PCRE — Perl-compatible regular expressions
The full syntax and semantics of the regular expressions that are supported by PCRE are described in the pcrepattern(3) documentation. This document contains just a quick-reference summary of the syntax.
\a
alarm, that is, the BEL character (hex 07) \cx
"control-x", where x is any character \e
escape (hex 1B) \f
formfeed (hex 0C) \n
newline (hex 0A) \r
carriage return (hex 0D) \t
tab (hex 09) \ddd
character with octal code ddd, or backreference \xhh
character with hex code hh \x{hhh..}
character with hex code hhh..
.
any character except newline; in dotall mode, any character whatsoever \C
one byte, even in UTF-8 mode (best avoided) \d
a decimal digit \D
a character that is not a decimal digit \h
a horizontal whitespace character \H
a character that is not a horizontal whitespace character \p{
xx
}a character with the xx
property\P{
xx
}a character without the xx
property\R
a newline sequence \s
a whitespace character \S
a character that is not a whitespace character \v
a vertical whitespace character \V
a character that is not a vertical whitespace character \w
a "word" character \W
a "non-word" character \X
an extended Unicode sequence
In PCRE, \d, \D, \s, \S, \w, and \W recognize only ASCII characters.
C
Other Cc
Control Cf
Format Cn
Unassigned Co
Private use Cs
Surrogate L
Letter Ll
Lower case letter Lm
Modifier letter Lo
Other letter Lt
Title case letter Lu
Upper case letter L&
Ll, Lu, or Lt M
Mark Mc
Spacing mark 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
Arabic, Armenian, Balinese, Bengali, Bopomofo, Braille, Buginese, Buhid, Canadian_Aboriginal, Cherokee, Common, Coptic, Cuneiform, Cypriot, Cyrillic, Deseret, Devanagari, Ethiopic, Georgian, Glagolitic, Gothic, Greek, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Han, Hangul, Hanunoo, Hebrew, Hiragana, Inherited, Kannada, Katakana, Kharoshthi, Khmer, Lao, Latin, Limbu, Linear_B, Malayalam, Mongolian, Myanmar, New_Tai_Lue, Nko, Ogham, Old_Italic, Old_Persian, Oriya, Osmanya, Phags_Pa, Phoenician, Runic, Shavian, Sinhala, Syloti_Nagri, Syriac, Tagalog, Tagbanwa, Tai_Le, Tamil, Telugu, Thaana, Thai, Tibetan, Tifinagh, Ugaritic, Yi.
[...]
positive character class [^...]
negative character class [x-y]
range (can be used for hex characters) [[:xxx:]]
positive POSIX named set [[:^xxx:]]
negative POSIX named set alnum
alphanumeric alpha
alphabetic ascii
0-127 blank
space or tab cntrl
control character digit
decimal digit graph
printing, excluding space lower
lower case letter printing, including space punct
printing, excluding alphanumeric space
whitespace upper
upper case letter word
same as \w xdigit
hexadecimal digit
In PCRE, POSIX character set names recognize only ASCII characters. You can use \Q...\E inside a character class.
?
0 or 1, greedy ?+
0 or 1, possessive ??
0 or 1, lazy *
0 or more, greedy *+
0 or more, possessive *?
0 or more, lazy +
1 or more, greedy ++
1 or more, possessive +?
1 or more, lazy {n}
exactly n {n,m}
at least n, no more than m, greedy {n,m}+
at least n, no more than m, possessive {n,m}?
at least n, no more than m, lazy {n,}
n or more, greedy {n,}+
n or more, possessive {n,}?
n or more, lazy
\b
word boundary \B
not a word boundary ^
start of subject also after internal newline in multiline mode \A
start of subject $
end of subject also before newline at end of subject also before internal newline in multiline mode \Z
end of subject also before newline at end of subject \z
end of subject \G
first matching position in subject
(...)
capturing group (?<name>...)
named capturing group (Perl) (?'name'...)
named capturing group (Perl) (?P<name>...)
named capturing group (Python) (?:...)
non-capturing group (?|...)
non-capturing group; reset group numbers for capturing groups in each alternative
(?i)
caseless (?J)
allow duplicate names (?m)
multiline (?s)
single line (dotall) (?U)
default ungreedy (lazy) (?x)
extended (ignore white space) (?-...)
unset option(s)
(?=...)
positive look ahead (?!...)
negative look ahead (?<=...)
positive look behind (?<!...)
negative look behind
Each top-level branch of a look behind must be of a fixed length.
\n
reference by number (can be ambiguous) \gn
reference by number \g{n}
reference by number \g{-n}
relative reference by number \k<name>
reference by name (Perl) \k'name'
reference by name (Perl) \g{name}
reference by name (Perl) \k{name}
reference by name (.NET) (?P=name)
reference by name (Python)
(?R)
recurse whole pattern (?n)
call subpattern by absolute number (?+n)
call subpattern by relative number (?-n)
call subpattern by relative number (?&name)
call subpattern by name (Perl) (?P>name)
call subpattern by name (Python)
(?(condition)yes-pattern)
(?(condition)yes-pattern|no-pattern)
(?(n)...
absolute reference condition (?(+n)...
relative reference condition (?(-n)...
relative reference condition (?(<name>)...
named reference condition (Perl) (?('name')...
named reference condition (Perl) (?(name)...
named reference condition (PCRE) (?(R)...
overall recursion condition (?(Rn)...
specific group recursion condition (?(R&name)...
specific recursion condition (?(DEFINE)...
define subpattern for reference (?(assert)...
assertion condition
The following act immediately they are reached:
(*ACCEPT)
force successful match (*FAIL)
force backtrack; synonym (*F)
The following act only when a subsequent match failure causes a backtrack to reach them. They all force a match failure, but they differ in what happens afterwards. Those that advance the start-of-match point do so only if the pattern is not anchored.
(*COMMIT)
overall failure, no advance of starting point (*PRUNE)
advance to next starting character (*SKIP)
advance start to current matching position (*THEN)
local failure, backtrack to next alternation
These are recognized only at the very start of the pattern or after a (*BSR_...) option.
(*CR) (*LF) (*CRLF) (*ANYCRLF) (*ANY)
These are recognized only at the very start of the pattern or after a (*...) option that sets the newline convention.
(*BSR_ANYCRLF) (*BSR_UNICODE)
Last updated: 14 November 2007 Copyright (c) 1997-2007 University of Cambridge.
COPYRIGHT |
---|
This manual page is taken from the PCRE library, which is distributed under the BSD license. |