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KDL Spec

This is the semi-formal specification for KDL, including the intended data model and the grammar.

This document describes KDL version 2.0.0-draft.8. It was released on 2024-12-14.

Compatibility

KDL v2 is designed such that for any given KDL document written as KDL 1.0 or KDL 2.0, the parse will either fail completely, or, if the parse succeeds, the data represented by a v1 or v2 parser will be identical. This means that it's safe to use a fallback parsing strategy in order to support both v1 and v2 simultaneously. For example, node "foo" is a valid node in both versions, and should be represented identically by parsers.

Introduction

KDL is a node-oriented document language. Its niche and purpose overlaps with XML, and as do many of its semantics. You can use KDL both as a configuration language, and a data exchange or storage format, if you so choose.

The bulk of this document is dedicated to a long-form description of all Components of a KDL document. There is also a much more terse Grammar at the end of the document that covers most of the rules, with some semantic exceptions involving the data model.

KDL is designed to be easy to read and easy to implement.

In this document, references to "left" or "right" refer to directions in the data stream towards the beginning or end, respectively; in other words, the directions if the data stream were only ASCII text. They do not refer to the writing direction of text, which can flow in either direction, depending on the characters used.

Components

Document

The toplevel concept of KDL is a Document. A Document is composed of zero or more Nodes, separated by newlines and whitespace, and eventually terminated by an EOF.

All KDL documents should be UTF-8 encoded and conform to the specifications in this document.

Example

The following is a document composed of two toplevel nodes:

foo {
    bar
}
baz

Node

Being a node-oriented language means that the real core component of any KDL document is the "node". Every node must have a name, which must be a String.

The name may be preceded by a Type Annotation to further clarify its type, particularly in relation to its parent node. (For example, clarifying that a particular date child node is for the publication date, rather than the last-modified date, with (published)date.)

Following the name are zero or more Arguments or Properties, separated by either whitespace or a slash-escaped line continuation. Arguments and Properties may be interspersed in any order, much like is common with positional arguments vs options in command line tools. Collectively, Arguments and Properties may be referred to as "Entries".

Children can be placed after the name and the optional Entries, possibly separated by either whitespace or a slash-escaped line continuation.

Arguments are ordered relative to each other and that order must be preserved in order to maintain the semantics. Properties between Arguments do not affect Argument ordering.

By contrast, Properties SHOULD NOT be assumed to be presented in a given order. Children should be used if an order-sensitive key/value data structure must be represented in KDL. Cf. JSON objects preserving key order.

Nodes MAY be prefixed with Slashdash to "comment out" the entire node, including its properties, arguments, and children, and make it act as plain whitespace, even if it spreads across multiple lines.

Finally, a node is terminated by either a Newline, a semicolon (;), the end of a child block (}) or the end of the file/stream (an EOF).

Example

// `foo` will have an Argument value list like `[1, 3]`.
foo 1 key=val 3 {
    bar
    (role)baz 1 2
}

Line Continuation

Line continuations allow Nodes to be spread across multiple lines.

A line continuation is a \ character followed by zero or more whitespace items (including multiline comments) and an optional single-line comment. It must be terminated by a Newline (including the Newline that is part of single-line comments).

Following a line continuation, processing of a Node can continue as usual.

Example

my-node 1 2 \  // comments are ok after \
        3 4    // This is the actual end of the Node.

Property

A Property is a key/value pair attached to a Node. A Property is composed of a String, followed immediately by an equals sign (=, U+003D), and then a Value.

Properties should be interpreted left-to-right, with rightmost properties with identical names overriding earlier properties. That is:

node a=1 a=2

In this example, the node's a value must be 2, not 1.

No other guarantees about order should be expected by implementers. Deserialized representations may iterate over properties in any order and still be spec-compliant.

Properties MAY be prefixed with /- to "comment out" the entire token and make it act as plain whitespace, even if it spreads across multiple lines.

Argument

An Argument is a bare Value attached to a Node, with no associated key. It shares the same space as Properties, and may be interleaved with them.

A Node may have any number of Arguments, which should be evaluated left to right. KDL implementations MUST preserve the order of Arguments relative to each other (not counting Properties).

Arguments MAY be prefixed with /- to "comment out" the entire token and make it act as plain whitespace, even if it spreads across multiple lines.

Example

my-node 1 2 3 a b c

Children Block

A children block is a block of Nodes, surrounded by { and }. They are an optional part of nodes, and create a hierarchy of KDL nodes.

Regular node termination rules apply, which means multiple nodes can be included in a single-line children block, as long as they're all terminated by ;.

Example

parent {
    child1
    child2
}

parent { child1; child2; }

Value

A value is either: a String, a Number, a Boolean, or Null.

Values MUST be either Arguments or values of Properties. Only String values may be used as Node names or Property keys.

Values (both as arguments and in properties) MAY be prefixed by a single Type Annotation.

Type Annotation

A type annotation is a prefix to any Node Name or Value that includes a suggestion of what type the value is intended to be treated as, or as a context-specific elaboration of the more generic type the node name indicates.

Type annotations are written as a set of ( and ) with a single String in it. It may contain Whitespace after the ( and before the ), and may be separated from its target by Whitespace.

KDL does not specify any restrictions on what implementations might do with these annotations. They are free to ignore them, or use them to make decisions about how to interpret a value.

Additionally, the following type annotations MAY be recognized by KDL parsers and, if used, SHOULD interpret these types as follows:

Reserved Type Annotations for Numbers Without Decimals:

Signed integers of various sizes (the number is the bit size):

  • i8
  • i16
  • i32
  • i64
  • i128

Unsigned integers of various sizes (the number is the bit size):

  • u8
  • u16
  • u32
  • u64
  • u128

Platform-dependent integer types, both signed and unsigned:

  • isize
  • usize

Reserved Type Annotations for Numbers With Decimals:

IEEE 754 floating point numbers, both single (32) and double (64) precision:

  • f32
  • f64

IEEE 754-2008 decimal floating point numbers

  • decimal64
  • decimal128

Reserved Type Annotations for Strings:

  • date-time: ISO8601 date/time format.
  • time: "Time" section of ISO8601.
  • date: "Date" section of ISO8601.
  • duration: ISO8601 duration format.
  • decimal: IEEE 754-2008 decimal string format.
  • currency: ISO 4217 currency code.
  • country-2: ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code.
  • country-3: ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 country code.
  • country-subdivision: ISO 3166-2 country subdivision code.
  • email: RFC5322 email address.
  • idn-email: RFC6531 internationalized email address.
  • hostname: RFC1132 internet hostname (only ASCII segments)
  • idn-hostname: RFC5890 internationalized internet hostname (only xn---prefixed ASCII "punycode" segments, or non-ASCII segments)
  • ipv4: RFC2673 dotted-quad IPv4 address.
  • ipv6: RFC2373 IPv6 address.
  • url: RFC3986 URI.
  • url-reference: RFC3986 URI Reference.
  • irl: RFC3987 Internationalized Resource Identifier.
  • irl-reference: RFC3987 Internationalized Resource Identifier Reference.
  • url-template: RFC6570 URI Template.
  • uuid: RFC4122 UUID.
  • regex: Regular expression. Specific patterns may be implementation-dependent.
  • base64: A Base64-encoded string, denoting arbitrary binary data.

Examples

node (u8)123
node prop=(regex).*
(published)date "1970-01-01"
(contributor)person name="Foo McBar"

String

Strings in KDL represent textual UTF-8 Values. A String is either an Identifier String (like foo), a Quoted String (like "foo") or a Multi-Line String. Both Quoted and Multiline strings come in normal and Raw String variants (like #"foo"#):

  • Identifier Strings let you write short, "single-word" strings with a minimum of syntax
  • Quoted Strings let you write strings "like normal", with whitespace and escapes.
  • Multi-Line Strings let you write strings across multiple lines and with indentation that's not part of the string value.
  • Raw Strings don't allow any escapes, allowing you to not worry about the string's content containing anything that might look like an escape.

Strings MUST be represented as UTF-8 values.

Strings MUST NOT include the code points for disallowed literal code points directly. Quoted and Multi-Line Strings may include these code points as values by representing them with their corresponding \u{...} escape.

Identifier String

An Identifier String (sometimes referred to as just an "identifier") is composed of any Unicode Scalar Value other than non-initial characters, followed by any number of Unicode Scalar Values other than non-identifier characters.

A handful of patterns are disallowed, to avoid confusion with other values:

  • idents that appear to start with a Number (like 1.0v2 or -1em) or the "almost a number" pattern of a decimal point without a leading digit (like .1).
  • idents that are the language keywords (inf, -inf, nan, true, false, and null) without their leading #.

Identifiers that match these patterns MUST be treated as a syntax error; such values can only be written as quoted or raw strings. The precise details of the identifier syntax is specified in the Full Grammar below.

Identifier Strings are terminated by Whitespace or Newlines.

Non-initial characters

The following characters cannot be the first character in an Identifier String:

Additionally, the - character can only be used as an initial character if the second character is not a digit. This allows identifiers to look like --this, and removes the ambiguity of having an identifier look like a negative number.

Non-identifier characters

The following characters cannot be used anywhere in a Identifier String:

Quoted String

A Quoted String is delimited by " on either side of any number of literal string characters except unescaped " and \.

Literal Newline characters can only be included if they are Escaped Whitespace, which discards them from the string value. Actually including a newline in the value requires using a newline escape sequence, like \n, or using a Multi-Line String which is actually designed for strings stretching across multiple lines.

Like Identifier Strings, Quoted Strings MUST NOT include any of the disallowed literal code-points as code points in their body.

Quoted Strings have a Raw String variant, which disallows escapes.

Escapes

In addition to literal code points, a number of "escapes" are supported in Quoted Strings. "Escapes" are the character \ followed by another character, and are interpreted as described in the following table:

Name Escape Code Pt
Line Feed \n U+000A
Carriage Return \r U+000D
Character Tabulation (Tab) \t U+0009
Reverse Solidus (Backslash) \\ U+005C
Quotation Mark (Double Quote) \" U+0022
Backspace \b U+0008
Form Feed \f U+000C
Space \s U+0020
Unicode Escape \u{(1-6 hex chars)} Code point described by hex characters, as long as it represents a Unicode Scalar Value
Whitespace Escape See below N/A
Escaped Whitespace

In addition to escaping individual characters, \ can also escape whitespace. When a \ is followed by one or more literal whitespace characters, the \ and all of that whitespace are discarded. For example, "Hello World" and "Hello \ World" are semantically identical. See whitespace and newlines for how whitespace is defined.

Note that only literal whitespace is escaped; whitespace escapes (\n and such) are retained. For example, these strings are all semantically identical:

"Hello\       \nWorld"

    "Hello\n\
    World"

"Hello\nWorld"

"""
  Hello
  World
  """
Invalid escapes

Except as described in the escapes table, above, \ MUST NOT precede any other characters in a string.

Multi-line String

Multi-Line Strings support multiple lines with literal, non-escaped Newlines. They must use a special multi-line syntax, and they automatically "dedent" the string, allowing its value to be indented to a visually matching level as desired.

A Multi-Line String is opened and closed by three double-quote characters, like """. Its first line MUST immediately start with a Newline after its opening """. Its final line MUST contain only whitespace before the closing """. All in-between lines that contain non-newline, non-whitespace characters MUST start with at least the exact same whitespace as the final line (precisely matching codepoints, not merely counting characters or "size"); they may contain additional whitespace following this prefix. The lines in between may contain unescaped " (but no unescaped """ as this would close the string).

The value of the Multi-Line String omits the first and last Newline, the Whitespace of the last line, and the matching Whitespace prefix on all intermediate lines. The first and last Newline can be the same character (that is, empty multi-line strings are legal).

In other words, the final line specifies the whitespace prefix that will be removed from all other lines.

Multi-line Strings that do not immediately start with a Newline and whose final """ is not preceeded by optional whitespace and a Newline are illegal. This also means that """ may not be used for a single-line String (e.g. """foo""").

Newline Normalization

Literal Newline sequences in Multi-line Strings must be normalized to a single U+000A (LF) during deserialization. This means, for example, that CR LF becomes a single LF during parsing.

This normalization does not apply to non-literal Newlines entered using escape sequences. That is:

multi-line """
    \r\n[CRLF]
    foo[CRLF]
    """

becomes:

single-line "\r\n\nfoo"

For clarity: this normalization applies to each individual Newline sequence. That is, the literal sequence CRLF CRLF becomes LF LF, not LF.

Example

multi-line """
        foo
    This is the base indentation
            bar
    """

This example's string value will be:

    foo
This is the base indentation
        bar

which is equivalent to " foo\nThis is the base indentation\n bar" when written as a single-line string.


If the last line wasn't indented as far, it won't dedent the rest of the lines as much:

multi-line """
        foo
    This is no longer on the left edge
            bar
  """

This example's string value will be:

      foo
  This is no longer on the left edge
          bar

Equivalent to " foo\n This is no longer on the left edge\n bar".


Empty lines can contain any whitespace, or none at all, and will be reflected as empty in the value:

multi-line """
    Indented a bit

    A second indented paragraph.
    """

This example's string value will be:

Indented a bit.

A second indented paragraph.

Equivalent to "Indented a bit.\n\nA second indented paragraph."


The following yield syntax errors:

multi-line """can't be single line"""
multi-line """
  closing quote with non-whitespace prefix"""
multi-line """stuff
  """
// Every line must share the exact same prefix as the closing line.
multi-line """[\n]
[tab]a[\n]
[space][space]b[\n]
[space][tab][\n]
[tab]"""

Interaction with Whitespace Escapes

Multi-line strings support the same mechanism for escaping whitespace as Quoted Strings. When processing a Multi-line String, implementations MUST dedent the string after resolving all whitespace escapes, but before resolving other backslash escapes. Furthermore, a whitespace escape that attempts to escape the final line's newline and/or whitespace prefix is invalid since the multi-line string has to still be valid with the escaped whitespace removed.

For example, the following example is illegal:

  // Equivalent to trying to write a string containing `foo\nbar\`.
  """
  foo
  bar\
  """

while the following example is allowed

  """
  foo \
bar
  baz
  \   """
  
  // equivalent to
  """
  foo bar
  baz
  """

Raw String

Both Quoted and Multi-Line Strings have Raw String variants, which are identical in syntax except they do not support \-escapes. They otherwise share the same properties as far as literal Newline characters go, multi-line rules, and the requirement of UTF-8 representation.

The Raw String variants are indicated by preceding the strings's opening quotes with one or more # characters. The string is then closed by its normal closing quotes, followed by a matching number of # characters. This means that the string may contain any combination of " and # characters other than its closing delimiter (e.g., if a raw string starts with ##", it can contain " or "#, but not "## or "###).

Like other Strings, Raw Strings MUST NOT include any of the disallowed literal code-points as code points in their body. Unlike with Quoted Strings, these cannot simply be escaped, and are thus unrepresentable when using Raw Strings.

Example

just-escapes #"\n will be literal"#

The string contains the literal characters \n will be literal.

quotes-and-escapes ##"hello\n\r\asd"#world"##

The string contains the literal characters hello\n\r\asd"#world

raw-multi-line #"""
    You can show examples of """
        multi-line strings
        """
    without worrying about escapes.
    """#

The string contains the value

You can show examples of """
    multi-line strings
    """
without worrying about escapes.

or equivalently, "You can show examples of \"\"\"\n multi-line strings\n \"\"\"\nwithout worrying about escapes." as a Quoted String.

Number

Numbers in KDL represent numerical Values. There is no logical distinction in KDL between real numbers, integers, and floating point numbers. It's up to individual implementations to determine how to represent KDL numbers.

There are five syntaxes for Numbers: Keywords, Decimal, Hexadecimal, Octal, and Binary.

  • All non-Keyword numbers may optionally start with one of - or +, which determine whether they'll be positive or negative.
  • Binary numbers start with 0b and only allow 0 and 1 as digits, which may be separated by _. They represent numbers in radix 2.
  • Octal numbers start with 0o and only allow digits between 0 and 7, which may be separated by _. They represent numbers in radix 8.
  • Hexadecimal numbers start with 0x and allow digits between 0 and 9, as well as letters A through F, in either lower or upper case, which may be separated by _. They represent numbers in radix 16.
  • Decimal numbers are a bit more special:
    • They have no radix prefix.
    • They use digits 0 through 9, which may be separated by _.
    • They may optionally include a decimal separator ., followed by more digits, which may again be separated by _.
    • They may optionally be followed by E or e, an optional - or +, and more digits, to represent an exponent value.

Note that, similar to JSON and some other languages, numbers without an integer digit (such as .1) are illegal. They must be written with at least one integer digit, like 0.1. (These patterns are also disallowed from Identifier Strings, to avoid confusion.)

Keyword Numbers

There are three special "keyword" numbers included in KDL to accomodate the widespread use of IEEE 754 floats:

  • #inf - floating point positive infinity.
  • #-inf - floating point negative infinity.
  • #nan - floating point NaN/Not a Number.

To go along with this and prevent foot guns, the bare Identifier Strings inf, -inf, and nan are considered illegal identifiers and should yield a syntax error.

The existence of these keywords does not imply that any numbers be represented as IEEE 754 floats. These are simply for clarity and convenience for any implementation that chooses to represent their numbers in this way.

Boolean

A boolean Value is either the symbol #true or #false. These SHOULD be represented by implementation as boolean logical values, or some approximation thereof.

Example

my-node #true value=#false

Null

The symbol #null represents a null Value. It's up to the implementation to decide how to represent this, but it generally signals the "absence" of a value.

Example

my-node #null key=#null

Whitespace

The following characters should be treated as non-Newline white space:

Name Code Pt
Character Tabulation U+0009
Line Tabulation U+000B
Space U+0020
No-Break Space U+00A0
Ogham Space Mark U+1680
En Quad U+2000
Em Quad U+2001
En Space U+2002
Em Space U+2003
Three-Per-Em Space U+2004
Four-Per-Em Space U+2005
Six-Per-Em Space U+2006
Figure Space U+2007
Punctuation Space U+2008
Thin Space U+2009
Hair Space U+200A
Narrow No-Break Space U+202F
Medium Mathematical Space U+205F
Ideographic Space U+3000

Single-line comments

Any text after //, until the next literal Newline is "commented out", and is considered to be Whitespace.

Multi-line comments

In addition to single-line comments using //, comments can also be started with /* and ended with */. These comments can span multiple lines. They are allowed in all positions where Whitespace is allowed and can be nested.

Slashdash comments

Finally, a special kind of comment called a "slashdash", denoted by /-, can be used to comment out entire components of a KDL document logically, and have those elements not be included as part of the parsed document data.

Slashdash comments can be used before the following, including before their type annotations, if present:

  • A Node: the entire Node is treated as Whitespace, including all props, args, and children.
  • An Argument: the Argument value is treated as Whitespace.
  • A Property key: the entire property, including both key and value, is treated as Whitespace. A slashdash of just the property value is not allowed.
  • A Children Block: the entire block, including all children within, is treated as Whitespace. Only other children blocks, whether slashdashed or not, may follow a slashdashed children block.

A slashdash may be be followed by any amount of whitespace, including newlines and comments (other than other slashdashes), before the element that it comments out.

Newline

The following character sequences should be treated as new lines:

Acronym Name Code Pt
CRLF Carriage Return and Line Feed U+000D + U+000A
CR Carriage Return U+000D
LF Line Feed U+000A
NEL Next Line U+0085
FF Form Feed U+000C
LS Line Separator U+2028
PS Paragraph Separator U+2029

Note that for the purpose of new lines, the specific sequence CRLF is considered a single newline.

Disallowed Literal Code Points

The following code points may not appear literally anywhere in the document. They may be represented in Strings (but not Raw Strings) using Unicode Escapes (\u{...}).

  • The codepoints U+0000-0008 or the codepoints U+000E-001F (various control characters).
  • U+007F (the Delete control character).
  • Any codepoint that is not a Unicode Scalar Value (U+D800-DFFF).
  • U+200E-200F, U+202A-202E, and U+2066-2069, the unicode "direction control" characters
  • U+FEFF, aka Zero-width Non-breaking Space (ZWNBSP)/Byte Order Mark (BOM), except as the first code point in a document.

Full Grammar

This is the full official grammar for KDL and should be considered authoritative if something seems to disagree with the text above. The grammar language syntax is defined below.

document := bom? nodes

// Nodes
nodes := (line-space* node)* line-space*

base-node := slashdash? type? node-space* string
      (node-space+ slashdash? node-prop-or-arg)*
      // slashdashed node-children must always be after props and args.
      (node-space+ slashdash node-children)*
      (node-space+ node-children)?
      (node-space+ slashdash node-children)*
      node-space*
node := base-node node-terminator
final-node := base-node node-terminator?

// Entries
node-prop-or-arg := prop | value
node-children := '{' nodes final-node? '}'
node-terminator := single-line-comment | newline | ';' | eof

prop := string node-space* '=' node-space* value
value := type? node-space* (string | number | keyword)
type := '(' node-space* string node-space* ')'

// Strings
string := identifier-string | quoted-string | raw-string ¶

identifier-string := unambiguous-ident | signed-ident | dotted-ident
unambiguous-ident := ((identifier-char - digit - sign - '.') identifier-char*) - disallowed-keyword-strings
signed-ident := sign ((identifier-char - digit - '.') identifier-char*)?
dotted-ident := sign? '.' ((identifier-char - digit) identifier-char*)?
identifier-char := unicode - unicode-space - newline - [\\/(){};\[\]"#=] - disallowed-literal-code-points - equals-sign
disallowed-keyword-identifiers := 'true' - 'false' - 'null' - 'inf' - '-inf' - 'nan'

quoted-string := '"' single-line-string-body '"' | '"""' newline multi-line-string-body newline unicode-space* '"""'
single-line-string-body := (string-character - newline)*
multi-line-string-body := (('"' | '""')? string-character)*
string-character := '\' escape | [^\\"] - disallowed-literal-code-points
escape := ["\\bfnrts] | 'u{' hex-digit{1, 6} '}' | (unicode-space | newline)+
hex-digit := [0-9a-fA-F]

raw-string := '#' raw-string-quotes '#' | '#' raw-string '#'
raw-string-quotes := '"' single-line-raw-string-body '"' | '"""' newline multi-line-raw-string-body '"""'
single-line-raw-string-body := '' | (single-line-raw-string-char - '"') single-line-raw-string-char*? | '"' (single-line-raw-string-char - '"') single-line-raw-string-char*?
single-line-raw-string-char := unicode - newline - disallowed-literal-code-points
multi-line-raw-string-body := (unicode - disallowed-literal-code-points)*?

// Numbers
number := keyword-number | hex | octal | binary | decimal

decimal := sign? integer ('.' integer)? exponent?
exponent := ('e' | 'E') sign? integer
integer := digit (digit | '_')*
digit := [0-9]
sign := '+' | '-'

hex := sign? '0x' hex-digit (hex-digit | '_')*
octal := sign? '0o' [0-7] [0-7_]*
binary := sign? '0b' ('0' | '1') ('0' | '1' | '_')*

// Keywords and booleans.
keyword := boolean | '#null'
keyword-number := '#inf' | '#-inf' | '#nan'
boolean := '#true' | '#false'

// Specific code points
bom := '\u{FEFF}'
disallowed-literal-code-points := See Table (Disallowed Literal Code Points)
unicode := Any Unicode Scalar Value
unicode-space := See Table (All White_Space unicode characters which are not `newline`)

// Comments
single-line-comment := '//' ^newline* (newline | eof)
multi-line-comment := '/*' commented-block
commented-block := '*/' | (multi-line-comment | '*' | '/' | [^*/]+) commented-block
slashdash := '/-' (node-space | line-space)*

// Whitespace
ws := unicode-space | multi-line-comment
escline := '\\' ws* (single-line-comment | newline | eof)
newline := See Table (All Newline White_Space)
// Whitespace where newlines are allowed.
line-space := newline | ws | single-line-comment
// Whitespace within nodes, where newline-ish things must be esclined.
node-space := ws* escline ws* | ws+

Grammar language

The grammar language syntax is a combination of ABNF with some regex spice thrown in. Specifically:

  • Single quotes (') are used to denote literal text. \ within a literal string is used for escaping other single-quotes, for initiating unicode characters using hex values (\u{FEFF}), and for escaping \ itself (\\).
  • * is used for "zero or more", + is used for "one or more", and ? is used for "zero or one". Per standard regex semantics, * and + are greedy; they match as many instances as possible without failing the match.
  • *? (used only in raw strings) indicates a non-greedy match; it matches as few instances as possible without failing the match.
  • is a cut point. It always matches and consumes no characters, but once matched, the parser is not allowed to backtrack past that point in the source. If a parser would rewind past the cut point, it must instead fail the overall parse, as if it had run out of options. (This is only used with the raw-string production, to ensure the first instance of the appropriate closing quote sequence is guaranteed to be the end of the raw string, rather than allowing it to potentially consume more of the document unexpectedly.)
  • () can be used to group matches that must be matched together.
  • a | b means a or b, whichever matches first. If multiple items are before a |, they are a single group. a b c | d is equivalent to (a b c) | d.
  • [] are used for regex-style character matches, where any character between the brackets will be a single match. \ is used to escape \, [, and ]. They also support character ranges (0-9), and negation (^)
  • - is used for "except for" or "minus" whatever follows it. For example, a - 'x' means "any a, except something that matches the literal 'x'".
  • The prefix ^ means "something that does not match" whatever follows it. For example, ^foo means "must not match foo".
  • A single definition may be split over multiple lines. Newlines are treated as spaces.
  • // followed by text on its own line is used as comment syntax.