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According to the documentation the default definition of the ws method in a grammar is to match zero or more whitespace characters, as long as that point is not within a word:

regex ws { <!ww> \s* }

What is the difference between this definition and the following:

regex ws { \s+ }

I wonder why the zero width assertion <!ww> is used instead of the simpler \s+? I also note that the default definition allows to match zero white spaces, but when would that actually happen? Wouldn't it be more clear if it used \s+ instead of \s*?

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  • Ok, so then the default ws will match between consecutive characters that are not word characters and not white space (like emojis). For example: perl6 -e 'my $str="\c[carrot]\c[potato]"; say $str.split(/<!ww>\s*/).elems' gives 4. Is this a reasonable behavior? Apr 1, 2019 at 20:14
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    Larry considered it reasonable default behavior. The idea is that it works well for most typical grammars and if you want something else you just define your own ws rule.
    – raiph
    Apr 1, 2019 at 20:23

1 Answer 1

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The ww assertion means that there are chars matching \w either side of the current point. The ! inverts it, meaning <!ww> matches:

  • At the start of the string
  • At the end of the string
  • When there's a non-\w character before the current position (such as between "+" and "a")
  • When there's a non-\w character after the current position (such as between "a" and "+")

Effectively, then, it means that whitespace can never be considered to occur between two word characters. However, between non-word characters, or between a word character and a non-word character, then there can be considered whitespace.

This follows what many languages we might wish to parse need. For example, consider ab+cd. The default ws will match either side of the +, but would not, for example, match within an identifier.

For languages where that isn't suitable, it's simply a matter of overriding the default ws for whatever that language needs.

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