I know that you are looking at this academically, but in general, a quantifier at the end of a match is often a code smell. Not only that, a zero-or-more quantifier is even smellier. That pattern will never fail to match because it can always match the zero-times case:
use strict;
use warnings;
my $str = 'xzy';
if ($str =~ m/((a+)?(b+)?(c))*/) {
print "matched: $1 | $2 | $3 | $4\n";
}
Gives some warnings, but still matches:
matched: | | |
Use of uninitialized value $1 in concatenation (.) or string at .
Use of uninitialized value $2 in concatenation (.) or string at .
Use of uninitialized value $3 in concatenation (.) or string at .
Use of uninitialized value $4 in concatenation (.) or string at .
Even if this was changed to +
for one-or-more matches, that really means you are usually looking for only the last match. In that case, you should rewrite your pattern to find only the last case and not pollute the per-match variables with previous matches. I don't see a good way to do that in this abstract, contextless situation, but maybe it's a global match in scalar context:
use strict;
use warnings;
my $str = 'aacbbbcac';
while($str =~ m/(a+)?(b+)?(c)/g ) {
print "$& | $1 | $2 | $3 | $4\n";
}
The output does carry the same baggage between matches as before because these are now separate successful matches:
aac | aa | | c |
bbbc | | bbb | c |
ac | a | | c |
Use of uninitialized value $2 in concatenation (.) or string at .
Use of uninitialized value $4 in concatenation (.) or string at .
Use of uninitialized value $1 in concatenation (.) or string at .
Use of uninitialized value $4 in concatenation (.) or string at .
Use of uninitialized value $2 in concatenation (.) or string at .
Use of uninitialized value $4 in concatenation (.) or string at .
Note that you can't use \G
here because the matches overlap.
perl -E'"a"=~/(.)/; "b"=~/(..)/; say $1;'