This seems to me to capture the essence of the behavior of lazy quantification.
The general usage of 'lazy' in the context of programming is: deferred or on-demand; with the complementary term being 'eager'.
I think that overloading lazy to mean non-greedy for this unique usage, just creates the potential for confusion and unreal expectations.
Anyone got any experience of this phone's predecessor?
In reply to Re^4: What are greedy and lazy matching in Perl?
by BrowserUk
in thread What is greedy and lazy Matching in perl
by shankonit
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