How can I use Perl to validate this data containing balanced text?

I have a text file filled with sentences with unique pattern. The unique pattern is:

NAME [ e_NAME ]


simple rule: the "NAME" must follow after "e_" if the "e_" appearers inside the brackets!

The problem comes out when the string is complicated. I'll show the end point situations that may be hard to analyse:

Lines that won't match the rule:

(1) NAME1[blabla+NAME2[blabla+e_BAD2]+e_NAME1]
(4) NAME1[e_NAME1BAD1] -> means it has to be only NAME1


Lines that match the rule:

(1) FOO1[blabla + 1]
(2) [blalbla] + bla
(3) bla + blabla
(4) FOO1[ccc + ddd + FOO2[e_FOO2]] = 123
(5) FOO1[cc + FOO2[ dd ] ] + FOO3[e_FOO3]


I already asked this question but I couldn't catch this end points...

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Your post doesn't make sense. And I don't know what your question is. –  Gavin Miller Nov 18 '09 at 18:13
If you already asked the question, why not edit the question, which will bump it back to the top, and make the question clearer and more useful? Don't post duplicates. –  Chris Lutz Nov 18 '09 at 18:14
What do you want to actually do here? Are you merely trying to validate that each line contains a specific pattern? Does the initial NAME1 refer to the actual characters N A M E 1 or is it a variable indicating some arbitrary string? –  Jim Garrison Nov 18 '09 at 18:15
yeah, I meant the role of the rule :) thanks –  YoDar Nov 22 '09 at 13:36

Edited after requirements were clarified

Either Text::Balanced or Regexp::Common might be useful. I initially posted an answer using the former but didn't like it very much. The following example uses Regexp::Common and seems fairly straightforward.

use strict;
use warnings;
use Regexp::Common;

my $PRE = '[^[]*?'; my$VAR   = '\w+';
my $BRACK =$RE{balanced}{-parens=>'[]'};
my $POST = '.*'; while (<DATA>){ my ($bad, $full); # Brackets, if any, must balance$bad = 1 unless s/$/[/g == s/$/]/g;

$full =$_;
until ($bad){ # Find some bracketed text and store all components. my ($pre, $var,$brack, $post) =$full =~ /^($PRE)($VAR)($BRACK)($POST)$/; last unless defined$brack;

# Create a copy of the bracketed text, removing both the outer
# brackets and all instances of inner-bracketed text.
chop (my $clean = substr$brack, 1);
$clean =~ s/$BRACK/ /g;

# If e_FOO exists, FOO must equal $var.$bad = 1 if $clean =~ /e_(\w+)/ and$1 ne $var; # Remove the part of$full we've already checked.
substr($full, 0, length($pre) + length($var) + 1, ''); } print if$bad;
}

__DATA__
NAME1[blabla] + NAME2[e_BAD2]                            NOT OK 2
FOO1[blabla + 1]                                         OK 1
[blalbla] + bla                                          OK 2
bla + blabla                                             OK 3
FOO1[ccc + ddd + FOO2[e_FOO2]] = 123                     OK 4
FOO1[cc + FOO2[ dd ] ] + FOO3[e_FOO3]                    OK 5

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Thanks a lot for your clean answer. I'm going to pass over your answer and understand each of the lines you wrote. –  YoDar Nov 19 '09 at 8:23
Have you notice my question edit ? Your answer may be very helpful, but there's need to be some little change that I find it hard to analyse. If you can sealed that break, I'll be very thankful! :) –  YoDar Nov 22 '09 at 8:28
exactly! :) thanks –  YoDar Nov 22 '09 at 13:32

Maybe you are looking for something like:

 if ($string =~ /(\w+)$e\\_(\w+)/ && 1 eq 2) { print "Pattern '1' contained in string 'string'\n"; }  - add comment Based on the accepted answer to your first question, I came up with this: use strict; use warnings; while (<DATA>) { my l = _; while (s/(\w+)\[([^\[$]*)\]//) { my ($n, $chk) = ($1, $2); unless ($chk =~ /\be_$n\b/) { warn "Bad line:$l";
last;
}
}
}


The \b checks for a word boundary. This version still doesn't check for unbalanced brackets, but it does seem to catch all the examples you gave, and will also complain when the e_NAME1 is inside another nested block, like so:

NAME1[stuff + NAME2[e_NAME1 + e_NAME2] + morestuff]

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