Why is it matching the final " if it could leave it for "? and the pattern would still match?

In the greedy case, it's because that's how regexes work; if .* can match the quote ("), it will.  Note that it would be different if the trailing quote was non-optional; then the greedy match would only match up to but not including the final quote.

In the non-greedy case, of course, it's the same problem; the non-greedy succeeds by matching nothing at all, as the optional final quote does not have to be matched either.

Here's another way to look at the effect of a "non-optional" final quote for both the greedy and non-greedy cases:

$string =~ s/\"(.*)\"/$1/; # <= Final quote " pushes left against # otherwise greedy match (.*) $string =~ s/\"(.*?)\"/$1/; # => Final quote " pulls right against # otherwise non-greedy match (.*?)

So when the final quote is optional, neither of the above constraints get enforced; the greedy match can be maximally greedy, and the non-greedy match can be minimally greedy.

And by the way, you don't need to escape the quotes in a regex.  \" can be just ".


s''(q.S:$/9=(T1';s;(..)(..);$..=substr+crypt($1,$2),2,3;eg;print$..$/

In reply to Re: Matching quote characters? by liverpole
in thread Matching quote characters? by Anonymous Monk

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