My question is the same question as How do I re.search or re.match on a whole file without reading it all into memory? but using perl instead of python
Question: I want to be able to run a regular expression on an entire file, but I'd like to be able to not have to read the whole file into memory at once as I may be working with rather large files in the future. Is there a way to do this? Thanks!
Clarification: I cannot read line-by-line because it can span multiple lines.
Why am I using perl instead of python? I've run into enough issues with python regex that I need to switch to perl. I would install https://pypi.python.org/pypi/regex but I can't since my workplace, understandably, doesn't allow write access to its python installation directory and I would prefer to avoid a slow back and forth email chain with IT for them to install it for me, and/or deal with further permission issues :)
EDIT: Example patterns I'm looking for
assign signal0 = (cond1) ? val1 :
(cond2) ? val2 :
val3;
assign signal1[15:0] = {input1[7:0], input2[7:0]};
assign signal2[34:0] = { 4'b0,
subsig0[3:0],
subsig1,
subsig2,
subsig3[18:2],
subsig4[5:0]
};
I'm looking for patterns like the above, i.e. a variable assignment up until I see a semicolon. The regex would match any of the above as I don't know if the pattern is multiline or not. Perhaps something similar to /assign\s+\w+\s+=\s+[^;];/m
, i.e. up until I see a semicolon
EDIT2: From the given answers (thanks!) it appears that decomposing the pattern into start, middle, & end sections might be the best strategy, e.g. using the range operator as suggested by some.