Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

>what is a literal character and what is a control character?

I read a tip back in the Perl 5 book, that you can just escape any character if you don't remember if it has a special meaning. (You'll still get the literal character even if it didn't need escaping.)

So I basically do that a lot. Never had any issue with control characters.



In my example, if you over-escape the first period or under-escape the second period the regex will undermatch or overmatch.

for me it took a few tries to get filexc to not match and file.c to match in my example in the 3 languages.


My comment was just about what you call "under-escap[ing] the second period."

I mean if you don't know if a ,;:"%$$@!_€|~ or any other character means something you can just write \ before that character. In other words, without thinking of whether it means something in your regex language. I don't think = means anything, but I would write \= to match an equals sign, so I don't even have to think about it. So my comment was about matching literal characters of any kind. I would have used a \ for the literal period out of habit, just because it wasn't [A-Za-z]. So my version would have been right the first time.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: