mirror of
https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one
synced 2024-12-18 06:42:10 +00:00
1.4 KiB
1.4 KiB
title | date | replyURI | replyTitle | replyType | replyAuthor | replyAuthorURI | syndicatedCopies | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Regex feature creep considered non-harmful | 2023-08-26T15:00:22-07:00 | https://akko.wtf/objects/14ffd986-060f-4bf9-9339-f26b1a3ecf5c | “regular” expressions | SocialMediaPosting | Chjara | https://tuxcrafting.online/ |
|
De-facto standard extensions for recursion and variable-length look-arounds have existed for ages; the word "regular" in most regular-expression engines is there for historical reasons. I first read about this in {{}}{{}} by {{}}{{}} (he loves his biblical terminology).
I would like to just use Raku rules for a concise way to describe more advanced grammars; I'd then just keep my regexes to the PCRE subset that's common between Google's RE2 and the Rust regex crate. I doubt they're both "regular" but both guarantee linear time matching. Part of the reason I don't do this is portability. Not everything runs Raku, but almost every platform has a regex engine with the features I need.