Regexp::Common - Provide commonly requested regular expressions
# STANDARD USAGE
use Regexp::Common;
while (<>) {
/$RE{num}{real}/ and print q{a number};
/$RE{quoted}/ and print q{a ['"`] quoted string};
m[$RE{delimited}{-delim=>'/'}] and print q{a /.../ sequence};
/$RE{balanced}{-parens=>'()'}/ and print q{balanced parentheses};
/$RE{profanity}/ and print q{a #*@%-ing word};
}
# SUBROUTINE-BASED INTERFACE
use Regexp::Common 'RE_ALL';
while (<>) {
$_ =~ RE_num_real() and print q{a number};
$_ =~ RE_quoted() and print q{a ['"`] quoted string};
$_ =~ RE_delimited(-delim=>'/') and print q{a /.../ sequence};
$_ =~ RE_balanced(-parens=>'()'} and print q{balanced parentheses};
$_ =~ RE_profanity() and print q{a #*@%-ing word};
}
# IN-LINE MATCHING...
if ( $RE{num}{int}->matches($text) ) {...}
# ...AND SUBSTITUTION
my $cropped = $RE{ws}{crop}->subs($uncropped);
# ROLL-YOUR-OWN PATTERNS
use Regexp::Common 'pattern';
pattern name => ['name', 'mine'],
create => '(?i:J[.]?\s+A[.]?\s+Perl-Hacker)',
;
my $name_matcher = $RE{name}{mine};
pattern name => [ 'lineof', '-char=_' ],
create => sub {
my $flags = shift;
my $char = quotemeta $flags->{-char};
return '(?:^$char+$)';
},
match => sub {
my ($self, $str) = @_;
return $str !~ /[^$self->{flags}{-char}]/;
},
subs => sub {
my ($self, $str, $replacement) = @_;
$_[1] =~ s/^$self->{flags}{-char}+$//g;
},
;
my $asterisks = $RE{lineof}{-char=>'*'};
# DECIDING WHICH PATTERNS TO LOAD.
use Regexp::Common qw /comment number/; # Comment and number patterns.
use Regexp::Common qw /no_defaults/; # Don't load any patterns.
use Regexp::Common qw /!delimited/; # All, but delimited patterns.
By default, this module exports a single hash (%RE) that stores or generates
commonly needed regular expressions (see List of available patterns).
There is an alternative, subroutine-based syntax described in
Subroutine-based interface.
To access a particular pattern, %RE is treated as a hierarchical hash of
hashes (of hashes...), with each successive key being an identifier. For
example, to access the pattern that matches real numbers, you
specify:
$RE{num}{real}
and to access the pattern that matches integers:
$RE{num}{int}
Deeper layers of the hash are used to specify flags: arguments that
modify the resulting pattern in some way. The keys used to access these
layers are prefixed with a minus sign and may have a value; if a value
is given, it's done by using a multidimensional key.
For example, to access the pattern that
matches base-2 real numbers with embedded commas separating
groups of three digits (e.g. 10,101,110.110101101):
$RE{num}{real}{-base => 2}{-sep => ','}{-group => 3}
Through the magic of Perl, these flag layers may be specified in any order
(and even interspersed through the identifier keys!)
so you could get the same pattern with:
$RE{num}{real}{-sep => ','}{-group => 3}{-base => 2}
or:
$RE{num}{-base => 2}{real}{-group => 3}{-sep => ','}
or even:
$RE{-base => 2}{-group => 3}{-sep => ','}{num}{real}
etc.
Note, however, that the relative order of amongst the identifier keys
is significant. That is:
$RE{list}{set}
would not be the same as:
$RE{set}{list}
In versions prior to 2.113, flags could also be written as
{"-flag=value"}. This no longer works, although {"-flag$;value"}
still does. However, {-flag => 'value'} is the preferred syntax.
Normally, flags are specific to a single pattern.
However, there is two flags that all patterns may specify.
- -keep
-
By default, the patterns provided by
%RE contain no capturing
parentheses. However, if the -keep flag is specified (it requires
no value) then any significant substrings that the pattern matches
are captured. For example:
if ($str =~ $RE{num}{real}{-keep}) {
$number = $1;
$whole = $3;
$decimals = $5;
}
Special care is needed if a ``kept'' pattern is interpolated into a
larger regular expression, as the presence of other capturing
parentheses is likely to change the ``number variables'' into which significant
substrings are saved.
See also Adding new regular expressions, which describes how to create
new patterns with ``optional'' capturing brackets that respond to -keep.
- -i
-
Some patterns or subpatterns only match lowercase or uppercase letters.
If one wants the do case insensitive matching, one option is to use
the
/i regexp modifier, or the special sequence (?i). But if the
functional interface is used, one does not have this option. The
-i switch solves this problem; by using it, the pattern will do
case insensitive matching.
The patterns returned from %RE are objects, so rather than writing:
if ($str =~ /$RE{some}{pattern}/ ) {...}
you can write:
if ( $RE{some}{pattern}->matches($str) ) {...}
For matching this would seem to have no great advantage apart from readability
(but see below).
For substitutions, it has other significant benefits. Frequently you want to
perform a substitution on a string without changing the original. Most people
use this:
$changed = $original;
$changed =~ s/$RE{some}{pattern}/$replacement/;
The more adept use:
($changed = $original) =~ s/$RE{some}{pattern}/$replacement/;
Regexp::Common allows you do write this:
$changed = $RE{some}{pattern}->subs($original=>$replacement);
Apart from reducing precedence-angst, this approach has the added
advantages that the substitution behaviour can be optimized from the
regular expression, and the replacement string can be provided by
default (see Adding new regular expressions).
For example, in the implementation of this substitution:
$cropped = $RE{ws}{crop}->subs($uncropped);
the default empty string is provided automatically, and the substitution is
optimized to use:
$uncropped =~ s/^\s+//;
$uncropped =~ s/\s+$//;
rather than:
$uncropped =~ s/^\s+|\s+$//g;
The hash-based interface was chosen because it allows regexes to be
effortlessly interpolated, and because it also allows them to be
``curried''. For example:
my $num = $RE{num}{int};
my $commad = $num->{-sep=>','}{-group=>3};
my $duodecimal = $num->{-base=>12};
However, the use of tied hashes does make the access to Regexp::Common
patterns slower than it might otherwise be. In contexts where impatience
overrules laziness, Regexp::Common provides an additional
subroutine-based interface.
For each (sub-)entry in the %RE hash ($RE{key1}{key2}{etc}), there
is a corresponding exportable subroutine: RE_key1_key2_etc(). The name of
each subroutine is the underscore-separated concatenation of the non-flag
keys that locate the same pattern in %RE. Flags are passed to the subroutine
in its argument list. Thus:
use Regexp::Common qw( RE_ws_crop RE_num_real RE_profanity );
$str =~ RE_ws_crop() and die "Surrounded by whitespace";
$str =~ RE_num_real(-base=>8, -sep=>" ") or next;
$offensive = RE_profanity(-keep);
$str =~ s/$offensive/$bad{$1}++; "<expletive deleted>"/ge;
Note that, unlike the hash-based interface (which returns objects), these
subroutines return ordinary qr'd regular expressions. Hence they do not
curry, nor do they provide the OO match and substitution inlining described
in the previous section.
It is also possible to export subroutines for all available patterns like so:
use Regexp::Common 'RE_ALL';
Or you can export all subroutines with a common prefix of keys like so:
use Regexp::Common 'RE_num_ALL';
which will export RE_num_int and RE_num_real (and if you have
create more patterns who have first key num, those will be exported
as well). In general, RE_key1_..._keyn_ALL will export all subroutines
whose pattern names have first keys key1 ... keyn.
You can add your own regular expressions to the %RE hash at run-time,
using the exportable pattern subroutine. It expects a hash-like list of
key/value pairs that specify the behaviour of the pattern. The various
possible argument pairs are:
- name => [ @list ]
-
A required argument that specifies the name of the pattern, and any
flags it may take, via a reference to a list of strings. For example:
pattern name => [qw( line of -char )],
# other args here
;
This specifies an entry $RE{line}{of}, which may take a -char flag.
Flags may also be specified with a default value, which is then used whenever
the flag is specified without an explicit value (but not when the flag is
omitted). For example:
pattern name => [qw( line of -char=_ )],
# default char is '_'
# other args here
;
- create => $sub_ref_or_string
-
A required argument that specifies either a string that is to be returned
as the pattern:
pattern name => [qw( line of underscores )],
create => q/(?:^_+$)/
;
or a reference to a subroutine that will be called to create the pattern:
pattern name => [qw( line of -char=_ )],
create => sub {
my ($self, $flags) = @_;
my $char = quotemeta $flags->{-char};
return '(?:^$char+$)';
},
;
If the subroutine version is used, the subroutine will be called with
three arguments: a reference to the pattern object itself, a reference
to a hash containing the flags and their values,
and a reference to an array containing the non-flag keys.
Whatever the subroutine returns is stringified as the pattern.
No matter how the pattern is created, it is immediately postprocessed to
include or exclude capturing parentheses (according to the value of the
-keep flag). To specify such ``optional'' capturing parentheses within
the regular expression associated with create, use the notation
(?k:...). Any parentheses of this type will be converted to (...)
when the -keep flag is specified, or (?:...) when it is not.
It is a Regexp::Common convention that the outermost capturing parentheses
always capture the entire pattern, but this is not enforced.
- match => $sub_ref
-
An optional argument that specifies a subroutine that is to be called when
the
$RE{...}->matches(...) method of this pattern is invoked.
The subroutine should expect two arguments: a reference to the pattern object
itself, and the string to be matched against.
It should return the same types of values as a m/.../ does.
pattern name => [qw( line of -char )],
create => sub {...},
match => sub {
my ($self, $str) = @_;
$str !~ /[^$self->{flags}{-char}]/;
},
;
- subs => $sub_ref
-
An optional argument that specifies a subroutine that is to be called when
the
$RE{...}->subs(...) method of this pattern is invoked.
The subroutine should expect three arguments: a reference to the pattern object
itself, the string to be changed, and the value to be substituted into it.
The third argument may be undef, indicating the default substitution is
required.
The subroutine should return the same types of values as an s/.../.../ does.
For example:
pattern name => [ 'lineof', '-char=_' ],
create => sub {...},
subs => sub {
my ($self, $str, $ignore_replacement) = @_;
$_[1] =~ s/^$self->{flags}{-char}+$//g;
},
;
Note that such a subroutine will almost always need to modify $_[1] directly.
- version => $minimum_perl_version
-
If this argument is given, it specifies the minimum version of perl required
to use the new pattern. Attempts to use the pattern with earlier versions of
perl will generate a fatal diagnostic.
By default, all the sets of patterns listed below are made available.
However, it is possible to indicate which sets of patterns should
be made available - the wanted sets should be given as arguments to
use. Alternatively, it is also possible to indicate which sets of
patterns should not be made available - those sets will be given as
argument to the use statement, but are preceded with an exclaimation
mark. The argument no_defaults indicates none of the default patterns
should be made available. This is useful for instance if all you want
is the pattern() subroutine.
Examples:
use Regexp::Common qw /comment number/; # Comment and number patterns.
use Regexp::Common qw /no_defaults/; # Don't load any patterns.
use Regexp::Common qw /!delimited/; # All, but delimited patterns.
It's also possible to load your own set of patterns. If you have a
module Regexp::Common::my_patterns that makes patterns available,
you can have it made available with
use Regexp::Common qw /my_patterns/;
Note that the default patterns will still be made available - only if
you use no_defaults, or mention one of the default sets explicitly,
the non mentioned defaults aren't made available.
The patterns listed below are currently available. Each set of patterns
has its own manual page describing the details. For each pattern set
named name, the manual page Regexp::Common::name describes the
details.
Currently available are:
- Regexp::Common::balanced
-
Provides regexes for strings with balanced parenthesized delimiters.
- Regexp::Common::comment
-
Provides regexes for comments of various languages (43 languages
currently).
- Regexp::Common::delimited
-
Provides regexes for delimited strings.
- Regexp::Common::lingua
-
Provides regexes for palindromes.
- Regexp::Common::list
-
Provides regexes for lists.
- Regexp::Common::net
-
Provides regexes for IPv4, IPv6, and MAC addresses.
- Regexp::Common::number
-
Provides regexes for numbers (integers and reals).
- Regexp::Common::profanity
-
Provides regexes for profanity.
- Regexp::Common::whitespace
-
Provides regexes for leading and trailing whitespace.
- Regexp::Common::zip
-
Provides regexes for zip codes.
Future releases of the module will also provide patterns for the following:
* email addresses
* HTML/XML tags
* more numerical matchers,
* mail headers (including multiline ones),
* more URLS
* telephone numbers of various countries
* currency (universal 3 letter format, Latin-1, currency names)
* dates
* binary formats (e.g. UUencoded, MIMEd)
If you have other patterns or pattern generators that you think would be
generally useful, please send them to the maintainer -- preferably as source
code using the pattern subroutine. Submissions that include a set of
tests will be especially welcome.
- Can't export unknown subroutine %s
-
The subroutine-based interface didn't recognize the requested subroutine.
Often caused by a spelling mistake or an incompletely specified name.
=item C<Can't create unknown regex: $RE{...}>
Regexp::Common doesn't have a generator for the requested pattern.
Often indicates a misspelt or missing parameter.
- Perl %f does not support the pattern $RE{...}.
You need Perl %f or later>
-
The requested pattern requires advanced regex features (e.g. recursion)
that not available in your version of Perl. Time to upgrade.
- pattern() requires argument: name => [ @list ]
-
Every user-defined pattern specification must have a name.
pattern() requires argument: create => $sub_ref_or_stringpattern() requires argument: create => $sub_ref_or_string
-
Every user-defined pattern specification must provide a pattern creation
mechanism: either a pattern string or a reference to a subroutine that
returns the pattern string.
- Base must be between 1 and 36
-
The
$RE{num}{real}{-base=>'N'} pattern uses the characters [0-9A-Z]
to represent the digits of various bases. Hence it only produces
regular expressions for bases up to hexatricensimal.
- Must specify delimiter in $RE{delimited}
-
The pattern has no default delimiter.
You need to write:
$RE{delimited}{-delim=>X'} for some character X
Deepest thanks to the many people who have encouraged and contributed to this
project, especially: Elijah, Jarkko, Tom, Nat, Ed, and Vivek.
Further thanks go to: Alexandr Ciornii, Blair Zajac, Bob Stockdale,
Charles Thomas, Chris Vertonghen, the CPAN Testers, David Hand,
Fany, Geoffrey Leach, Hermann-Marcus Behrens, Jerome Quelin, Jim Cromie,
Lars Wilke, Linda Julien, Mike Arms, Mike Castle, Mikko, Murat Uenalan,
Rafaël Garcia-Suarez, Ron Savage, Sam Vilain, Slaven Rezic, Smylers,
Tim Maher, and all the others I've forgotten.
Damian Conway (damian@conway.org)
This package is maintained by Abigail (regexp-common@abigail.be).
Bound to be plenty.
For a start, there are many common regexes missing.
Send them in to regexp-common@abigail.be.
There are some POD issues when installing this module using a pre-5.6.0 perl;
some manual pages may not install, or may not install correctly using a perl
that is that old. You might consider upgrading your perl.
This software is Copyright (c) 2001 - 2017, Damian Conway and Abigail.
This module is free software, and maybe used under any of the following
licenses:
1) The Perl Artistic License. See the file COPYRIGHT.AL.
2) The Perl Artistic License 2.0. See the file COPYRIGHT.AL2.
3) The BSD License. See the file COPYRIGHT.BSD.
4) The MIT License. See the file COPYRIGHT.MIT.
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