Perl Regex Cheat Sheet



  1. Perl provides lot of short cut notations to write regular expressions. These short cut notations help us to understand the regex easily and write smaller regular expressions. List of short cut notations. W - Match a 'word' character ( alphanumeric & ) 2. W - Match a non-word character.
  2. Quick-Start: Regex Cheat Sheet. The tables below are a reference to basic regex. While reading the rest of the site, when in doubt, you can always come back and look here. (It you want a bookmark, here's a direct link to the regex reference tables ). I encourage you to print the tables so you have a cheat sheet on your desk for quick reference.
  3. Perl Cheat Sheet html (juerd.nl) Perl Quick Reference Card pdf (johnbokma.com) Perl Regular Expressions by Iain Truskett pdf (refcards.com) Perl Regular Expression - Quick Reference pdf Perl Predefined Variables (perl's special variable cheat sheet) by Peteris Krumins doc, pdf (catonmat.net) Perl pack/unpack Summary (perl's pack.

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– Perl Regular Expressions Tip Sheet. Compile Perl regular expression perl-regex and return regex-id to be used by other PRX functions. pos = prxmatch.

Pcre Cheat Sheet

When learning regexes, or when you need to use a feature you have not used yet or don't use often, itcan be quite useful to have a place for quick look-up. I hope this Regex Cheat-sheet will provide such aid for you.

Character Classes

Regex Character Classes and Special Character classes.

TODO: add examples w and d matching unicode letters and numebers.

Quantifiers

'Quantifier-modifier' aka. Minimal Matching

Other

Grouping and capturing

Anchors

Modifiers

Perl Regex Cheat Sheet

Extended

Other Regex related articles

Official documentation

Published on 2015-08-19

Comments

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This document presents a tabular summary of the regular expression (regexp) syntax in Perl, then illustrates it with a collection of annotated examples.

Metacharacters

charmeaning
^beginning of string
$end of string
.any character except newline
*match 0 or more times
+match 1 or more times
?match 0 or 1 times; or: shortest match
|alternative
grouping; “storing”
set of characters
repetition modifier
quote or special

To present a metacharacter as a data character standing for itself, precede it with (e.g. . matches the full stop character . only).

In the table above, the characters themselves, in the first column, are links to descriptions of characters in my The ISO Latin 1 character repertoire - a description with usage notes. Note that the physical appearance (glyph) of a character may vary from one device or program or font to another.

Repetition

a*zero or more a’s
a+one or more a’s
a?zero or one a’s (i.e., optional a)
a{m}exactly ma’s
a{m,}at least ma’s
a{m,n}at least m but at most n a’s
repetition?same as repetition but the shortest match is taken

Read the notation a’s as “occurrences of strings, each of which matches the pattern a”. Read repetition as any of the repetition expressions listed above it. Shortest match means that the shortest string matching the pattern is taken. The default is “greedy matching”, which finds the longest match. The repetition? construct was introduced in Perl version 5.

Special notations with

Single characters
ttab
nnewline
rreturn (CR)
xhhcharacter with hex. code hh
“Zero-width assertions”
b“word” boundary
Bnot a “word” boundary
Matching
wmatches any single character classified as a “word” character (alphanumeric or “_”)
Wmatches any non-“word” character
smatches any whitespace character (space, tab, newline)
Smatches any non-whitespace character
dmatches any digit character, equiv. to [0-9]
Dmatches any non-digit character

Character sets: specialities inside [...]

Different meanings apply inside a character set (“character class”) denoted by [...] so that, instead of the normal rules given here, the following apply:

[characters]matches any of the characters in the sequence
[x-y]matches any of the characters from x to y (inclusively) in the ASCII code
[-]matches the hyphen character “-
[n]matches the newline; other single character denotations with apply normally, too
[^something]matches any character except those that [something] denotes; that is, immediately after the leading “[”, the circumflex “^” means “not” applied to all of the rest

Regular Expressions In Perl - A Summary With Examples

Examples

expressionmatches...
abcabc (that exact character sequence, but anywhere in the string)
^abcabc at the beginning of the string
abc$abc at the end of the string
a|beither of a and b
^abc|abc$the string abc at the beginning or at the end of the string
ab{2,4}can a followed by two, three or four b’s followed by a c
ab{2,}can a followed by at least two b’s followed by a c
ab*can a followed by any number (zero or more) of b’s followed by a c
ab+can a followed by one or more b’s followed by a c
ab?can a followed by an optional b followed by a c; that is, either abc or ac
a.can a followed by any single character (not newline) followed by a c
a.ca.c exactly
[abc]any one of a, b and c
[Aa]bceither of Abc and abc
[abc]+any (nonempty) string of a’s, b’s and c’s (such as a, abba, acbabcacaa)
[^abc]+any (nonempty) string which does not contain any of a, b and c (such as defg)
ddany two decimal digits, such as 42; same as d{2}
w+a “word”: a nonempty sequence of alphanumeric characters and low lines (underscores), such as foo and 12bar8 and foo_1
100s*mkthe strings 100 and mk optionally separated by any amount of white space (spaces, tabs, newlines)
abcbabc when followed by a word boundary (e.g. in abc! but not in abcd)
perlBperl when not followed by a word boundary (e.g. in perlert but not in perl stuff)

Examples of simple use in Perl statements

These examples use very simple regexps only. The intent is just to show contexts where regexps might be used, as well as the effect of some “flags” to matching and replacements. Note in particular that matching is by default case-sensitive (Abc does not match abc unless specified otherwise).

s/foo/bar/;
replaces the first occurrence of the exact character sequence foo in the “current string” (in special variable $_) by the character sequence bar; for example, foolish bigfoot would become barlish bigfoot

s/foo/bar/g;
replaces any occurrence of the exact character sequence foo in the “current string” by the character sequence bar; for example, foolish bigfoot would become barlish bigbart

s/foo/bar/gi;
replaces any occurrence of foocase-insensitively in the “current string” by the character sequence bar (e.g. Foo and FOO get replaced by bar too)

Regular Expression Cheat Sheet

Cheat

if(m/foo/)...
tests whether the current string contains the string foo

Date of creation: 2000-01-28. Last revision: 2007-04-16. Last modification: 2007-05-28.

Finnish translation – suomennos: Säännölliset lausekkeet Perlissä.

The inspiration for my writing this document was Appendix : A Summary of Perl Regular Expressions in Pankaj Kamthan’s CGI Security : Better Safe than Sorry, and my own repeated failures to memorize the syntax.

This page belongs to section Programming of the free information site IT and communication by Jukka “Yucca” Korpela.