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  2. Oniguruma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oniguruma

    Oniguruma (鬼車) is a free and open-source regular expression library that supports a variety of character encodings written by K. Kosako. The Ruby programming language, in version 1.9, as well as PHP 's multi-byte string module (since PHP5), use Oniguruma as their regular expression engine. [2] It is also used in products such as Atom, [3 ...

  3. Comparison of regular expression engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_regular...

    List of regular expression libraries. FPGA accelerated >100 Gbit/s regex engine for cybersecurity, financial, e-commerce industries. hardware-accelerated search acceleration using RegEx available for ASIC, FPGA and cloud. Enables massively parallel content processing at ultra-high speeds. ^ Formerly called Regex++.

  4. Regular expression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression

    A regular expression (shortened as regex or regexp), [1] sometimes referred to as rational expression, [2][3] is a sequence of characters that specifies a match pattern in text. Usually such patterns are used by string-searching algorithms for "find" or "find and replace" operations on strings, or for input validation.

  5. RE/flex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Re/flex

    RE/flex (regex-centric, fast lexical analyzer) [1] [2] is a free and open source computer program written in C++ that generates fast lexical analyzers (also known as "scanners" or "lexers") [3] [4] in C++. RE/flex offers full Unicode support, indentation anchors, word boundaries, lazy quantifiers (non-greedy, lazy repeats), and performance ...

  6. Help:Searching/Regex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Searching/Regex

    A regex search scans the text of each page on Wikipedia in real time, character by character, to find pages that match a specific sequence or pattern of characters. Unlike keyword searching, regex searching is by default case-sensitive, does not ignore punctuation, and operates directly on the page source (MediaWiki markup) rather than on the ...

  7. Kleene's algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kleene's_algorithm

    Kleene's algorithm. In theoretical computer science, in particular in formal language theory, Kleene's algorithm transforms a given nondeterministic finite automaton (NFA) into a regular expression. Together with other conversion algorithms, it establishes the equivalence of several description formats for regular languages.

  8. RE2 (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RE2_(software)

    RE2 (software) RE2 is a software library which implements a regular expression engine via finite-state machines using automata theory, in contrast to almost all other regular expression libraries, which use backtracking implementations. It provides a C++ interface. RE2 was implemented and used by Google.

  9. Regular language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_language

    In theoretical computer science and formal language theory, a regular language (also called a rational language) [1] [2] is a formal language that can be defined by a regular expression, in the strict sense in theoretical computer science (as opposed to many modern regular expression engines, which are augmented with features that allow the recognition of non-regular languages).