Okay so I'm working on a project where I need a regex that can match a * followed by 1-4 spaces or tabs and then followed by a row of text. Right now I'm using .* after the lookbehind for testing purposes. However I can get it to match explicitly 1, 2, or 4 spaces/tabs but not 1-4. I'm testing against the following block

*    test line here
*   Second test
*  Third test
* Another test

And these are the two patterns I'm testing (?<=(\*[ \t]{3})).* which works just as expected and matches the 2nd line, same if I replace 3 with 1, 2 or 4 however if I replace it with 1,4 forming the following pattern (?<=(\*[ \t]{1,4})).* it no longer matches any of the rows and I honestly can't understand why. I've tried googling without success. I'm using the g(lobal) flag.

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up vote 3 down vote accepted

PHP, like many flavors, doesn't support variable length lookbehind. The only support is alternation (|) at the top level of the lookbehind. Even a ? can break the pattern. An alternative is to use:

(?<=\*[ \t]|\*[ \t]{2}|\*[ \t]{3}|\*[ \t]{4}).*

Or better, abort the lookbehind for a group:

\*[ \t]{1,4}(.*)

This should work well for you, since it doesn't seem like you have overlapping of your matches anyway.

From the manual:

The contents of a lookbehind assertion are restricted such that all the strings it matches must have a fixed length. However, if there are several alternatives, they do not all have to have the same fixed length. Thus (?<=bullock|donkey) is permitted, but (?<!dogs?|cats?) causes an error at compile time. Branches that match different length strings are permitted only at the top level of a lookbehind assertion.

Source: http://www.php.net/manual/en/regexp.reference.assertions.php

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It might also be worth mentioning that the regex will still not do what the OP probably wants - it will gladly match more than 4 spaces because .* will match spaces just fine. – Tim Pietzcker Feb 10 '11 at 11:53
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@Tim - That's a good point, but I think .* is just a simplified example of what the OP sees as an odd behavior - the interesting part is the look behind. – Kobi Feb 10 '11 at 11:56
Thanks, I overlooked that. By the way, RegexBuddy doesn't complain about {1,4} (it balks at infinite quantifiers, but not at this finite quantifier). – Tim Pietzcker Feb 10 '11 at 12:00
After some testing with alternation it seem like it always will match only * followed by one space thus resulting in the matched area being starting with tabs or spaces, but I guess I could just abort the lookbehind group as you said and then with string manipulation remove the unnecessary space. I guess I could use substring to remove the first character and then ltrim. And yeah .* were just simplification because the lookbehind was what I wanted help with. – Hultner Feb 10 '11 at 12:01
@Tim - I suppose it depends on the implementation: {1,4} can be expanded to a legal alternation, but PHP doesn't do it (which is better, of course, it might create a monstrosity). I check my PHP patterns at pagecolumn.com/tool/pregtest.htm , and sometimes on ideone, which I guess are closer to the real thing :) – Kobi Feb 10 '11 at 12:04
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