anchored pattern (*PRUNE) has the
same effect as (*COMMIT).
The behaviour of (*PRUNE:NAME) is not the same as (*MARK:NAME)(*PRUNE).
It is like (*MARK:NAME) in that the name is remembered for passing back
to the caller. However, (*SKIP:NAME) searches only for names set with
(*MARK), ignoring those set by other backtracking verbs.
(*SKIP)
This verb, when given without a name, is like (*PRUNE), except that if
the pattern is unanchored, the "bumpalong" advance is not to the next
character, but to the position in the subject where (*SKIP) was
encountered. (*SKIP) signifies that whatever text was matched leading
up to it cannot be part of a successful match if there is a later
mismatch. Consider:
attempt would start at the second character instead of skipping on to
"c".
If (*SKIP) is used to specify a new starting position that is the same
as the starting position of the current match, or (by being inside a
lookbehind) earlier, the position specified by (*SKIP) is ignored, and
instead the normal "bumpalong" occurs.
(*SKIP:NAME)
When (*SKIP) has an associated name, its behaviour is modified. When
such a (*SKIP) is triggered, the previous path through the pattern is
searched for the most recent (*MARK) that has the same name. If one is
found, the "bumpalong" advance is to the subject position that
corresponds to that (*MARK) instead of to where (*SKIP) was
encountered. If no (*MARK) with a matching name is found, the (*SKIP)
is ignored.
The search for a (*MARK) name uses the normal backtracking mechanism,
which means that it does not see (*MARK) settings that are inside
atomic groups or assertions, because they are never re-entered by
backtracking. Compare the following pcre2test examples:
re> /a(?>(*MARK:X))(*SKIP:X)(*F)|(.)/
data: abc
0: a
1: a
data:
re> /a(?:(*MARK:X))(*SKIP:X)(*F)|(.)/
data: abc
0: b
1: b
In the first example, the (*MARK) setting is in an atomic group, so it
is not seen when (*SKIP:X) triggers, causing the (*SKIP) to be ignored.
This allows the second branch of the pattern to be tried at the first
character position. In the second example, the (*MARK) setting is not
in an atomic group. This allows (*SKIP:X) to find the (*MARK) when it
backtracks, and this causes a new matching attempt to start at the
second character. This time, the (*MARK) is never seen because "a" does
not match "b", so the matcher immediately jumps to the second branch of
the pattern.
Note that (*SKIP:NAME) searches only for names set by (*MARK:NAME). It
ignores names that are set by other backtracking verbs.
(*THEN) or (*THEN:NAME)
This verb causes a skip to the next innermost alternative when
backtracking reaches it. That is, it cancels any further backtracking
within the current alternative. Its name comes from the observation
that it can be used for a pattern-based if-then-else block:
( COND1 (*THEN) FOO | COND2 (*THEN) BAR | COND3 (*THEN) BAZ ) ...
If the COND1 pattern matches, FOO is tried (and possibly further items
after the end of the group if FOO succeeds); on failure, the matcher
skips to the second alternative and tries COND2, without backtracking
into COND1. If that succeeds and BAR fails, COND3 is tried. If
(*MARK), ignoring those set by other backtracking verbs.
A group that does not contain a | character is just a part of the
enclosing alternative; it is not a nested alternation with only one
alternative. The effect of (*THEN) extends beyond such a group to the
enclosing alternative. Consider this pattern, where A, B, etc. are
complex pattern fragments that do not contain any | characters at this
level:
A (B(*THEN)C) | D
If A and B are matched, but there is a failure in C, matching does not
backtrack into A; instead it moves to the next alternative, that is, D.
However, if the group containing (*THEN) is given an alternative, it
behaves differently:
A (B(*THEN)C | (*FAIL)) | D
The effect of (*THEN) is now confined to the inner group. After a
failure in C, matching moves to (*FAIL), which causes the whole group
to fail because there are no more alternatives to try. In this case,
matching does backtrack into A.
Note that a conditional group is not considered as having two
alternatives, because only one is ever used. In other words, the |
character in a conditional group has a different meaning. Ignoring
white space, consider:
^.*? (?(?=a) a | b(*THEN)c )
If the subject is "ba", this pattern does not match. Because .*? is
ungreedy, it initially matches zero characters. The condition (?=a)
then fails, the character "b" is matched, but "c" is not. At this
point, matching does not backtrack to .*? as might perhaps be expected
from the presence of the | character. The conditional group is part of
the single alternative that comprises the whole pattern, and so the
match fails. (If there was a backtrack into .*?, allowing it to match
"b", the match would succeed.)
The verbs just described provide four different "strengths" of control
when subsequent matching fails. (*THEN) is the weakest, carrying on the
match at the next alternative. (*PRUNE) comes next, failing the match
at the current starting position, but allowing an advance to the next
character (for an unanchored pattern). (*SKIP) is similar, except that
the advance may be more than one character. (*COMMIT) is the strongest,
causing the entire match to fail.
More than one backtracking verb
If more than one backtracking verb is present in a pattern, the one
that is backtracked onto first acts. For example, consider this
pattern, where A, B, etc. are complex pattern fragments:
(A(*COMMIT)B(*THEN)C|ABD)
If A matches but B fails, the backtrack to (*COMMIT) causes the entire
match to fail. However, if A and B match, but C fails, the backtrack to
(*THEN) causes the next alternative (ABD) to be tried. This behaviour
is consistent, but is not always the same as Perl's. It means that if
two or more backtracking verbs appear in succession, all the the last
Backtracking verbs in repeated groups
PCRE2 sometimes differs from Perl in its handling of backtracking verbs
in repeated groups. For example, consider:
/(a(*COMMIT)b)+ac/
If the subject is "abac", Perl matches unless its optimizations are
disabled, but PCRE2 always fails because the (*COMMIT) in the second
repeat of the group acts.
Backtracking verbs in assertions
(*FAIL) in any assertion has its normal effect: it forces an immediate
backtrack. The behaviour of the other backtracking verbs depends on
whether or not the assertion is standalone or acting as the condition
in a conditional group.
(*ACCEPT) in a standalone positive assertion causes the assertion to
succeed without any further processing; captured strings and a mark
name (if set) are retained. In a standalone negative assertion,
(*ACCEPT) causes the assertion to fail without any further processing;
captured substrings and any mark name are discarded.
If the assertion is a condition, (*ACCEPT) causes the condition to be
true for a positive assertion and false for a negative one; captured
substrings are retained in both cases.
The remaining verbs act only when a later failure causes a backtrack to
reach them. This means that, for the Perl-compatible assertions, their
effect is confined to the assertion, because Perl lookaround assertions
are atomic. A backtrack that occurs after such an assertion is complete
does not jump back into the assertion. Note in particular that a
(*MARK) name that is set in an assertion is not "seen" by an instance
of (*SKIP:NAME) later in the pattern.
PCRE2 now supports non-atomic positive assertions, as described in the
section entitled "Non-atomic assertions" above. These assertions must
be standalone (not used as conditions). They are not Perl-compatible.
For these assertions, a later backtrack does jump back into the
assertion, and therefore verbs such as (*COMMIT) can be triggered by
backtracks from later in the pattern.
The effect of (*THEN) is not allowed to escape beyond an assertion. If
there are no more branches to try, (*THEN) causes a positive assertion
to be false, and a negative assertion to be true.
The other backtracking verbs are not treated specially if they appear
in a standalone positive assertion. In a conditional positive
assertion, backtracking (from within the assertion) into (*COMMIT),
(*SKIP), or (*PRUNE) causes the condition to be false. However, for
both standalone and conditional negative assertions, backtracking into
(*COMMIT), (*SKIP), or (*PRUNE) causes the assertion to be true,
without considering any further alternative branches.
Backtracking verbs in subroutines
These behaviours occur whether or not the group is called recursively.
(*ACCEPT) in a group called as a subroutine causes the subroutine match
to succeed without any further processing. Matching then continues
when triggered by being backtracked to in a group called as a
subroutine. There is then a backtrack at the outer level.
(*THEN), when triggered, skips to the next alternative in the innermost
enclosing group that has alternatives (its normal behaviour). However,
if there is no such group within the subroutine's group, the subroutine
match fails and there is a backtrack at the outer level.
SEE ALSO
pcre2api(3), pcre2callout(3), pcre2matching(3), pcre2syntax(3),
pcre2(3).
AUTHOR
Philip Hazel
Retired from University Computing Service
Cambridge, England.
REVISION
Last updated: 12 January 2022
Copyright (c) 1997-2022 University of Cambridge.
PCRE2 10.40 12 January 2022 PCRE2PATTERN(3)