1 |
The perltest program
|
2 |
--------------------
|
3 |
|
4 |
The perltest program tests Perl's regular expressions; it has the same
|
5 |
specification as pcretest, and so can be given identical input, except that
|
6 |
input patterns can be followed only by Perl's lower case modifiers and /+ (as
|
7 |
used by pcretest), which is recognized and handled by the program.
|
8 |
|
9 |
The data lines are processed as Perl double-quoted strings, so if they contain
|
10 |
" \ $ or @ characters, these have to be escaped. For this reason, all such
|
11 |
characters in testinput1 and testinput3 are escaped so that they can be used
|
12 |
for perltest as well as for pcretest, and the special upper case modifiers such
|
13 |
as /A that pcretest recognizes are not used in these files. The output should
|
14 |
be identical, apart from the initial identifying banner.
|
15 |
|
16 |
For testing UTF-8 features, an alternative form of perltest, called perltest8,
|
17 |
is supplied. This requires Perl 5.6 or higher. It recognizes the special
|
18 |
modifier /8 that pcretest uses to invoke UTF-8 functionality. The testinput5
|
19 |
file can be fed to perltest8.
|
20 |
|
21 |
The testinput2 and testinput4 files are not suitable for feeding to perltest,
|
22 |
since they do make use of the special upper case modifiers and escapes that
|
23 |
pcretest uses to test some features of PCRE. The first of these files also
|
24 |
contains malformed regular expressions, in order to check that PCRE diagnoses
|
25 |
them correctly. Similarly, testinput6 tests UTF-8 features that do not relate
|
26 |
to Perl.
|
27 |
|
28 |
Philip Hazel <ph10@cam.ac.uk>
|
29 |
August 2000
|