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I'm learning an advanced usage of regex and noticed that many posts use (*SKIP) or (*F) in it.

I posted a question where the idea was to match lines that don't have yellow but has blue only if brown exists after blue. And the right answer was:

.*yellow.*(*SKIP)(*F)|^.*\bblue\b(?=.*brown).*$

I also have tried lookaround expressions like below but haven't worked for all the cases:

^((?!yellow).)*blue(?=.*brown).*$

I had no idea about these (*SKIP)(*F) flags, so the question is, how do these flag works? What do they do? And are there other flags like these?

Thanks.

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  • @SotiriosDelimanolis actually I haven't used it on java pattern I'm testing it on regex101 Jul 2, 2014 at 15:13
  • @SotiriosDelimanolis yes, you are right but the idea is to implement this regex on java later. First I would like to learn the regex way. Btw, what tag do you recommend me instead of java since I'm doing it on regex101? Jul 2, 2014 at 15:16
  • @TheLostMind no need to apologies, I don't want to confuse anybody. Thanks for the fix. Jul 2, 2014 at 15:19
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    These flags are a feature of Perl Compatible Regular Expressions (PCRE) so I would recommend reading its documentation (search for the tags you want to know about in the document). In order to use them you'll need to find a regex library that supports them for your language of choice. I do not know of any such library for Java.
    – SamYonnou
    Jul 2, 2014 at 15:29
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    @Fede: I don't think (*SKIP)(*F) will work on Java. There are other hack ways in Java to get around variable length lookbehind in Java though.
    – anubhava
    Jul 2, 2014 at 15:33

2 Answers 2

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These two backtracking control verbs are implemented only in Perl, PCRE and the pypi regex module.

The idea of the (*SKIP)(*FAIL) trick is to consume characters that you want to avoid, and that must not be a part of the match result.

A classical pattern that uses of this trick looks like that:

What_I_want_to_avoid(*SKIP)(*FAIL)|What_I_want_to_match

A regex engine processes a string like that:

  • the first token of the pattern is tested on each character from left to right (by default most of the time, but some regex engines can be set to work from right to left, .net can do this if I remember well)

  • if the first token matches, then the regex engine tests the next token of the pattern with the next characters (after the first token match) etc.

  • when a token fails, the regex engine gets the characters matched by the last token back and tries another way to make the pattern succeed (if it doesn't work too, the regex engine do the same with the previous token etc.)

When the regex engine meets the (*SKIP) verb (in this case all previous tokens have obviously succeeded), it has no right anymore to go back to all the previous tokens on the left and has no right anymore to retry all the matched characters with another branch of the pattern or at the next position in the string until the last matched character (included) if the pattern fails later on the right of the (*SKIP) verb.

The role of (*FAIL) is to force the pattern to fail. Thus all the characters matched on the left of (*SKIP) are skipped and the regex engine continues its job after these characters.

The only possibility for the pattern to succeed in the example pattern is that the first branch fails before (*SKIP) to allow the second branch to be tested.

You can find another kind of explanation here.

About Java and other regex engines that don't have these two features

Backtracking control verbs are not implemented in other regex engines and there are no equivalent.

However, you can use several ways to do the same (to be more clear, to avoid something that can be possibly matched by an other part of the pattern).

The use of capture groups:

way 1:

What_I_want_to_avoid|(What_I_want_to_match)

You only need to extract the capture group 1 (or to test if it exists), since it is what you are looking for. If you use the pattern to perform a replacement, you can use the properties of the match result (offset, length, capture group) to make the replacement with classical string functions. Other language like javascript, ruby... allows to use a callback function as replacement.

way 2:

((?>To_avoid|Other_things_that_can_be_before_what_i_want)*)(What_I_want)

It's the more easy way for the replacement, no need to callback function, the replacement string need only to begin with \1 (or $1)

The use of lookarounds:

example, you want to find a word that is not embedded between two other words (lets say S_word and E_word that are different (see Qtax comment)):

(the edge cases S_word E_word word E_word and S_word word S_word E_word are allowed in this example.)

The backtracking control verb way will be:

S_word not_S_word_or_E_word E_word(*SKIP)(*F)|word

To use this way the regex engine needs to allow variable length lookbehinds to a certain extent. With .net or the new regex module, no problems, lookbehinds can have a totally variable length. It is possible with Java too but the size must be limited (example: (?<=.{1,1000})).

The Java equivalent will be:

word(?:(?!not_S_word_or_E_word E_word)|(?<!S_word not_E_word{0,1000} word))

Note that in some cases, only the lookahead is necessary. Note too that starting a pattern with literal character is more efficient than starting with a lookbehind, that's why I putted it after the word (even if I need to rewrite the word one more time in the assertion.)

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  • 3
    Excellent explanation. That's the explanation I was looking for. I'm looking for these behaviour in java so I think I'll to post another question. Jul 2, 2014 at 16:13
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    @Fede: I will add a complement about Java that doesn't have these features. Jul 2, 2014 at 16:14
  • Thanks. this is very useful it's a pitty that java's engine doesn't support this, it is very handy Jul 2, 2014 at 16:24
  • @CasimiretHippolyte How do I specify anything to the left of What_I_want_to_avoid that I want to match? For ex., I want to match the word 'blah' but not 'blaah'. How do I incorporatebl into aa(*SKIP)(*F)|ah?
    – dasf
    Apr 14, 2015 at 21:48
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    "The use of lookarounds" example is not completely correct, the lookahead expression doesn't match the same strings as the (*SKIP)(*F) expression does, nor does it do what the example text states. For example word in the string word E_word should match, but the lookahead expression doesn't match it.
    – Qtax
    Aug 10, 2015 at 14:48
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The (*SKIP) and (*F) (aka *FAIL) patterns are documented in the Perl manual: http://perldoc.perl.org/perlre.html

However, they are only available in Perl and in flavours of regex that imitate Perl (for example the PCRE library used by PHP).

Java's built in regex engine does not support these extensions, and I am not aware of one that does.

My general advice in Java is to keep your regular expressions simple, and use other string manipulation methods to achieve what can't be done clearly with a short regex.

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  • Confirming availability in php.
    – NVRM
    May 17, 2020 at 18:15

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