pcre2/testdata/testoutput22-16

183 lines
3.2 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

# Tests of \C when Unicode support is available. Note that \C is not supported
# for DFA matching in UTF mode, so this test is not run with -dfa. The output
# of this test is different in 8-, 16-, and 32-bit modes. Some tests may match
# in some widths and not in others.
/ab\Cde/utf,info
Capturing subpattern count = 0
Contains \C
Options: utf
First code unit = 'a'
Last code unit = 'e'
Subject length lower bound = 0
abXde
0: abXde
# This should produce an error diagnostic (\C in UTF lookbehind) in 8-bit and
# 16-bit modes, but not in 32-bit mode.
/(?<=ab\Cde)X/utf
Failed: error 136 at offset 0: \C is not allowed in a lookbehind assertion in UTF-16 mode
ab!deXYZ
# Autopossessification tests
/\C+\X \X+\C/Bx
------------------------------------------------------------------
Bra
AllAny+
extuni
extuni+
AllAny
Ket
End
------------------------------------------------------------------
/\C+\X \X+\C/Bx,utf
------------------------------------------------------------------
Bra
Anybyte+
extuni
extuni+
Anybyte
Ket
End
------------------------------------------------------------------
/\C\X*TӅ;
{0,6}\v+
F
/utf
\= Expect no match
Ӆ\x0a
No match
/\C(\W?ſ)'?{{/utf
\= Expect no match
\\C(\\W?ſ)'?{{
No match
/X(\C{3})/utf
X\x{1234}
No match
X\x{11234}Y
0: X\x{11234}Y
1: \x{11234}Y
X\x{11234}YZ
0: X\x{11234}Y
1: \x{11234}Y
/X(\C{4})/utf
X\x{1234}YZ
No match
X\x{11234}YZ
0: X\x{11234}YZ
1: \x{11234}YZ
X\x{11234}YZW
0: X\x{11234}YZ
1: \x{11234}YZ
/X\C*/utf
XYZabcdce
0: XYZabcdce
/X\C*?/utf
XYZabcde
0: X
/X\C{3,5}/utf
Xabcdefg
0: Xabcde
X\x{1234}
No match
X\x{1234}YZ
0: X\x{1234}YZ
X\x{1234}\x{512}
No match
X\x{1234}\x{512}YZ
0: X\x{1234}\x{512}YZ
X\x{11234}Y
0: X\x{11234}Y
X\x{11234}YZ
0: X\x{11234}YZ
X\x{11234}\x{512}
0: X\x{11234}\x{512}
X\x{11234}\x{512}YZ
0: X\x{11234}\x{512}YZ
X\x{11234}\x{512}\x{11234}Z
0: X\x{11234}\x{512}\x{11234}
/X\C{3,5}?/utf
Xabcdefg
0: Xabc
X\x{1234}
No match
X\x{1234}YZ
0: X\x{1234}YZ
X\x{1234}\x{512}
No match
X\x{11234}Y
0: X\x{11234}Y
X\x{11234}YZ
0: X\x{11234}Y
X\x{11234}\x{512}YZ
0: X\x{11234}\x{512}
X\x{11234}
No match
/a\Cb/utf
aXb
0: aXb
a\nb
0: a\x{0a}b
a\x{100}b
0: a\x{100}b
/a\C\Cb/utf
a\x{100}b
No match
a\x{12257}b
0: a\x{12257}b
a\x{12257}\x{11234}b
No match
/ab\Cde/utf
abXde
0: abXde
# This one is here not because it's different to Perl, but because the way
# the captured single code unit is displayed. (In Perl it becomes a character,
# and you can't tell the difference.)
/X(\C)(.*)/utf
X\x{1234}
0: X\x{1234}
1: \x{1234}
2:
X\nabc
0: X\x{0a}abc
1: \x{0a}
2: abc
# This one is here because Perl gives out a grumbly error message (quite
# correctly, but that messes up comparisons).
/a\Cb/utf
\= Expect no match in 8-bit mode
a\x{100}b
0: a\x{100}b
/^ab\C/utf,no_start_optimize
\= Expect no match - tests \C at end of subject
ab
No match
/\C[^\v]+\x80/utf
[AΏBŀC]
No match
/\C[^\d]+\x80/utf
[AΏBŀC]
No match
# End of testinput22