What's the difference between /\p{Alpha}/i and /\p{L}/i in ruby?

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伪装坚强ぢ 2021-01-05 02:05

I\'m trying to build a regexp in ruby to match alpha characters in UTF-8 like ñíóúü, etc. I know /\\p{Alpha}/i works and /\\p{L}/i wor

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  • 2021-01-05 02:54

    They seem to be equivalent. (Edit: sometimes, see the end of this answer)

    It seems like Ruby supports \p{Alpha} since version 1.9. In POSIX \p{Alpha} is equal to \p{L&} (for regular expressions with Unicode support; see here). This matches all characters that have an upper and lower case variant (see here). Unicase letters would not be matched (while they would be match by \p{L}.

    This does not seem to be true for Ruby (I picked a random Arabic character, since Arabic has a unicase alphabet):

    • \p{L} (any letter) matches.
    • Case-sensitive classes \p{Lu}, \p{Ll}, \p{Lt} don't match. As expected.
    • p{L&} doesn't match. As expected.
    • \p{Alpha} matches.

    Which seems to be a very good indication that \p{Alpha} is just an alias for \p{L} in Ruby. On Rubular you can also see that \p{Alpha} was not available in Ruby 1.8.7.

    Note that the i modifier is irrelevant in any case, because both \p{Alpha} and \p{L} match both upper- and lower-case characters anyway.

    EDIT:

    A ha, there is a difference! I just found this PDF about Ruby's new regex engine (in use as of Ruby 1.9 as stated above). \p{Alpha} is available regardless of encoding (and will probably just match [A-Za-z] if there is no Unicode support), while \p{L} is specifically a Unicode property. That means, \p{Alpha} behaves exactly as in POSIX regexes, with the difference that here is corresponds to \p{L}, but in POSIX it corresponds to \p{L&}.

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