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Product typeBook
Published inSep 2017
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781787282049
Edition1st Edition
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Andrew Shitov
Andrew Shitov
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Andrew Shitov

Andrew Shitov has been a Perl enthusiast since the end of the 1990s, and is the organizer of over 30 Perl conferences in eight countries. He worked as a developer and CTO in leading web-development companies, such as Art. Lebedev Studio, Booking dotCom, and eBay, and he learned from the "Fathers of the Russian Internet", Artemy Lebedev and Anton Nossik. Andrew has been following the Perl 6 development since its beginning in 2000. He ran a blog dedicated to the language, published a series of articles in the Pragmatic Perl magazine, and gives talks about Perl 6 at various Perl events. In 2017, he published the Perl 6 at a Glance book by DeepText, which was the first book on Perl 6 published after the first stable release of the language specification.
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Using alternations in regexes

Let us look once again to our naïve regex for matching phone numbers:

rx/ \+? (\d || \s || \-)+ /

Vertical bars separate different variants within the group in parentheses. It can be either \d, or \s, or \-. In the context of regexes, this is call alternation. Different variants are, correspondingly, called alternatives.

In Perl 6, there are two forms of alternation separator in regexes—single | and double || vertical bars . With a single vertical bar, the longest variant always wins. With the double bar, the first matched alternative wins.

In the phone number example, each alternative is exactly one symbol long. So, there is no difference between | and || there. In other cases, the choice of the operator may drastically change the result.

For example, take the two regexes from the following example and match the forms of an adjective...

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Perl 6 Deep Dive
Published in: Sep 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781787282049

Author (1)

author image
Andrew Shitov

Andrew Shitov has been a Perl enthusiast since the end of the 1990s, and is the organizer of over 30 Perl conferences in eight countries. He worked as a developer and CTO in leading web-development companies, such as Art. Lebedev Studio, Booking dotCom, and eBay, and he learned from the "Fathers of the Russian Internet", Artemy Lebedev and Anton Nossik. Andrew has been following the Perl 6 development since its beginning in 2000. He ran a blog dedicated to the language, published a series of articles in the Pragmatic Perl magazine, and gives talks about Perl 6 at various Perl events. In 2017, he published the Perl 6 at a Glance book by DeepText, which was the first book on Perl 6 published after the first stable release of the language specification.
Read more about Andrew Shitov