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.net - How do a{n}? and a{n} differ?

I'm trying to understand the following regular expression quantifier (a is just an exemplary token here):

a{n}?

How does the question mark affect the match of the above expression? And how does it differ from the following?

a{n}

I would have expected the pattern aa{1}?a to match both aaa and aa for example. While it matches aaa, aa is not a match. The pattern a(a{1})?a does match both, so the parentheses do make a difference here.


Note: The msdn article Quantifiers in Regular Expressions states for both:

The {n} quantifier matches the preceding element exactly n times, where n is any integer.

For {n}?, it adds the following, not overly helpful part:

It is the lazy counterpart of the greedy quantifier {n}+.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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Nothing. The article states:

The {n} quantifier matches the preceding element exactly n times, where n is any integer. {n} is a greedy quantifier whose lazy equivalent is {n}?.

The {n}? quantifier matches the preceding element exactly n times, where n is any integer. It is the lazy counterpart of the greedy quantifier {n}+.

Notice the text is exactly the same. Basically, adding ? does not change the behavior of the quantifier. It appears that .NET's regular expression engine supports {n}? as a alternative to {n}.


Interestingly, this article does appear to contain an error:

The {n,} quantifier matches the preceding element at least n times, where n is any integer. {n,} is a greedy quantifier whose lazy equivalent is {n}?.

This is wrong. The lazy equivalent of {n,} is {n,}? which is not the same as {n}?.


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