I think this tutorial explains what exactly "independent, non-capturing group" or "Atomic Grouping" is
The regular expression a(bc|b)c
(capturing group) matches abcc
and abc. The regex a(?>bc|b)c
(atomic group) matches abcc
but not abc.
When applied to abc, both regexes will match a
to a, bc
to
bc, and then c
will fail to match at the end of the string. Here their paths diverge. The regex with the capturing group has
remembered a backtracking position for the alternation. The group will
give up its match, b
then matches b and c
matches c. Match
found!
The regex with the atomic group, however, exited from an atomic
group after bc
was matched. At that point, all backtracking
positions for tokens inside the group are discarded. In this example,
the alternation's option to try b
at the second position in the
string is discarded. As a result, when c
fails, the regex engine has
no alternatives left to try.