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  • perl: generating permutations from a regular expression

    - by wibble
    I know you can generate all permutations from a list, using glob or Algorithm::Permute for example - but how do you generate all possible permutations from a regular expression? i want to do like: @perms = permute( "/\s[A-Z][0-9][0-9]/" ); sub permute( $regex ) { # code - put all permutations of above regex in a list return @list; }

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  • how to find all occurrences in REGEX with

    - by Vincenzo
    My code is: #include <boost/regex.hpp> boost::cmatch matches; boost::regex_match("alpha beta", matches, boost::regex("([a-z])+")); cout << "found: " matches.size() << endl; And it shows found: 2 which means that only ONE occurrence is found… How to instruct it to find THREE occurrences? Thanks!

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  • How to remove control chars from UTF8 string

    - by Mimefilt
    Hi there, i have a VB.NET program that handles the content of documents. The programm handles high volumes of documents as "batch"(2Million documents;total 1TB volume) Some of this documents may contain control chars or chars like f0e8(http://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/f0e8/browsertest.htm). Is there a easy and especially fast way to remove that chars?(except space,newline,tab,...) If the answer is regex: Has anyone a complete regex for me? Thanks!

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  • Are regexes really maintainable?

    - by Rich Bradshaw
    Any code I've seen that uses Regexes tends to use them as a black box: Put in string Magic Regex Get out string This doesn't seem a particularly good idea to use in production code, as even a small change can often result in a completely different regex. Apart from cases where the standard is permanent and unchanging, are regexes the way to do things, or is it better to try different methods?

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  • Reverse regular expressions to generate data

    - by Anton Gogolev
    In one of the StackOverflow Podcasts (the one where guys were discussing data generation for testing DBs -- either #11 or #12), Jeff mentioned something like "reverse regular expressions", which are used exactly for that purpose: given a regex, produce a string which will eventually match said regex. What is the correct term for this whole concept? Is this a well-known concept?

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  • Easy way to convert regex to a java compatible regex?

    - by beagleguy
    hi all I have a regex defined in python/ruby/php that is like this "(forumdisplay.php\?.*page=%CURRENTPAGE%)" when I do it for java, I have to double escape that question mark to //? like so: "(forumdisplay.php\\?.*page=%CURRENTPAGE%)"; is there a function I can use to do that automatically? or would I need to change all my regexes over to work with the java regex engine? thanks

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  • Problem with Replace in Eclipse

    - by Imran
    I'm using regex to match all non-quoted property names in my json files. Eclipse has no problem finding the desired matches, but when I want to replace the matched strings with "$2", I get this error: Match string has changed in file filename.json. Match skipped Here's the regex I'm using: `((\w+)\s*(?!['"])(?=:))` Any idea on how to work around this issue?

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  • Use regular expressions with Glib

    - by Sébastien
    Hello, I would like to find all comment blocks(/*...*/) but the function g_regex_match_full always returns true. Here is the code : // Create the regex. start_block_comment_regex = g_regex_new("/\*.*\*/", G_REGEX_OPTIMIZE, 0, &regex_error); //Search the regex; if(TRUE == g_regex_match_full(start_block_comment_regex, current_line, -1, 0, 0, &match_info, &regex_error)) { }

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  • Regular expressions in c++ STL

    - by Radek Šimko
    Is there any native library in STL which is tested and works without any extra compiler options? I tried to use <regex>, but the compiler outputs this: In file included from /usr/include/c++/4.3/regex:40, from main.cpp:5: /usr/include/c++/4.3/c++0x_warning.h:36:2: error: #error This file requires compiler and library support for the upcoming ISO C++ standard, C++0x. This support is currently experimental, and must be enabled with the -std=c++0x or -std=gnu++0x compiler options.

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  • Scanning string in perl

    - by Alphaneo
    What is the best way to achieve sscanf like functionality in perl? I am looking now looking at the sscanf module, Which is better, Option-1: Going sscanf way? Option-2: Regex way? [I am a beginner when it comes to Regex]

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  • regular expressions: ignoring certain chars globally

    - by shi kui
    Consider it that '_'s in a number doesn't change that number's value so 1000==1_000==10_00. The Problem: given numbers like 1_244_23 1412_2 1_1111 etc..., how could I decide whether certain number appears in that collection? For example: 1244_23 yes, 11_111 yes, 1412_1 no. How could using regex to solve this? I mean, if I could tell the regex engine just ignore these '_''s when matching then this problem becomes trivial? How could I do so?

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  • Validate HTML entities in JavaScript

    - by Eduard Luca
    I have a small JavaScript validation script that validates inputs based on Regex. I want to allow certain characters that are not exactly common (not sure if they're UTF8). For example I want to allow the following character ’, which looks like a single quote, but isn't. I got the HTML code for this which is &#8217;, but I'm not sure how to put this into the Regex. I've tried just inputting [&#8217]* but it doesn't validate.

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  • Regular Expression to parse SQL Structure

    - by user351429
    I am trying to parse the MySQL data types returned by "DESCRIBE [TABLE]". It returns strings like: int(11) float varchar(200) int(11) unsigned float(6,2) I've tried to do the job using regular expressions but it's not working. PHP CODE: $string = "int(11) numeric"; $regex = '/(\w+)\s*(\w+)/'; var_dump( preg_split($regex, $string) );

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  • Ignoring certain chars globally

    - by shi kui
    Consider it that '_'s in a number doesn't change that number's value so 1000==1_000==10_00. The Problem: given numbers like 1_244_23 1412_2 1_1111 etc..., how could I decide whether certain number appears in that collection? For example: 1244_23 yes, 11_111 yes, 1412_1 no. How could using regex to solve this? I mean, if I could tell the regex engine just ignore these '_''s when matching then this problem becomes trivial? How could I do so?

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  • .Net Removing all the first 0 of a string

    - by Melursus
    I got the following : 01.05.03 I need to convert that to 1.5.3 The problem is I cannot only trim the 0 because if I got : 01.05.10 I need to convert that to 1.5.10 So, what's the better way to solve that problem ? Regex ? If so, any regex example doing that ?

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  • Find multiple line spanning text and replace using Powershell

    - by MrGrant
    Hello, I am using a regular expression search to match up and replace some text. The text can span multiple lines (may or may not have line breaks). Currently I have this: $regex = "\<\?php eval.*?\>" Get-ChildItem -exclude *.bak | Where-Object {$_.Attributes -ne "Directory"} |ForEach-Object { $text = [string]::Join("`n", (Get-Content $_)) $text -replace $RegEx ,"REPLACED"}

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  • Multiline Regular Expression search and replace!

    - by Scott
    I've hit a wall. Does anybody know a good text editor that has search and replace like Notepad++ but can also do multi-line regex search and replace? Basically, I am trying to find something that can match a regex like: search oldlog\(.*\n\s+([\r\n.]*)\);replace newlog\(\1\) Any ideas?

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  • Javascript regular expressions: how to match ONLY the given characters?

    - by Dfowj
    I'm trying to use a regex like /[computer]{3,8}/ to get any words containing only the letters in computer ranging from 3 to 8 letters long. That regex instead captures all words containing ANY of the letters in [computer]. I've been looking at regular expression examples, but i can't quite figure it out... How do i modifiy this regular expression to capture words containing ONLY the letters in computer (with a length of 3 to 8)?

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