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  2. Help:Manipulating strings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Manipulating_strings

    On Wikipedia you can use a limited version of regex called a Lua pattern to select and modify bits of text from a string. The pattern is a piece of code describing what you are looking for in the string. The symbols you an use in a pattern are: . means any individual character. ... would mean any three characters, etc. *, +, ?, and -are the ...

  3. 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 .

  4. 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 ...

  5. Template:Regex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Regex

    a string of alphabetic characters a-z, or; a string of digits 0-9, or; a string of alphanumeric characters a-z, 0-9. a token inside a camelCase word. For transitions from lower to upper case, (or camelCase), and transitions from letter to number: these are two words; only the first transition divides such words, into two

  6. Comparison of programming languages (string functions)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_programming...

    find_character(string,char) returns integer Description Returns the position of the start of the first occurrence of the character char in string. If the character is not found most of these routines return an invalid index value – -1 where indexes are 0-based, 0 where they are 1-based – or some value to be interpreted as Boolean FALSE.

  7. Wikipedia:AutoWikiBrowser/Find and replace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:AutoWikiBrowser/...

    Regex – If checked indicates that the find and replace expression is a regular expression. Multiline – If checked, this indicates to AWB that the regex characters "^" and "$" ought to match at the beginning and the end of lines respectively, not just the beginning and end of the entire page. In some programming contexts this is referred to ...

  8. Approximate string matching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Approximate_string_matching

    This number is called the edit distance between the string and the pattern. The usual primitive operations are: [1] insertion: cot → coat; deletion: coat → cot; substitution: coat → cost; These three operations may be generalized as forms of substitution by adding a NULL character (here symbolized by *) wherever a character has been ...

  9. Pattern matching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_matching

    Here, the first n is a single variable pattern, which will match absolutely any argument and bind it to name n to be used in the rest of the definition. In Haskell (unlike at least Hope ), patterns are tried in order so the first definition still applies in the very specific case of the input being 0, while for any other argument the function ...