Text::ParseWords - parse text into an array of tokens or array of arrays
Contents
Copyright And License
This library is free software; you may redistribute and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.40.1 2025-07-27 Text::ParseWords(3perl)
Description
The nested_quotewords() and quotewords() functions accept a delimiter (which can be a regular expression)
and a list of lines and then breaks those lines up into a list of words ignoring delimiters that appear
inside quotes. quotewords() returns all of the tokens in a single long list, while nested_quotewords()
returns a list of token lists corresponding to the elements of @lines. parse_line() does tokenizing on a
single string. The *quotewords() functions simply call parse_line(), so if you're only splitting one
line you can call parse_line() directly and save a function call.
The $keep controls what happens with delimters and special characters:
true
If true, then the tokens are split on the specified delimiter, but all other characters (including
quotes and backslashes) are kept in the tokens.
false
If $keep is false then the *quotewords() functions remove all quotes and backslashes that are not
themselves backslash-escaped or inside of single quotes (i.e., quotewords() tries to interpret these
characters just like the Bourne shell). NB: these semantics are significantly different from the
original version of this module shipped with Perl 5.000 through 5.004.
"delimiters"
As an additional feature, $keep may be the keyword "delimiters" which causes the functions to
preserve the delimiters in each string as tokens in the token lists, in addition to preserving quote
and backslash characters.
shellwords() is written as a special case of quotewords(), and it does token parsing with whitespace as a
delimiter-- similar to most Unix shells.
Examples
The sample program:
use Text::ParseWords;
@words = quotewords('\s+', 0, q{this is "a test" of\ quotewords \"for you});
$i = 0;
foreach (@words) {
print "$i: <$_>\n";
$i++;
}
produces:
0: <this>
1: <is>
2: <a test>
3: <of quotewords>
4: <"for>
5: <you>
demonstrating:
0 a simple word
1 multiple spaces are skipped because of our $delim
2 use of quotes to include a space in a word
3 use of a backslash to include a space in a word
4 use of a backslash to remove the special meaning of a double-quote
5 another simple word (note the lack of effect of the backslashed double-quote)
Replacing "quotewords('\s+', 0, q{this is...})" with "shellwords(q{this is...})" is a simpler way to
accomplish the same thing.
Name
Text::ParseWords - parse text into an array of tokens or array of arrays
See Also
Text::CSV - for parsing CSV files
Synopsis
use Text::ParseWords;
@lists = nested_quotewords($delim, $keep, @lines);
@words = quotewords($delim, $keep, @lines);
@words = shellwords(@lines);
@words = parse_line($delim, $keep, $line);
@words = old_shellwords(@lines); # DEPRECATED!
