
regex - How .* (dot star) works? - Stack Overflow
Oct 1, 2012 · In Regex, . refers to any character, be it a number, an aplhabet character, or any other special character. * means zero or more times.
regex - Carets in Regular Expressions - Stack Overflow
Jun 1, 2017 · Specifically when does ^ mean "match start" and when does it mean "not the following" in regular expressions? From the Wikipedia article and other references, I've …
Regex: ?: notation (Question mark and colon notation)
Dec 8, 2018 · The regex compiles fine, and there are already JUnit tests that show how it works. It's just that I'm a bit confused about why the first question mark and colon are there.
regex - What are ^.* and .*$ in regular expressions? - Stack Overflow
In case it is JS it indicates the start and end of the regex, like quotes for strings. stackoverflow.com/questions/15661969/…
regex - Question marks in regular expressions - Stack Overflow
Apr 7, 2011 · I'm reading the regular expressions reference and I'm thinking about ? and ?? characters. Could you explain me with some examples their usefulness? I don't understand …
regex - Regular Expressions: Is there an AND operator? - Stack …
In regex in general, ^ is negation only at the beginning of a character class. Unless CMake is doing something really funky (to the point where calling their pattern matching language …
regex - Regular Expressions- Match Anything - Stack Overflow
Normally the dot matches any character except newlines. So if .* isn't working, set the "dot matches newlines, too" option (or use (?s).*). If you're using JavaScript, which doesn't have a …
regex - Match linebreaks - \n or \r\n? - Stack Overflow
While writing this answer, I had to match exclusively on linebreaks instead of using the s-flag (dotall - dot matches linebreaks). The sites usually used to test regular expressions behave …
OR condition in Regex - Stack Overflow
Apr 13, 2013 · Note that your regex would have worked too if it was written as \d \w|\d instead of \d|\d \w. This is because in your case, once the regex matches the first option, \d, it ceases to …
Regex that accepts only numbers (0-9) and NO characters
By putting ^ at the beginning of your regex and $ at the end, you ensure that no other characters are allowed before or after your regex. For example, the regex [0-9] matches the strings "9" as …