Will, why not use the Oracle parser?
create global temporary table plans as select * from table(dbms_xplan.display_cursor());
--/
declare
c number;
i varchar2(30);
l number;
stmt varchar2(4000);
begin
delete from plans;
stmt:= 'select z.* from z,skew1 where z.z = skew1.fillblocks';
l:= length(stmt);
c:=dbms_sql.open_cursor();
dbms_sql.parse (c, stmt,dbms_sql.native);
select distinct sql_id into i from v$open_cursor where sid in (select sid from v$mystat) and substr(sql_text,1,l) = substr(stmt,1,l);
insert into plans select * from table(dbms_xplan.display_cursor(i));
dbms_output.put_Line ('sql_id:'||i);
end;
/
select * from plans;
PLAN_TABLE_OUTPUT
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
SQL_ID 97qc3ynmw1pa4, child number 0
-------------------------------------
select z.* from z,skew1 where z.z = skew1.fillblocks
Plan hash value: 942457544
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Id | Operation | Name | Rows | Bytes | Cost (%CPU)| Time |
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 0 | SELECT STATEMENT | | | | 85 (100)| |
|* 1 | HASH JOIN | | 1 | 410 | 85 (2)| 00:00:02 |
| 2 | TABLE ACCESS FULL| Z | 1 | 9 | 2 (0)| 00:00:01 |
| 3 | TABLE ACCESS FULL| SKEW1 | 6000 | 2349K| 82 (0)| 00:00:01 |
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Predicate Information (identified by operation id):
---------------------------------------------------
1 - access("Z"."Z"=INTERNAL_FUNCTION("SKEW1"."FILLBLOCKS"))
You do need an oracle database connection. If the output is what you want, it is the easiest way to get what you want, without re-inventing an other color for a wheel. In this example I limited the sql to 4000 characters but you could feed a pl/sql array of varchar2 into to dbms_sql.parse function, doing so allows you to parse sql's of unimaginable sizes.