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Manual Pages for UNIX Darwin command on man Regexp::Common::list

Regexp::Common::list(3)User Contributed Perl DocumentatioRnegexp::Common::list(3)

NAME

Regexp::Common::list - provide regexes for lists

SYNOPSIS

use Regexp::Common qw /list/; while (<>) {

/$RE{list}{-pat => '\w+'}/ and print "List of words";

/$RE{list}{-pat => $RE{num}{real}}/ and print "List of numbers";

}

DESCRIPTION

Please consult the manual of Regexp::Common for a general description of the works of this interface. Do not use this module directly, but load it via Regexp::Common.

$$RREE{{lliisstt}}{{-ppaatt}}{{-sseepp}}{{-llaassttsseepp}}

Returns a pattern matching a list of (at least two) substrings.

If "-pat=P" is specified, it defines the pattern for each substring in

the list. By default, P is "qr/.*?\S/". In Regexp::Common 0.02 or earlier, the default pattern was "qr/.*?/". But that will match a single space, causing unintended parsing of "a, b, and c" as a list of

four elements instead of 3 (with "-word" being "(?:and)"). One

consequence is that a list of the form "a,,b" will no longer be parsed. Use the pattern "qr /.*?/" to be able to parse this, but see the previous remark.

If "-sep=P" is specified, it defines the pattern P to be used as a

separator between each pair of substrings in the list, except the final two. By default P is "qr/\s*,\s*/".

If "-lastsep=P" is specified, it defines the pattern P to be used as a

separator between the final two substrings in the list. By default P

is the same as the pattern specified by the "-sep" flag.

For example:

$RE{list}{-pat=>'\w+'} # match a list of word chars

$RE{list}{-pat=>$RE{num}{real}} # match a list of numbers

$RE{list}{-sep=>"\t"} # match a tab-separated list

$RE{list}{-lastsep=>',\s+and\s+'} # match a proper English list

Under "-keep":

$1 captures the entire list

$2 captures the last separator

$$RREE{{lliisstt}}{{ccoonnjj}}{{-wwoorrdd==PATTERN}

An alias for $RE{list}{-lastsep=>'\s*,?\s*PATTERN\s*'}

If "-word" is not specified, the default pattern is "qr/and|or/".

For example:

$RE{list}{conj}{-word=>'et'} # match Jean, Paul, et Satre

$RE{list}{conj}{-word=>'oder'} # match Bonn, Koln oder Hamburg

$$RREE{{lliisstt}}{{aanndd}}

An alias for $RE{list}{conj}{-word=>'and'}

$$RREE{{lliisstt}}{{oorr}}

An alias for $RE{list}{conj}{-word=>'or'}

HISTORY

$Log: list.pm,v $

Revision 2.103 2003/07/04 13:34:05 abigail Fixed assignment to Revision 2.102 2003/02/11 09:42:06 abigail Added Revision 2.101 2003/02/01 22:55:31 abigail Changed Copyright years Revision 2.100 2003/01/21 23:19:40 abigail The whole world understands RCS/CVS version numbers, that 1.9 is an older version than 1.10. Except CPAN. Curse the idiot(s) who think that version numbers are floats (in which universe do floats have more than one decimal dot?). Everything is bumped to version 2.100 because CPAN couldn't deal with the fact one file had version 1.10. Revision 1.2 2002/08/05 12:16:59 abigail Fixed 'Regex::' and 'Rexexp::' typos to 'Regexp::' (Found my Mike Castle). Revision 1.1 2002/07/28 21:41:07 abigail Split off from Regexp::Common.

SEE ALSO

Regexp::Common for a general description of how to use this interface. AUTHOR Damian Conway (damian@conway.org) MMAAIINNTTAAIINNAANNCCEE

This package is maintained by Abigail (regexp-common@abigail.nl).

BUGS AND IRRITATIONS

Bound to be plenty. For a start, there are many common regexes missing. Send them in to

regexp-common@abigail.nl.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2001 - 2003, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved.

This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified under the terms of the Perl Artistic License (see http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html)

perl v5.8.8 2003-07-04 Regexp::Common::list(3)




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