You can think of any regular expression in term of some nested
for loops.
Please, consider:
for my $i (0 .. $eos) {
for my $j ($min .. $max) {
last if $j > $eos-$i;
print substr($str, $i, $j),"\n";
}
}
The following variables specifies the meaning of
"ABCDEF" =~ /(\w{2,}?)(?{print "$1\n"})(?!)/;
my $min = 2; # minimum match length
my $max = 32767; # maximum match length
my $str = "ABCDEF";
my $eos = length($str);
Using the same nested
for loops, we have another specification for
"ABCDEF" =~ /([A-Z]{3})(?{print "$1\n"})(?!)/;
my $min = 3; # minimum match length
my $max = 3; # maximum match length
my $str = "ABCDEF";
my $eos = length($str);
By executing the code, it gives us the same output as the corresponding regular expressions do. I hope this will give you a basic intuition on how backtracking works.
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