On 2011-04-25 17:46, Herczeg Zoltán wrote: >PCRE (PERL) uses a backtracking mechanism, which is basically a
> depth-first search. Sometimes we need to record the current status,
> because we need to restore it if an alternative fails. These
> record/restore points are the nodes of the tree, and we travese the
> child nodes in a left-to-right order. Capturing brackets are such nodes.
>Here is a simple example: (a)b|c
> If 'a' matches, we need to set the start and end index of the capturing
> bracket. If 'b' does not match however, we need to restore the capturing
> bracket before 'c' is tried. (Ok there is much more behind the scenes,
> but I think it is enough to understand the basic concept)
>So the 'recursion' term is somewhat general in this case.
>
Thanx for explanation. Not at all is clear for me about the need of so
deep recursion, but I will investigate this.
I concerns about a significant stack expense in my Windows application.
But want to keep the stack (no heap) memory usage.