fae0b210ff
X-SVN-Rev: 12554
265 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
265 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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#*****************************************************************************
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#
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# Copyright (C) 2002-2003, International Business Machines Corporation and others.
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# All Rights Reserved.
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#
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#*****************************************************************************
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#
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# file: regexcst.txt
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# ICU Regular Expression Parser State Table
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#
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# This state table is used when reading and parsing a regular expression pattern
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# The pattern parser uses a state machine; the data in this file define the
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# state transitions that occur for each input character.
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#
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# *** This file defines the regex pattern grammar. This is it.
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# *** The determination of what is accepted is here.
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#
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# This file is processed by a perl script "regexcst.pl" to produce initialized C arrays
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# that are then built with the rule parser.
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#
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#
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# Here is the syntax of the state definitions in this file:
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#
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#
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#StateName:
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# input-char n next-state ^push-state action
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# input-char n next-state ^push-state action
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# | | | | |
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# | | | | |--- action to be performed by state machine
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# | | | | See function RBBIRuleScanner::doParseActions()
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# | | | |
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# | | | |--- Push this named state onto the state stack.
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# | | | Later, when next state is specified as "pop",
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# | | | the pushed state will become the current state.
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# | | |
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# | | |--- Transition to this state if the current input character matches the input
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# | | character or char class in the left hand column. "pop" causes the next
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# | | state to be popped from the state stack.
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# | |
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# | |--- When making the state transition specified on this line, advance to the next
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# | character from the input only if 'n' appears here.
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# |
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# |--- Character or named character classes to test for. If the current character being scanned
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# matches, peform the actions and go to the state specified on this line.
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# The input character is tested sequentally, in the order written. The characters and
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# character classes tested for do not need to be mutually exclusive. The first match wins.
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#
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#
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# start state, scan position is at the beginning of the pattern.
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#
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start:
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default term doPatStart
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#
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# term. At a position where we can accept the start most items in a pattern.
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#
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term:
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quoted n expr-quant doLiteralChar
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rule_char n expr-quant doLiteralChar
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'[' n expr-quant doScanUnicodeSet
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'(' n open-paren
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'.' n expr-quant doDotAny
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'^' n term doCaret
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'$' n term doDollar
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'\' n backslash
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'|' n term doOrOperator
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')' n pop doCloseParen
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eof term doPatFinish
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default errorDeath doRuleError
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#
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# expr-quant We've just finished scanning a term, now look for the optional
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# trailing quantifier - *, +, ?, *?, etc.
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#
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expr-quant:
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'*' n quant-star
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'+' n quant-plus
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'?' n quant-opt
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'{' n interval-open doIntervalInit
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'(' n open-paren-quant
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default expr-cont
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#
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# expr-cont Expression, continuation. At a point where additional terms are
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# allowed, but not required. No Quantifiers
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#
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expr-cont:
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'|' n term doOrOperator
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')' n pop doCloseParen
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default term
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#
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# open-paren-quant Special case handling for comments appearing before a quantifier,
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# e.g. x(?#comment )*
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# Open parens from expr-quant come here; anything but a (?# comment
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# branches into the normal parenthesis sequence as quickly as possible.
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#
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open-paren-quant:
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'?' n open-paren-quant2 doSuppressComments
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default open-paren
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open-paren-quant2:
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'#' n paren-comment ^expr-quant
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default open-paren-extended
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#
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# open-paren We've got an open paren. We need to scan further to
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# determine what kind of quantifier it is - plain (, (?:, (?>, or whatever.
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#
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open-paren:
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'?' n open-paren-extended doSuppressComments
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default term ^expr-quant doOpenCaptureParen
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open-paren-extended:
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':' n term ^expr-quant doOpenNonCaptureParen # (?:
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'>' n term ^expr-quant doOpenAtomicParen # (?>
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'=' n term ^expr-cont doOpenLookAhead # (?=
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'!' n term ^expr-cont doOpenLookAheadNeg # (?!
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'<' n open-paren-lookbehind
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'#' n paren-comment ^term
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'i' paren-flag doBeginMatchMode
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'm' paren-flag doBeginMatchMode
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's' paren-flag doBeginMatchMode
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'x' paren-flag doBeginMatchMode
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'-' paren-flag doBeginMatchMode
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'(' n errorDeath doConditionalExpr
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'{' n errorDeath doPerlInline
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default errorDeath doBadOpenParenType
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open-paren-lookbehind:
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'=' n term ^expr-cont doOpenLookBehind # (?<=
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'!' n term ^expr-cont doOpenLookBehindNeg # (?<!
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default errorDeath doBadOpenParenType
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#
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# paren-comment We've got a (?# ... ) style comment. Eat pattern text till we get to the ')'
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# TODO: should parens nest here? Check what perl does.
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#
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paren-comment:
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')' n pop
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eof errorDeath doMismatchedParenErr
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default n paren-comment
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#
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# paren-flag Scanned a (?ismx-ismx flag setting
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#
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paren-flag:
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'i' n paren-flag doMatchMode
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'm' n paren-flag doMatchMode
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's' n paren-flag doMatchMode
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'x' n paren-flag doMatchMode
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'-' n paren-flag doMatchMode
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')' n term doSetMatchMode
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':' n term ^expr-quant doMatchModeParen
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default errorDeath
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#
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# quant-star Scanning a '*' quantifier. Need to look ahead to decide
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# between plain '*', '*?', '*+'
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#
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quant-star:
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'?' n expr-cont doNGStar # *?
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'+' n expr-cont doPossessiveStar # *+
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default expr-cont doStar
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#
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# quant-plus Scanning a '+' quantifier. Need to look ahead to decide
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# between plain '+', '+?', '++'
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#
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quant-plus:
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'?' n expr-cont doNGPlus # *?
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'+' n expr-cont doPossessivePlus # *+
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default expr-cont doPlus
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#
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# quant-opt Scanning a '?' quantifier. Need to look ahead to decide
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# between plain '?', '??', '?+'
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#
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quant-opt:
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'?' n expr-cont doNGOpt # ??
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'+' n expr-cont doPossessiveOpt # ?+
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default expr-cont doOpt # ?
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#
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# Interval scanning a '{', the opening delimiter for an interval specification
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# {number} or {min, max} or {min, }
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#
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interval-open:
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white_space n interval-open # TODO: is white space allowed here in non-free mode?
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digit_char interval-lower
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default errorDeath doIntervalError
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interval-lower:
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digit_char n interval-lower doIntevalLowerDigit
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',' n interval-upper
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'}' n interval-type doIntervalSame # {n}
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default errorDeath doIntervalError
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interval-upper:
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digit_char n interval-upper doIntervalUpperDigit
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'}' n interval-type
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default errorDeath doIntervalError
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interval-type:
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'?' n expr-cont doNGInterval # {n,m}?
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'+' n expr-cont doPossessiveInterval # {n,m}+
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default expr-cont doInterval # {m,n}
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#
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# backslash # Backslash. Figure out which of the \thingies we have encountered.
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# The low level next-char function will have preprocessed
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# some of them already; those won't come here.
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backslash:
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'A' n term doBackslashA
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'B' n term doBackslashB
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'b' n term doBackslashb
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'd' n expr-quant doBackslashd
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'D' n expr-quant doBackslashD
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'G' n term doBackslashG
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'N' expr-quant doProperty # \N{NAME} named char
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'p' expr-quant doProperty # \p{Lu} style property
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'P' expr-quant doProperty
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'Q' n term doEnterQuoteMode
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'S' n expr-quant doBackslashS
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's' n expr-quant doBackslashs
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'W' n expr-quant doBackslashW
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'w' n expr-quant doBackslashw
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'X' n expr-quant doBackslashX
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'Z' n term doBackslashZ
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'z' n term doBackslashz
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digit_char n expr-quant doBackRef # Will scan multiple digits
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eof errorDeath doEscapeError
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default n expr-quant doLiteralChar # Escaped literal char.
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#
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# errorDeath. This state is specified as the next state whenever a syntax error
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# in the source rules is detected. Barring bugs, the state machine will never
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# actually get here, but will stop because of the action associated with the error.
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# But, just in case, this state asks the state machine to exit.
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errorDeath:
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default n errorDeath doExit
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