1Text::Balanced(3pm)    Perl Programmers Reference Guide    Text::Balanced(3pm)
2
3
4

NAME

6       Text::Balanced - Extract delimited text sequences from strings.
7

SYNOPSIS

9        use Text::Balanced qw (
10                               extract_delimited
11                               extract_bracketed
12                               extract_quotelike
13                               extract_codeblock
14                               extract_variable
15                               extract_tagged
16                               extract_multiple
17
18                               gen_delimited_pat
19                               gen_extract_tagged
20                              );
21
22        # Extract the initial substring of $text that is delimited by
23        # two (unescaped) instances of the first character in $delim.
24
25               ($extracted, $remainder) = extract_delimited($text,$delim);
26
27        # Extract the initial substring of $text that is bracketed
28        # with a delimiter(s) specified by $delim (where the string
29        # in $delim contains one or more of '(){}[]<>').
30
31               ($extracted, $remainder) = extract_bracketed($text,$delim);
32
33        # Extract the initial substring of $text that is bounded by
34        # an XML tag.
35
36               ($extracted, $remainder) = extract_tagged($text);
37
38        # Extract the initial substring of $text that is bounded by
39        # a C<BEGIN>...C<END> pair. Don't allow nested C<BEGIN> tags
40
41               ($extracted, $remainder) =
42                       extract_tagged($text,"BEGIN","END",undef,{bad=>["BEGIN"]});
43
44        # Extract the initial substring of $text that represents a
45        # Perl "quote or quote-like operation"
46
47               ($extracted, $remainder) = extract_quotelike($text);
48
49        # Extract the initial substring of $text that represents a block
50        # of Perl code, bracketed by any of character(s) specified by $delim
51        # (where the string $delim contains one or more of '(){}[]<>').
52
53               ($extracted, $remainder) = extract_codeblock($text,$delim);
54
55        # Extract the initial substrings of $text that would be extracted by
56        # one or more sequential applications of the specified functions
57        # or regular expressions
58
59               @extracted = extract_multiple($text,
60                                             [ \&extract_bracketed,
61                                               \&extract_quotelike,
62                                               \&some_other_extractor_sub,
63                                               qr/[xyz]*/,
64                                               'literal',
65                                             ]);
66
67       # Create a string representing an optimized pattern (a la Friedl) #
68       that matches a substring delimited by any of the specified characters #
69       (in this case: any type of quote or a slash)
70
71               $patstring = gen_delimited_pat(q{'"`/});
72
73       # Generate a reference to an anonymous sub that is just like
74       extract_tagged # but pre-compiled and optimized for a specific pair of
75       tags, and consequently # much faster (i.e. 3 times faster). It uses
76       qr// for better performance on # repeated calls, so it only works under
77       Perl 5.005 or later.
78
79               $extract_head = gen_extract_tagged('<HEAD>','</HEAD>');
80
81               ($extracted, $remainder) = $extract_head->($text);
82

DESCRIPTION

84       The various "extract_..." subroutines may be used to extract a delim‐
85       ited substring, possibly after skipping a specified prefix string. By
86       default, that prefix is optional whitespace ("/\s*/"), but you can
87       change it to whatever you wish (see below).
88
89       The substring to be extracted must appear at the current "pos" location
90       of the string's variable (or at index zero, if no "pos" position is
91       defined).  In other words, the "extract_..." subroutines don't extract
92       the first occurance of a substring anywhere in a string (like an unan‐
93       chored regex would). Rather, they extract an occurance of the substring
94       appearing immediately at the current matching position in the string
95       (like a "\G"-anchored regex would).
96
97       General behaviour in list contexts
98
99       In a list context, all the subroutines return a list, the first three
100       elements of which are always:
101
102       [0] The extracted string, including the specified delimiters.  If the
103           extraction fails an empty string is returned.
104
105       [1] The remainder of the input string (i.e. the characters after the
106           extracted string). On failure, the entire string is returned.
107
108       [2] The skipped prefix (i.e. the characters before the extracted
109           string).  On failure, the empty string is returned.
110
111       Note that in a list context, the contents of the original input text
112       (the first argument) are not modified in any way.
113
114       However, if the input text was passed in a variable, that variable's
115       "pos" value is updated to point at the first character after the
116       extracted text. That means that in a list context the various subrou‐
117       tines can be used much like regular expressions. For example:
118
119               while ( $next = (extract_quotelike($text))[0] )
120               {
121                       # process next quote-like (in $next)
122               }
123
124       General behaviour in scalar and void contexts
125
126       In a scalar context, the extracted string is returned, having first
127       been removed from the input text. Thus, the following code also pro‐
128       cesses each quote-like operation, but actually removes them from $text:
129
130               while ( $next = extract_quotelike($text) )
131               {
132                       # process next quote-like (in $next)
133               }
134
135       Note that if the input text is a read-only string (i.e. a literal), no
136       attempt is made to remove the extracted text.
137
138       In a void context the behaviour of the extraction subroutines is
139       exactly the same as in a scalar context, except (of course) that the
140       extracted substring is not returned.
141
142       A note about prefixes
143
144       Prefix patterns are matched without any trailing modifiers ("/gimsox"
145       etc.)  This can bite you if you're expecting a prefix specification
146       like '.*?(?=<H1>)' to skip everything up to the first <H1> tag. Such a
147       prefix pattern will only succeed if the <H1> tag is on the current
148       line, since . normally doesn't match newlines.
149
150       To overcome this limitation, you need to turn on /s matching within the
151       prefix pattern, using the "(?s)" directive: '(?s).*?(?=<H1>)'
152
153       "extract_delimited"
154
155       The "extract_delimited" function formalizes the common idiom of
156       extracting a single-character-delimited substring from the start of a
157       string. For example, to extract a single-quote delimited string, the
158       following code is typically used:
159
160               ($remainder = $text) =~ s/\A('(\\.⎪[^'])*')//s;
161               $extracted = $1;
162
163       but with "extract_delimited" it can be simplified to:
164
165               ($extracted,$remainder) = extract_delimited($text, "'");
166
167       "extract_delimited" takes up to four scalars (the input text, the
168       delimiters, a prefix pattern to be skipped, and any escape characters)
169       and extracts the initial substring of the text that is appropriately
170       delimited. If the delimiter string has multiple characters, the first
171       one encountered in the text is taken to delimit the substring.  The
172       third argument specifies a prefix pattern that is to be skipped (but
173       must be present!) before the substring is extracted.  The final argu‐
174       ment specifies the escape character to be used for each delimiter.
175
176       All arguments are optional. If the escape characters are not specified,
177       every delimiter is escaped with a backslash ("\").  If the prefix is
178       not specified, the pattern '\s*' - optional whitespace - is used. If
179       the delimiter set is also not specified, the set "/["'`]/" is used. If
180       the text to be processed is not specified either, $_ is used.
181
182       In list context, "extract_delimited" returns a array of three elements,
183       the extracted substring (including the surrounding delimiters), the
184       remainder of the text, and the skipped prefix (if any). If a suitable
185       delimited substring is not found, the first element of the array is the
186       empty string, the second is the complete original text, and the prefix
187       returned in the third element is an empty string.
188
189       In a scalar context, just the extracted substring is returned. In a
190       void context, the extracted substring (and any prefix) are simply
191       removed from the beginning of the first argument.
192
193       Examples:
194
195               # Remove a single-quoted substring from the very beginning of $text:
196
197                       $substring = extract_delimited($text, "'", '');
198
199               # Remove a single-quoted Pascalish substring (i.e. one in which
200               # doubling the quote character escapes it) from the very
201               # beginning of $text:
202
203                       $substring = extract_delimited($text, "'", '', "'");
204
205               # Extract a single- or double- quoted substring from the
206               # beginning of $text, optionally after some whitespace
207               # (note the list context to protect $text from modification):
208
209                       ($substring) = extract_delimited $text, q{"'};
210
211               # Delete the substring delimited by the first '/' in $text:
212
213                       $text = join '', (extract_delimited($text,'/','[^/]*')[2,1];
214
215       Note that this last example is not the same as deleting the first
216       quote-like pattern. For instance, if $text contained the string:
217
218               "if ('./cmd' =~ m/$UNIXCMD/s) { $cmd = $1; }"
219
220       then after the deletion it would contain:
221
222               "if ('.$UNIXCMD/s) { $cmd = $1; }"
223
224       not:
225
226               "if ('./cmd' =~ ms) { $cmd = $1; }"
227
228       See "extract_quotelike" for a (partial) solution to this problem.
229
230       "extract_bracketed"
231
232       Like "extract_delimited", the "extract_bracketed" function takes up to
233       three optional scalar arguments: a string to extract from, a delimiter
234       specifier, and a prefix pattern. As before, a missing prefix defaults
235       to optional whitespace and a missing text defaults to $_. However, a
236       missing delimiter specifier defaults to '{}()[]<>' (see below).
237
238       "extract_bracketed" extracts a balanced-bracket-delimited substring
239       (using any one (or more) of the user-specified delimiter brackets:
240       '(..)', '{..}', '[..]', or '<..>'). Optionally it will also respect
241       quoted unbalanced brackets (see below).
242
243       A "delimiter bracket" is a bracket in list of delimiters passed as
244       "extract_bracketed"'s second argument. Delimiter brackets are specified
245       by giving either the left or right (or both!) versions of the required
246       bracket(s). Note that the order in which two or more delimiter brackets
247       are specified is not significant.
248
249       A "balanced-bracket-delimited substring" is a substring bounded by
250       matched brackets, such that any other (left or right) delimiter bracket
251       within the substring is also matched by an opposite (right or left)
252       delimiter bracket at the same level of nesting. Any type of bracket not
253       in the delimiter list is treated as an ordinary character.
254
255       In other words, each type of bracket specified as a delimiter must be
256       balanced and correctly nested within the substring, and any other kind
257       of ("non-delimiter") bracket in the substring is ignored.
258
259       For example, given the string:
260
261               $text = "{ an '[irregularly :-(] {} parenthesized >:-)' string }";
262
263       then a call to "extract_bracketed" in a list context:
264
265               @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '{}' );
266
267       would return:
268
269               ( "{ an '[irregularly :-(] {} parenthesized >:-)' string }" , "" , "" )
270
271       since both sets of '{..}' brackets are properly nested and evenly bal‐
272       anced.  (In a scalar context just the first element of the array would
273       be returned. In a void context, $text would be replaced by an empty
274       string.)
275
276       Likewise the call in:
277
278               @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '{[' );
279
280       would return the same result, since all sets of both types of specified
281       delimiter brackets are correctly nested and balanced.
282
283       However, the call in:
284
285               @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '{([<' );
286
287       would fail, returning:
288
289               ( undef , "{ an '[irregularly :-(] {} parenthesized >:-)' string }"  );
290
291       because the embedded pairs of '(..)'s and '[..]'s are "cross-nested"
292       and the embedded '>' is unbalanced. (In a scalar context, this call
293       would return an empty string. In a void context, $text would be
294       unchanged.)
295
296       Note that the embedded single-quotes in the string don't help in this
297       case, since they have not been specified as acceptable delimiters and
298       are therefore treated as non-delimiter characters (and ignored).
299
300       However, if a particular species of quote character is included in the
301       delimiter specification, then that type of quote will be correctly han‐
302       dled.  for example, if $text is:
303
304               $text = '<A HREF=">>>>">link</A>';
305
306       then
307
308               @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '<">' );
309
310       returns:
311
312               ( '<A HREF=">>>>">', 'link</A>', "" )
313
314       as expected. Without the specification of """ as an embedded quoter:
315
316               @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '<>' );
317
318       the result would be:
319
320               ( '<A HREF=">', '>>>">link</A>', "" )
321
322       In addition to the quote delimiters "'", """, and "`", full Perl quote-
323       like quoting (i.e. q{string}, qq{string}, etc) can be specified by
324       including the letter 'q' as a delimiter. Hence:
325
326               @result = extract_bracketed( $text, '<q>' );
327
328       would correctly match something like this:
329
330               $text = '<leftop: conj /and/ conj>';
331
332       See also: "extract_quotelike" and "extract_codeblock".
333
334       "extract_variable"
335
336       "extract_variable" extracts any valid Perl variable or variable-
337       involved expression, including scalars, arrays, hashes, array accesses,
338       hash look-ups, method calls through objects, subroutine calles through
339       subroutine references, etc.
340
341       The subroutine takes up to two optional arguments:
342
343       1.  A string to be processed ($_ if the string is omitted or "undef")
344
345       2.  A string specifying a pattern to be matched as a prefix (which is
346           to be skipped). If omitted, optional whitespace is skipped.
347
348       On success in a list context, an array of 3 elements is returned. The
349       elements are:
350
351       [0] the extracted variable, or variablish expression
352
353       [1] the remainder of the input text,
354
355       [2] the prefix substring (if any),
356
357       On failure, all of these values (except the remaining text) are
358       "undef".
359
360       In a scalar context, "extract_variable" returns just the complete sub‐
361       string that matched a variablish expression. "undef" is returned on
362       failure. In addition, the original input text has the returned sub‐
363       string (and any prefix) removed from it.
364
365       In a void context, the input text just has the matched substring (and
366       any specified prefix) removed.
367
368       "extract_tagged"
369
370       "extract_tagged" extracts and segments text between (balanced) speci‐
371       fied tags.
372
373       The subroutine takes up to five optional arguments:
374
375       1.  A string to be processed ($_ if the string is omitted or "undef")
376
377       2.  A string specifying a pattern to be matched as the opening tag.  If
378           the pattern string is omitted (or "undef") then a pattern that
379           matches any standard XML tag is used.
380
381       3.  A string specifying a pattern to be matched at the closing tag.  If
382           the pattern string is omitted (or "undef") then the closing tag is
383           constructed by inserting a "/" after any leading bracket characters
384           in the actual opening tag that was matched (not the pattern that
385           matched the tag). For example, if the opening tag pattern is speci‐
386           fied as '{{\w+}}' and actually matched the opening tag "{{DATA}}",
387           then the constructed closing tag would be "{{/DATA}}".
388
389       4.  A string specifying a pattern to be matched as a prefix (which is
390           to be skipped). If omitted, optional whitespace is skipped.
391
392       5.  A hash reference containing various parsing options (see below)
393
394       The various options that can be specified are:
395
396       "reject => $listref"
397           The list reference contains one or more strings specifying patterns
398           that must not appear within the tagged text.
399
400           For example, to extract an HTML link (which should not contain
401           nested links) use:
402
403                   extract_tagged($text, '<A>', '</A>', undef, {reject => ['<A>']} );
404
405       "ignore => $listref"
406           The list reference contains one or more strings specifying patterns
407           that are not be be treated as nested tags within the tagged text
408           (even if they would match the start tag pattern).
409
410           For example, to extract an arbitrary XML tag, but ignore "empty"
411           elements:
412
413                   extract_tagged($text, undef, undef, undef, {ignore => ['<[^>]*/>']} );
414
415           (also see "gen_delimited_pat" below).
416
417       "fail => $str"
418           The "fail" option indicates the action to be taken if a matching
419           end tag is not encountered (i.e. before the end of the string or
420           some "reject" pattern matches). By default, a failure to match a
421           closing tag causes "extract_tagged" to immediately fail.
422
423           However, if the string value associated with <reject> is "MAX",
424           then "extract_tagged" returns the complete text up to the point of
425           failure.  If the string is "PARA", "extract_tagged" returns only
426           the first paragraph after the tag (up to the first line that is
427           either empty or contains only whitespace characters).  If the
428           string is "", the the default behaviour (i.e. failure) is rein‐
429           stated.
430
431           For example, suppose the start tag "/para" introduces a paragraph,
432           which then continues until the next "/endpara" tag or until another
433           "/para" tag is encountered:
434
435                   $text = "/para line 1\n\nline 3\n/para line 4";
436
437                   extract_tagged($text, '/para', '/endpara', undef,
438                                           {reject => '/para', fail => MAX );
439
440                   # EXTRACTED: "/para line 1\n\nline 3\n"
441
442           Suppose instead, that if no matching "/endpara" tag is found, the
443           "/para" tag refers only to the immediately following paragraph:
444
445                   $text = "/para line 1\n\nline 3\n/para line 4";
446
447                   extract_tagged($text, '/para', '/endpara', undef,
448                                   {reject => '/para', fail => MAX );
449
450                   # EXTRACTED: "/para line 1\n"
451
452           Note that the specified "fail" behaviour applies to nested tags as
453           well.
454
455       On success in a list context, an array of 6 elements is returned. The
456       elements are:
457
458       [0] the extracted tagged substring (including the outermost tags),
459
460       [1] the remainder of the input text,
461
462       [2] the prefix substring (if any),
463
464       [3] the opening tag
465
466       [4] the text between the opening and closing tags
467
468       [5] the closing tag (or "" if no closing tag was found)
469
470       On failure, all of these values (except the remaining text) are
471       "undef".
472
473       In a scalar context, "extract_tagged" returns just the complete sub‐
474       string that matched a tagged text (including the start and end tags).
475       "undef" is returned on failure. In addition, the original input text
476       has the returned substring (and any prefix) removed from it.
477
478       In a void context, the input text just has the matched substring (and
479       any specified prefix) removed.
480
481       "gen_extract_tagged"
482
483       (Note: This subroutine is only available under Perl5.005)
484
485       "gen_extract_tagged" generates a new anonymous subroutine which
486       extracts text between (balanced) specified tags. In other words, it
487       generates a function identical in function to "extract_tagged".
488
489       The difference between "extract_tagged" and the anonymous subroutines
490       generated by "gen_extract_tagged", is that those generated subroutines:
491
492       ·   do not have to reparse tag specification or parsing options every
493           time they are called (whereas "extract_tagged" has to effectively
494           rebuild its tag parser on every call);
495
496       ·   make use of the new qr// construct to pre-compile the regexes they
497           use (whereas "extract_tagged" uses standard string variable inter‐
498           polation to create tag-matching patterns).
499
500       The subroutine takes up to four optional arguments (the same set as
501       "extract_tagged" except for the string to be processed). It returns a
502       reference to a subroutine which in turn takes a single argument (the
503       text to be extracted from).
504
505       In other words, the implementation of "extract_tagged" is exactly
506       equivalent to:
507
508               sub extract_tagged
509               {
510                       my $text = shift;
511                       $extractor = gen_extract_tagged(@_);
512                       return $extractor->($text);
513               }
514
515       (although "extract_tagged" is not currently implemented that way, in
516       order to preserve pre-5.005 compatibility).
517
518       Using "gen_extract_tagged" to create extraction functions for specific
519       tags is a good idea if those functions are going to be called more than
520       once, since their performance is typically twice as good as the more
521       general-purpose "extract_tagged".
522
523       "extract_quotelike"
524
525       "extract_quotelike" attempts to recognize, extract, and segment any one
526       of the various Perl quotes and quotelike operators (see perlop(3))
527       Nested backslashed delimiters, embedded balanced bracket delimiters
528       (for the quotelike operators), and trailing modifiers are all caught.
529       For example, in:
530
531               extract_quotelike 'q # an octothorpe: \# (not the end of the q!) #'
532
533               extract_quotelike '  "You said, \"Use sed\"."  '
534
535               extract_quotelike ' s{([A-Z]{1,8}\.[A-Z]{3})} /\L$1\E/; '
536
537               extract_quotelike ' tr/\\\/\\\\/\\\//ds; '
538
539       the full Perl quotelike operations are all extracted correctly.
540
541       Note too that, when using the /x modifier on a regex, any comment con‐
542       taining the current pattern delimiter will cause the regex to be imme‐
543       diately terminated. In other words:
544
545               'm /
546                       (?i)            # CASE INSENSITIVE
547                       [a-z_]          # LEADING ALPHABETIC/UNDERSCORE
548                       [a-z0-9]*       # FOLLOWED BY ANY NUMBER OF ALPHANUMERICS
549                  /x'
550
551       will be extracted as if it were:
552
553               'm /
554                       (?i)            # CASE INSENSITIVE
555                       [a-z_]          # LEADING ALPHABETIC/'
556
557       This behaviour is identical to that of the actual compiler.
558
559       "extract_quotelike" takes two arguments: the text to be processed and a
560       prefix to be matched at the very beginning of the text. If no prefix is
561       specified, optional whitespace is the default. If no text is given, $_
562       is used.
563
564       In a list context, an array of 11 elements is returned. The elements
565       are:
566
567       [0] the extracted quotelike substring (including trailing modifiers),
568
569       [1] the remainder of the input text,
570
571       [2] the prefix substring (if any),
572
573       [3] the name of the quotelike operator (if any),
574
575       [4] the left delimiter of the first block of the operation,
576
577       [5] the text of the first block of the operation (that is, the contents
578           of a quote, the regex of a match or substitution or the target list
579           of a translation),
580
581       [6] the right delimiter of the first block of the operation,
582
583       [7] the left delimiter of the second block of the operation (that is,
584           if it is a "s", "tr", or "y"),
585
586       [8] the text of the second block of the operation (that is, the
587           replacement of a substitution or the translation list of a transla‐
588           tion),
589
590       [9] the right delimiter of the second block of the operation (if any),
591
592       [10]
593           the trailing modifiers on the operation (if any).
594
595       For each of the fields marked "(if any)" the default value on success
596       is an empty string.  On failure, all of these values (except the
597       remaining text) are "undef".
598
599       In a scalar context, "extract_quotelike" returns just the complete sub‐
600       string that matched a quotelike operation (or "undef" on failure). In a
601       scalar or void context, the input text has the same substring (and any
602       specified prefix) removed.
603
604       Examples:
605
606               # Remove the first quotelike literal that appears in text
607
608                       $quotelike = extract_quotelike($text,'.*?');
609
610               # Replace one or more leading whitespace-separated quotelike
611               # literals in $_ with "<QLL>"
612
613                       do { $_ = join '<QLL>', (extract_quotelike)[2,1] } until $@;
614
615               # Isolate the search pattern in a quotelike operation from $text
616
617                       ($op,$pat) = (extract_quotelike $text)[3,5];
618                       if ($op =~ /[ms]/)
619                       {
620                               print "search pattern: $pat\n";
621                       }
622                       else
623                       {
624                               print "$op is not a pattern matching operation\n";
625                       }
626
627       "extract_quotelike" and "here documents"
628
629       "extract_quotelike" can successfully extract "here documents" from an
630       input string, but with an important caveat in list contexts.
631
632       Unlike other types of quote-like literals, a here document is rarely a
633       contiguous substring. For example, a typical piece of code using here
634       document might look like this:
635
636               <<'EOMSG' ⎪⎪ die;
637               This is the message.
638               EOMSG
639               exit;
640
641       Given this as an input string in a scalar context, "extract_quotelike"
642       would correctly return the string "<<'EOMSG'\nThis is the mes‐
643       sage.\nEOMSG", leaving the string " ⎪⎪ die;\nexit;" in the original
644       variable. In other words, the two separate pieces of the here document
645       are successfully extracted and concatenated.
646
647       In a list context, "extract_quotelike" would return the list
648
649       [0] "<<'EOMSG'\nThis is the message.\nEOMSG\n" (i.e. the full extracted
650           here document, including fore and aft delimiters),
651
652       [1] " ⎪⎪ die;\nexit;" (i.e. the remainder of the input text, concate‐
653           nated),
654
655       [2] "" (i.e. the prefix substring -- trivial in this case),
656
657       [3] "<<" (i.e. the "name" of the quotelike operator)
658
659       [4] "'EOMSG'" (i.e. the left delimiter of the here document, including
660           any quotes),
661
662       [5] "This is the message.\n" (i.e. the text of the here document),
663
664       [6] "EOMSG" (i.e. the right delimiter of the here document),
665
666       [7..10]
667           "" (a here document has no second left delimiter, second text, sec‐
668           ond right delimiter, or trailing modifiers).
669
670       However, the matching position of the input variable would be set to
671       "exit;" (i.e. after the closing delimiter of the here document), which
672       would cause the earlier " ⎪⎪ die;\nexit;" to be skipped in any sequence
673       of code fragment extractions.
674
675       To avoid this problem, when it encounters a here document whilst
676       extracting from a modifiable string, "extract_quotelike" silently rear‐
677       ranges the string to an equivalent piece of Perl:
678
679               <<'EOMSG'
680               This is the message.
681               EOMSG
682               ⎪⎪ die;
683               exit;
684
685       in which the here document is contiguous. It still leaves the matching
686       position after the here document, but now the rest of the line on which
687       the here document starts is not skipped.
688
689       To prevent <extract_quotelike> from mucking about with the input in
690       this way (this is the only case where a list-context "extract_quote‐
691       like" does so), you can pass the input variable as an interpolated lit‐
692       eral:
693
694               $quotelike = extract_quotelike("$var");
695
696       "extract_codeblock"
697
698       "extract_codeblock" attempts to recognize and extract a balanced
699       bracket delimited substring that may contain unbalanced brackets inside
700       Perl quotes or quotelike operations. That is, "extract_codeblock" is
701       like a combination of "extract_bracketed" and "extract_quotelike".
702
703       "extract_codeblock" takes the same initial three parameters as
704       "extract_bracketed": a text to process, a set of delimiter brackets to
705       look for, and a prefix to match first. It also takes an optional fourth
706       parameter, which allows the outermost delimiter brackets to be speci‐
707       fied separately (see below).
708
709       Omitting the first argument (input text) means process $_ instead.
710       Omitting the second argument (delimiter brackets) indicates that only
711       '{' is to be used.  Omitting the third argument (prefix argument)
712       implies optional whitespace at the start.  Omitting the fourth argument
713       (outermost delimiter brackets) indicates that the value of the second
714       argument is to be used for the outermost delimiters.
715
716       Once the prefix an dthe outermost opening delimiter bracket have been
717       recognized, code blocks are extracted by stepping through the input
718       text and trying the following alternatives in sequence:
719
720       1.  Try and match a closing delimiter bracket. If the bracket was the
721           same species as the last opening bracket, return the substring to
722           that point. If the bracket was mismatched, return an error.
723
724       2.  Try to match a quote or quotelike operator. If found, call
725           "extract_quotelike" to eat it. If "extract_quotelike" fails, return
726           the error it returned. Otherwise go back to step 1.
727
728       3.  Try to match an opening delimiter bracket. If found, call
729           "extract_codeblock" recursively to eat the embedded block. If the
730           recursive call fails, return an error. Otherwise, go back to step
731           1.
732
733       4.  Unconditionally match a bareword or any other single character, and
734           then go back to step 1.
735
736       Examples:
737
738               # Find a while loop in the text
739
740                       if ($text =~ s/.*?while\s*\{/{/)
741                       {
742                               $loop = "while " . extract_codeblock($text);
743                       }
744
745               # Remove the first round-bracketed list (which may include
746               # round- or curly-bracketed code blocks or quotelike operators)
747
748                       extract_codeblock $text, "(){}", '[^(]*';
749
750       The ability to specify a different outermost delimiter bracket is use‐
751       ful in some circumstances. For example, in the Parse::RecDescent mod‐
752       ule, parser actions which are to be performed only on a successful
753       parse are specified using a "<defer:...>" directive. For example:
754
755               sentence: subject verb object
756                               <defer: {$::theVerb = $item{verb}} >
757
758       Parse::RecDescent uses "extract_codeblock($text, '{}<>')" to extract
759       the code within the "<defer:...>" directive, but there's a problem.
760
761       A deferred action like this:
762
763                               <defer: {if ($count>10) {$count--}} >
764
765       will be incorrectly parsed as:
766
767                               <defer: {if ($count>
768
769       because the "less than" operator is interpreted as a closing delimiter.
770
771       But, by extracting the directive using "extract_code‐
772       block($text, '{}', undef, '<>')" the '>' character is only treated as a
773       delimited at the outermost level of the code block, so the directive is
774       parsed correctly.
775
776       "extract_multiple"
777
778       The "extract_multiple" subroutine takes a string to be processed and a
779       list of extractors (subroutines or regular expressions) to apply to
780       that string.
781
782       In an array context "extract_multiple" returns an array of substrings
783       of the original string, as extracted by the specified extractors.  In a
784       scalar context, "extract_multiple" returns the first substring success‐
785       fully extracted from the original string. In both scalar and void con‐
786       texts the original string has the first successfully extracted sub‐
787       string removed from it. In all contexts "extract_multiple" starts at
788       the current "pos" of the string, and sets that "pos" appropriately
789       after it matches.
790
791       Hence, the aim of of a call to "extract_multiple" in a list context is
792       to split the processed string into as many non-overlapping fields as
793       possible, by repeatedly applying each of the specified extractors to
794       the remainder of the string. Thus "extract_multiple" is a generalized
795       form of Perl's "split" subroutine.
796
797       The subroutine takes up to four optional arguments:
798
799       1.  A string to be processed ($_ if the string is omitted or "undef")
800
801       2.  A reference to a list of subroutine references and/or qr// objects
802           and/or literal strings and/or hash references, specifying the
803           extractors to be used to split the string. If this argument is
804           omitted (or "undef") the list:
805
806                   [
807                           sub { extract_variable($_[0], '') },
808                           sub { extract_quotelike($_[0],'') },
809                           sub { extract_codeblock($_[0],'{}','') },
810                   ]
811
812           is used.
813
814       3.  An number specifying the maximum number of fields to return. If
815           this argument is omitted (or "undef"), split continues as long as
816           possible.
817
818           If the third argument is N, then extraction continues until N
819           fields have been successfully extracted, or until the string has
820           been completely processed.
821
822           Note that in scalar and void contexts the value of this argument is
823           automatically reset to 1 (under "-w", a warning is issued if the
824           argument has to be reset).
825
826       4.  A value indicating whether unmatched substrings (see below) within
827           the text should be skipped or returned as fields. If the value is
828           true, such substrings are skipped. Otherwise, they are returned.
829
830       The extraction process works by applying each extractor in sequence to
831       the text string.
832
833       If the extractor is a subroutine it is called in a list context and is
834       expected to return a list of a single element, namely the extracted
835       text. It may optionally also return two further arguments: a string
836       representing the text left after extraction (like $' for a pattern
837       match), and a string representing any prefix skipped before the extrac‐
838       tion (like $` in a pattern match). Note that this is designed to facil‐
839       itate the use of other Text::Balanced subroutines with "extract_multi‐
840       ple". Note too that the value returned by an extractor subroutine need
841       not bear any relationship to the corresponding substring of the origi‐
842       nal text (see examples below).
843
844       If the extractor is a precompiled regular expression or a string, it is
845       matched against the text in a scalar context with a leading '\G' and
846       the gc modifiers enabled. The extracted value is either $1 if that
847       variable is defined after the match, or else the complete match (i.e.
848       $&).
849
850       If the extractor is a hash reference, it must contain exactly one ele‐
851       ment.  The value of that element is one of the above extractor types
852       (subroutine reference, regular expression, or string).  The key of that
853       element is the name of a class into which the successful return value
854       of the extractor will be blessed.
855
856       If an extractor returns a defined value, that value is immediately
857       treated as the next extracted field and pushed onto the list of fields.
858       If the extractor was specified in a hash reference, the field is also
859       blessed into the appropriate class,
860
861       If the extractor fails to match (in the case of a regex extractor), or
862       returns an empty list or an undefined value (in the case of a subrou‐
863       tine extractor), it is assumed to have failed to extract.  If none of
864       the extractor subroutines succeeds, then one character is extracted
865       from the start of the text and the extraction subroutines reapplied.
866       Characters which are thus removed are accumulated and eventually become
867       the next field (unless the fourth argument is true, in which case they
868       are disgarded).
869
870       For example, the following extracts substrings that are valid Perl
871       variables:
872
873               @fields = extract_multiple($text,
874                                          [ sub { extract_variable($_[0]) } ],
875                                          undef, 1);
876
877       This example separates a text into fields which are quote delimited,
878       curly bracketed, and anything else. The delimited and bracketed parts
879       are also blessed to identify them (the "anything else" is unblessed):
880
881               @fields = extract_multiple($text,
882                          [
883                               { Delim => sub { extract_delimited($_[0],q{'"}) } },
884                               { Brack => sub { extract_bracketed($_[0],'{}') } },
885                          ]);
886
887       This call extracts the next single substring that is a valid Perl
888       quotelike operator (and removes it from $text):
889
890               $quotelike = extract_multiple($text,
891                                             [
892                                               sub { extract_quotelike($_[0]) },
893                                             ], undef, 1);
894
895       Finally, here is yet another way to do comma-separated value parsing:
896
897               @fields = extract_multiple($csv_text,
898                                         [
899                                               sub { extract_delimited($_[0],q{'"}) },
900                                               qr/([^,]+)(.*)/,
901                                         ],
902                                         undef,1);
903
904       The list in the second argument means: "Try and extract a ' or " delim‐
905       ited string, otherwise extract anything up to a comma...".  The undef
906       third argument means: "...as many times as possible...", and the true
907       value in the fourth argument means "...discarding anything else that
908       appears (i.e. the commas)".
909
910       If you wanted the commas preserved as separate fields (i.e. like split
911       does if your split pattern has capturing parentheses), you would just
912       make the last parameter undefined (or remove it).
913
914       "gen_delimited_pat"
915
916       The "gen_delimited_pat" subroutine takes a single (string) argument and
917          > builds a Friedl-style optimized regex that matches a string delim‐
918       ited by any one of the characters in the single argument. For example:
919
920               gen_delimited_pat(q{'"})
921
922       returns the regex:
923
924               (?:\"(?:\\\"⎪(?!\").)*\"⎪\'(?:\\\'⎪(?!\').)*\')
925
926       Note that the specified delimiters are automatically quotemeta'd.
927
928       A typical use of "gen_delimited_pat" would be to build special purpose
929       tags for "extract_tagged". For example, to properly ignore "empty" XML
930       elements (which might contain quoted strings):
931
932               my $empty_tag = '<(' . gen_delimited_pat(q{'"}) . '⎪.)+/>';
933
934               extract_tagged($text, undef, undef, undef, {ignore => [$empty_tag]} );
935
936       "gen_delimited_pat" may also be called with an optional second argu‐
937       ment, which specifies the "escape" character(s) to be used for each
938       delimiter.  For example to match a Pascal-style string (where ' is the
939       delimiter and '' is a literal ' within the string):
940
941               gen_delimited_pat(q{'},q{'});
942
943       Different escape characters can be specified for different delimiters.
944       For example, to specify that '/' is the escape for single quotes and
945       '%' is the escape for double quotes:
946
947               gen_delimited_pat(q{'"},q{/%});
948
949       If more delimiters than escape chars are specified, the last escape
950       char is used for the remaining delimiters.  If no escape char is speci‐
951       fied for a given specified delimiter, '\' is used.
952
953       Note that "gen_delimited_pat" was previously called "delimited_pat".
954       That name may still be used, but is now deprecated.
955

DIAGNOSTICS

957       In a list context, all the functions return "(undef,$original_text)" on
958       failure. In a scalar context, failure is indicated by returning "undef"
959       (in this case the input text is not modified in any way).
960
961       In addition, on failure in any context, the $@ variable is set.
962       Accessing "$@->{error}" returns one of the error diagnostics listed
963       below.  Accessing "$@->{pos}" returns the offset into the original
964       string at which the error was detected (although not necessarily where
965       it occurred!)  Printing $@ directly produces the error message, with
966       the offset appended.  On success, the $@ variable is guaranteed to be
967       "undef".
968
969       The available diagnostics are:
970
971       "Did not find a suitable bracket: "%s""
972           The delimiter provided to "extract_bracketed" was not one of
973           '()[]<>{}'.
974
975       "Did not find prefix: /%s/"
976           A non-optional prefix was specified but wasn't found at the start
977           of the text.
978
979       "Did not find opening bracket after prefix: "%s""
980           "extract_bracketed" or "extract_codeblock" was expecting a particu‐
981           lar kind of bracket at the start of the text, and didn't find it.
982
983       "No quotelike operator found after prefix: "%s""
984           "extract_quotelike" didn't find one of the quotelike operators "q",
985           "qq", "qw", "qx", "s", "tr" or "y" at the start of the substring it
986           was extracting.
987
988       "Unmatched closing bracket: "%c""
989           "extract_bracketed", "extract_quotelike" or "extract_codeblock"
990           encountered a closing bracket where none was expected.
991
992       "Unmatched opening bracket(s): "%s""
993           "extract_bracketed", "extract_quotelike" or "extract_codeblock" ran
994           out of characters in the text before closing one or more levels of
995           nested brackets.
996
997       "Unmatched embedded quote (%s)"
998           "extract_bracketed" attempted to match an embedded quoted sub‐
999           string, but failed to find a closing quote to match it.
1000
1001       "Did not find closing delimiter to match '%s'"
1002           "extract_quotelike" was unable to find a closing delimiter to match
1003           the one that opened the quote-like operation.
1004
1005       "Mismatched closing bracket: expected "%c" but found "%s""
1006           "extract_bracketed", "extract_quotelike" or "extract_codeblock"
1007           found a valid bracket delimiter, but it was the wrong species. This
1008           usually indicates a nesting error, but may indicate incorrect quot‐
1009           ing or escaping.
1010
1011       "No block delimiter found after quotelike "%s""
1012           "extract_quotelike" or "extract_codeblock" found one of the quote‐
1013           like operators "q", "qq", "qw", "qx", "s", "tr" or "y" without a
1014           suitable block after it.
1015
1016       "Did not find leading dereferencer"
1017           "extract_variable" was expecting one of '$', '@', or '%' at the
1018           start of a variable, but didn't find any of them.
1019
1020       "Bad identifier after dereferencer"
1021           "extract_variable" found a '$', '@', or '%' indicating a variable,
1022           but that character was not followed by a legal Perl identifier.
1023
1024       "Did not find expected opening bracket at %s"
1025           "extract_codeblock" failed to find any of the outermost opening
1026           brackets that were specified.
1027
1028       "Improperly nested codeblock at %s"
1029           A nested code block was found that started with a delimiter that
1030           was specified as being only to be used as an outermost bracket.
1031
1032       "Missing second block for quotelike "%s""
1033           "extract_codeblock" or "extract_quotelike" found one of the quote‐
1034           like operators "s", "tr" or "y" followed by only one block.
1035
1036       "No match found for opening bracket"
1037           "extract_codeblock" failed to find a closing bracket to match the
1038           outermost opening bracket.
1039
1040       "Did not find opening tag: /%s/"
1041           "extract_tagged" did not find a suitable opening tag (after any
1042           specified prefix was removed).
1043
1044       "Unable to construct closing tag to match: /%s/"
1045           "extract_tagged" matched the specified opening tag and tried to
1046           modify the matched text to produce a matching closing tag (because
1047           none was specified). It failed to generate the closing tag, almost
1048           certainly because the opening tag did not start with a bracket of
1049           some kind.
1050
1051       "Found invalid nested tag: %s"
1052           "extract_tagged" found a nested tag that appeared in the "reject"
1053           list (and the failure mode was not "MAX" or "PARA").
1054
1055       "Found unbalanced nested tag: %s"
1056           "extract_tagged" found a nested opening tag that was not matched by
1057           a corresponding nested closing tag (and the failure mode was not
1058           "MAX" or "PARA").
1059
1060       "Did not find closing tag"
1061           "extract_tagged" reached the end of the text without finding a
1062           closing tag to match the original opening tag (and the failure mode
1063           was not "MAX" or "PARA").
1064

AUTHOR

1066       Damian Conway (damian@conway.org)
1067

BUGS AND IRRITATIONS

1069       There are undoubtedly serious bugs lurking somewhere in this code, if
1070       only because parts of it give the impression of understanding a great
1071       deal more about Perl than they really do.
1072
1073       Bug reports and other feedback are most welcome.
1074
1076        Copyright (c) 1997-2001, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved.
1077        This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed
1078            and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself.
1079
1080
1081
1082perl v5.8.8                       2001-09-21               Text::Balanced(3pm)
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