Is it possible to match nested brackets with regex without using recursion or balancing groups?

jaytea :

StackOverflow encourages self-answered questions, so I decided to create this post to share something I recently discovered.

The problem: Match an arbitrarily nested group of brackets in a flavour of regex such as Java's java.util.regex that supports neither recursion nor balancing groups. Ie, match the 3 outer groups in:

(F(i(r(s)t))) ((S)(e)((c)(o))(n)d) (((((((Third)))))))

This exercise is purely academic, since we all know that regular expressions are not supposed to be used to match these things, just as Q-tips are not supposed to be used to clean ears.

jaytea :

Indeed! It's possible using forward references:

(?=\()(?:(?=.*?\((?!.*?\1)(.*\)(?!.*\2).*))(?=.*?\)(?!.*?\2)(.*)).)+?.*?(?=\1)[^(]*(?=\2$)

Proof

Et voila; there it is. That right there matches a full group of nested parentheses from start to end. Two substrings per match are necessarily captured and saved; these are useless to you. Just focus on the results of the main match.

No, there is no limit on depth. No, there are no recursive constructs hidden in there. Just plain ol' lookarounds, with a splash of forward referencing. If your flavour does not support forward references (I'm looking at you, JavaScript), then I'm sorry. I really am. I wish I could help you, but I'm not a freakin' miracle worker.

That's great and all, but I want to match inner groups too!

OK, here's the deal. The reason we were able to match those outer groups is because they are non-overlapping. As soon as the matches we desire begin to overlap, we must tweak our strategy somewhat. We can still inspect the subject for correctly-balanced groups of parentheses. However, instead of outright matching them, we need to save them with a capturing group like so:

(?=\()(?=((?:(?=.*?\((?!.*?\2)(.*\)(?!.*\3).*))(?=.*?\)(?!.*?\3)(.*)).)+?.*?(?=\2)[^(]*(?=\3$))) 

Exactly the same as the previous expression, except I've wrapped the bulk of it in a lookahead to avoid consuming characters, added a capturing group, and tweaked the backreference indices so they play nice with their new friend. Now the expression matches at the position just before the next parenthetical group, and the substring of interest is saved as \1.

So... how the hell does this actually work?

I'm glad you asked. The general method is quite simple: iterate through characters one at a time while simultaneously matching the next occurrences of '(' and ')', capturing the rest of the string in each case so as to establish positions from which to resume searching in the next iteration. Let me break it down piece by piece:

breakdown of regex

Conclusion

So, there you have it. A way to match balanced nested structures using forward references coupled with standard (extended) regex features - no recursion or balanced groups. It's not efficient, and it certainly isn't pretty, but it is possible. And it's never been done before. That, to me, is quite exciting.

I know a lot of you use regular expressions to accomplish and help other users accomplish simpler and more practical tasks, but if there is anyone out there who shares my excitement for pushing the limits of possibility with regex then I'd love to hear from you. If there is interest, I have other similar material to post.

Guess you like

Origin http://10.200.1.11:23101/article/api/json?id=428811&siteId=1