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1<html>
2<head>
3<title>pcre2unicode specification</title>
4</head>
5<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
6<h1>pcre2unicode man page</h1>
7<p>
8Return to the <a href="index.html">PCRE2 index page</a>.
9</p>
10<p>
11This page is part of the PCRE2 HTML documentation. It was generated
12automatically from the original man page. If there is any nonsense in it,
13please consult the man page, in case the conversion went wrong.
14<br>
15<br><b>
16UNICODE AND UTF SUPPORT
17</b><br>
18<P>
19When PCRE2 is built with Unicode support (which is the default), it has
20knowledge of Unicode character properties and can process text strings in
21UTF-8, UTF-16, or UTF-32 format (depending on the code unit width). However, by
22default, PCRE2 assumes that one code unit is one character. To process a
23pattern as a UTF string, where a character may require more than one code unit,
24you must call
25<a href="pcre2_compile.html"><b>pcre2_compile()</b></a>
26with the PCRE2_UTF option flag, or the pattern must start with the sequence
27(*UTF). When either of these is the case, both the pattern and any subject
28strings that are matched against it are treated as UTF strings instead of
29strings of individual one-code-unit characters.
30</P>
31<P>
32If you do not need Unicode support you can build PCRE2 without it, in which
33case the library will be smaller.
34</P>
35<br><b>
36UNICODE PROPERTY SUPPORT
37</b><br>
38<P>
39When PCRE2 is built with Unicode support, the escape sequences \p{..},
40\P{..}, and \X can be used. The Unicode properties that can be tested are
41limited to the general category properties such as Lu for an upper case letter
42or Nd for a decimal number, the Unicode script names such as Arabic or Han, and
43the derived properties Any and L&. Full lists are given in the
44<a href="pcre2pattern.html"><b>pcre2pattern</b></a>
45and
46<a href="pcre2syntax.html"><b>pcre2syntax</b></a>
47documentation. Only the short names for properties are supported. For example,
48\p{L} matches a letter. Its Perl synonym, \p{Letter}, is not supported.
49Furthermore, in Perl, many properties may optionally be prefixed by "Is", for
50compatibility with Perl 5.6. PCRE does not support this.
51</P>
52<br><b>
53WIDE CHARACTERS AND UTF MODES
54</b><br>
55<P>
56Codepoints less than 256 can be specified in patterns by either braced or
57unbraced hexadecimal escape sequences (for example, \x{b3} or \xb3). Larger
58values have to use braced sequences. Unbraced octal code points up to \777 are
59also recognized; larger ones can be coded using \o{...}.
60</P>
61<P>
62In UTF modes, repeat quantifiers apply to complete UTF characters, not to
63individual code units.
64</P>
65<P>
66In UTF modes, the dot metacharacter matches one UTF character instead of a
67single code unit.
68</P>
69<P>
70The escape sequence \C can be used to match a single code unit in a UTF mode,
71but its use can lead to some strange effects because it breaks up multi-unit
72characters (see the description of \C in the
73<a href="pcre2pattern.html"><b>pcre2pattern</b></a>
74documentation).
75</P>
76<P>
77The use of \C is not supported by the alternative matching function
78<b>pcre2_dfa_match()</b> when in UTF-8 or UTF-16 mode, that is, when a character
79may consist of more than one code unit. The use of \C in these modes provokes
80a match-time error. Also, the JIT optimization does not support \C in these
81modes. If JIT optimization is requested for a UTF-8 or UTF-16 pattern that
82contains \C, it will not succeed, and so when <b>pcre2_match()</b> is called,
83the matching will be carried out by the normal interpretive function.
84</P>
85<P>
86The character escapes \b, \B, \d, \D, \s, \S, \w, and \W correctly test
87characters of any code value, but, by default, the characters that PCRE2
88recognizes as digits, spaces, or word characters remain the same set as in
89non-UTF mode, all with code points less than 256. This remains true even when
90PCRE2 is built to include Unicode support, because to do otherwise would slow
91down matching in many common cases. Note that this also applies to \b
92and \B, because they are defined in terms of \w and \W. If you want
93to test for a wider sense of, say, "digit", you can use explicit Unicode
94property tests such as \p{Nd}. Alternatively, if you set the PCRE2_UCP option,
95the way that the character escapes work is changed so that Unicode properties
96are used to determine which characters match. There are more details in the
97section on
98<a href="pcre2pattern.html#genericchartypes">generic character types</a>
99in the
100<a href="pcre2pattern.html"><b>pcre2pattern</b></a>
101documentation.
102</P>
103<P>
104Similarly, characters that match the POSIX named character classes are all
105low-valued characters, unless the PCRE2_UCP option is set.
106</P>
107<P>
108However, the special horizontal and vertical white space matching escapes (\h,
109\H, \v, and \V) do match all the appropriate Unicode characters, whether or
110not PCRE2_UCP is set.
111</P>
112<P>
113Case-insensitive matching in UTF mode makes use of Unicode properties. A few
114Unicode characters such as Greek sigma have more than two codepoints that are
115case-equivalent, and these are treated as such.
116</P>
117<br><b>
118VALIDITY OF UTF STRINGS
119</b><br>
120<P>
121When the PCRE2_UTF option is set, the strings passed as patterns and subjects
122are (by default) checked for validity on entry to the relevant functions.
123If an invalid UTF string is passed, an negative error code is returned. The
124code unit offset to the offending character can be extracted from the match
125data block by calling <b>pcre2_get_startchar()</b>, which is used for this
126purpose after a UTF error.
127</P>
128<P>
129UTF-16 and UTF-32 strings can indicate their endianness by special code knows
130as a byte-order mark (BOM). The PCRE2 functions do not handle this, expecting
131strings to be in host byte order.
132</P>
133<P>
134A UTF string is checked before any other processing takes place. In the case of
135<b>pcre2_match()</b> and <b>pcre2_dfa_match()</b> calls with a non-zero starting
136offset, the check is applied only to that part of the subject that could be
137inspected during matching, and there is a check that the starting offset points
138to the first code unit of a character or to the end of the subject. If there
139are no lookbehind assertions in the pattern, the check starts at the starting
140offset. Otherwise, it starts at the length of the longest lookbehind before the
141starting offset, or at the start of the subject if there are not that many
142characters before the starting offset. Note that the sequences \b and \B are
143one-character lookbehinds.
144</P>
145<P>
146In addition to checking the format of the string, there is a check to ensure
147that all code points lie in the range U+0 to U+10FFFF, excluding the surrogate
148area. The so-called "non-character" code points are not excluded because
149Unicode corrigendum #9 makes it clear that they should not be.
150</P>
151<P>
152Characters in the "Surrogate Area" of Unicode are reserved for use by UTF-16,
153where they are used in pairs to encode code points with values greater than
1540xFFFF. The code points that are encoded by UTF-16 pairs are available
155independently in the UTF-8 and UTF-32 encodings. (In other words, the whole
156surrogate thing is a fudge for UTF-16 which unfortunately messes up UTF-8 and
157UTF-32.)
158</P>
159<P>
160In some situations, you may already know that your strings are valid, and
161therefore want to skip these checks in order to improve performance, for
162example in the case of a long subject string that is being scanned repeatedly.
163If you set the PCRE2_NO_UTF_CHECK option at compile time or at match time,
164PCRE2 assumes that the pattern or subject it is given (respectively) contains
165only valid UTF code unit sequences.
166</P>
167<P>
168Passing PCRE2_NO_UTF_CHECK to <b>pcre2_compile()</b> just disables the check for
169the pattern; it does not also apply to subject strings. If you want to disable
170the check for a subject string you must pass this option to <b>pcre2_match()</b>
171or <b>pcre2_dfa_match()</b>.
172</P>
173<P>
174If you pass an invalid UTF string when PCRE2_NO_UTF_CHECK is set, the result
175is undefined and your program may crash or loop indefinitely.
176<a name="utf8strings"></a></P>
177<br><b>
178Errors in UTF-8 strings
179</b><br>
180<P>
181The following negative error codes are given for invalid UTF-8 strings:
182<pre>
183  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR1
184  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR2
185  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR3
186  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR4
187  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR5
188</pre>
189The string ends with a truncated UTF-8 character; the code specifies how many
190bytes are missing (1 to 5). Although RFC 3629 restricts UTF-8 characters to be
191no longer than 4 bytes, the encoding scheme (originally defined by RFC 2279)
192allows for up to 6 bytes, and this is checked first; hence the possibility of
1934 or 5 missing bytes.
194<pre>
195  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR6
196  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR7
197  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR8
198  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR9
199  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR10
200</pre>
201The two most significant bits of the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, or 6th byte of the
202character do not have the binary value 0b10 (that is, either the most
203significant bit is 0, or the next bit is 1).
204<pre>
205  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR11
206  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR12
207</pre>
208A character that is valid by the RFC 2279 rules is either 5 or 6 bytes long;
209these code points are excluded by RFC 3629.
210<pre>
211  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR13
212</pre>
213A 4-byte character has a value greater than 0x10fff; these code points are
214excluded by RFC 3629.
215<pre>
216  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR14
217</pre>
218A 3-byte character has a value in the range 0xd800 to 0xdfff; this range of
219code points are reserved by RFC 3629 for use with UTF-16, and so are excluded
220from UTF-8.
221<pre>
222  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR15
223  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR16
224  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR17
225  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR18
226  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR19
227</pre>
228A 2-, 3-, 4-, 5-, or 6-byte character is "overlong", that is, it codes for a
229value that can be represented by fewer bytes, which is invalid. For example,
230the two bytes 0xc0, 0xae give the value 0x2e, whose correct coding uses just
231one byte.
232<pre>
233  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR20
234</pre>
235The two most significant bits of the first byte of a character have the binary
236value 0b10 (that is, the most significant bit is 1 and the second is 0). Such a
237byte can only validly occur as the second or subsequent byte of a multi-byte
238character.
239<pre>
240  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF8_ERR21
241</pre>
242The first byte of a character has the value 0xfe or 0xff. These values can
243never occur in a valid UTF-8 string.
244<a name="utf16strings"></a></P>
245<br><b>
246Errors in UTF-16 strings
247</b><br>
248<P>
249The following negative error codes are given for invalid UTF-16 strings:
250<pre>
251  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF16_ERR1  Missing low surrogate at end of string
252  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF16_ERR2  Invalid low surrogate follows high surrogate
253  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF16_ERR3  Isolated low surrogate
254
255<a name="utf32strings"></a></PRE>
256</P>
257<br><b>
258Errors in UTF-32 strings
259</b><br>
260<P>
261The following negative error codes are given for invalid UTF-32 strings:
262<pre>
263  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF32_ERR1  Surrogate character (0xd800 to 0xdfff)
264  PCRE2_ERROR_UTF32_ERR2  Code point is greater than 0x10ffff
265
266</PRE>
267</P>
268<br><b>
269AUTHOR
270</b><br>
271<P>
272Philip Hazel
273<br>
274University Computing Service
275<br>
276Cambridge, England.
277<br>
278</P>
279<br><b>
280REVISION
281</b><br>
282<P>
283Last updated: 03 July 2016
284<br>
285Copyright &copy; 1997-2016 University of Cambridge.
286<br>
287<p>
288Return to the <a href="index.html">PCRE2 index page</a>.
289</p>
290