/x?/ means match x zero or one times, but prefer 1...
i.e.
Match it if you can
/x??/ means match x zero or one times, but prefer 0...
i.e. Match it if you have to
For instance:
% perl -le '"wxy" =~ /(wx?)/; print $1'
1:wx
% perl -le '"wxy" =~ /(wx??)/; print $1'
1:w
% perl -le '"wxy" =~ /(wx?y)/; print $1'
1:wxy
% perl -le '"wxy" =~ /(wx??y)/; print $1'
1:wxy
The notation is a little confusing because the two question marks in a row mean different things.
/x?/ is really just syntatic sugar for
/x{0,1}/. The second question mark turns on min matching. When you look at it this way, the difference between
/x{0,1}/ and
/x{0,1}?/ should be more clear.
-Blake
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