Well, Perl regular expressions can do that, but not "regular regular expressions", as they don't have a general way of saying "not", nor have they a non-exponential way of addressing "all of a set, regardless of their order".

I don't know why you say using some sort of parse tree is going to be overkill. Boolean expressions are amongst the simplest non-trivial expressions to parse; it's a typical excercise for students during the first hours of a compiler course. It shouldn't be too hard to parse this using Perl, even if you don't use Parse::RecDescent.

The reason I don't include some code in this post is that the specification of your target syntax isn't complete: it doesn't explain grouping. How do you express

(word1 AND word2) OR word3
in the target syntax? And how is
word1 AND (word2 OR word3)
expressed?

Abigail


In reply to Re: converting a boolean syntax by Abigail-II
in thread converting a boolean syntax by glwtta

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