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* Begin writing document for PCRE Started writing learnxinyminutes document for PCRE to cover general purpose regular expressions. Added introduction and a couple of details. * Change introductory example for regex The old example was incorrect. It's replaced with a simple one. * Add some more introductory text * Add first example * Added more example and a table for proper formatting * Add few more examples * Formatting * Improve example * Edit description of character classes * Add a way to test regex Add https://regex101.com/ web application to test the regex provided in example. * Add example of trap command trap is a very important command to intercept a fatal signal, perform cleanup, and then exit gracefully. It needs an entry in this document. Here a simple and most common example of using trap command i.e. cleanup upon receiving signal is added. * Revert "Add example of trap command" * Add an example of trap command `trap` is a very important command to intercept a fatal signal, perform cleanup, and then exit gracefully. It needs an entry in this document. Here a simple and most common example of using `trap` command i.e. cleanup upon receiving signal is added.
83 lines
3.4 KiB
Perl
83 lines
3.4 KiB
Perl
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language: PCRE
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filename: pcre.txt
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contributors:
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- ["Sachin Divekar", "http://github.com/ssd532"]
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---
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A regular expression (regex or regexp for short) is a special text string for describing a search pattern. e.g. to extract domain name from a string we can say `/^[a-z]+:/` and it will match `http:` from `http://github.com/`.
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PCRE (Perl Compatible Regular Expressions) is a C library implementing regex. It was written in 1997 when Perl was the de-facto choice for complex text processing tasks. The syntax for patterns used in PCRE closely resembles Perl. PCRE syntax is being used in many big projects including PHP, Apache, R to name a few.
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There are two different sets of metacharacters:
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* Those that are recognized anywhere in the pattern except within square brackets
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```
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\ general escape character with several uses
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^ assert start of string (or line, in multiline mode)
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$ assert end of string (or line, in multiline mode)
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. match any character except newline (by default)
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[ start character class definition
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| start of alternative branch
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( start subpattern
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) end subpattern
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? extends the meaning of (
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also 0 or 1 quantifier
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also quantifier minimizer
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* 0 or more quantifier
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+ 1 or more quantifier
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also "possessive quantifier"
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{ start min/max quantifier
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```
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* Those that are recognized within square brackets. Outside square brackets. They are also called as character classes.
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```
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\ general escape character
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^ negate the class, but only if the first character
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- indicates character range
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[ POSIX character class (only if followed by POSIX syntax)
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] terminates the character class
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```
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PCRE provides some generic character types, also called as character classes.
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```
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\d any decimal digit
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\D any character that is not a decimal digit
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\h any horizontal white space character
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\H any character that is not a horizontal white space character
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\s any white space character
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\S any character that is not a white space character
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\v any vertical white space character
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\V any character that is not a vertical white space character
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\w any "word" character
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\W any "non-word" character
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```
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## Examples
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We will test our examples on following string `66.249.64.13 - - [18/Sep/2004:11:07:48 +1000] "GET /robots.txt HTTP/1.0" 200 468 "-" "Googlebot/2.1"`. It is a standard Apache access log.
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| Regex | Result | Comment |
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| :---- | :-------------- | :------ |
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| GET | GET | GET matches the characters GET literally (case sensitive) |
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| \d+.\d+.\d+.\d+ | 66.249.64.13 | `\d+` match a digit [0-9] one or more times defined by `+` quantifier, `\.` matches `.` literally |
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| (\d+\.){3}\d+ | 66.249.64.13 | `(\d+\.){3}` is trying to match group (`\d+\.`) exactly three times. |
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| \[.+\] | [18/Sep/2004:11:07:48 +1000] | `.+` matches any character (except newline), `.` is any character |
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| ^\S+ | 66.249.64.13 | `^` means start of the line, `\S+` matches any number of non-space characters |
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| \+[0-9]+ | +1000 | `\+` matches the character `+` literally. `[0-9]` character class means single number. Same can be achieved using `\+\d+` |
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All these examples can be tried at https://regex101.com/
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1. Copy the example string in `TEST STRING` section
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2. Copy regex code in `Regular Expression` section
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3. The web application will show the matching result
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## Further Reading
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