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- Use for search:
- Normal search: Match the string given in the Search field
- Wildcards: The string can contain the wildcard characters
- ? (single character)
- * (any group of characters)
- Regular expression: The search string is interpreted as a MySQL regular expression (there are , except some MySQL regular expressions, that are not supported by translate5. Contact the translate5 support team for more information).black-listed for technical reasons.
- Please see the MySQL regular expression documentation for details on how to use regular expressions
The following list contains the regular expressions which are not supported by
translte5translate5, because they are black-listed:
Code Block language js title Blacklisted regular expressions linenumbers true /\\x[a-fA-F0-9]{2}/g,//Hexadecimal escape | \xFF where FF are 2 hexadecimal digits | Matches the character at the specified position in the code page | \xA9 matches © when using the Latin-1 code page /\\n/g,//Character escape /\\r/g,//Character escape /\\t/g,//Character escape /\\f/g,//Character escape /\\v/g,//Character escape /\\c[a-zA-Z]/g,//Control character escape \cA through \cZ Match an ASCII character Control+A through Control+Z, equivalent to \x01 through \x1A \cM\cJ matches a Windows CRLF line break //Control character escape \ca through \cz Match an ASCII character Control+A through Control+Z, equivalent to \x01 through \x1A \cm\cj matches a Windows CRLF line break /\\0/g,//NULL escape /\\(?:[1-7][0-7]{0,2}|[0-7]{2,3})/g,//Octal escape /(.*)\|(.*)/g,//javascript: a|ab matches a in ab | In POSIX ERE: a|ab matches ab in ab /\\[\^\]\-]/g,//\ (backslash) followed by any of ^-]\ /\\b/g,//javascript: [\b\t] matches a backspace or a tab character. /\\B/g,//javascript: \B. matches b, c, e, and f in abc def /\\d/g,//Shorthand Character Classes /\\D/g,//Shorthand Character Classes /\\s/g,//Shorthand Character Classes /\\S/g,//Shorthand Character Classes /\\w/g,//Shorthand Character Classes /\\W/g,//Shorthand Character Classes /\\h/g,//Shorthand Character Classes /\?\?/g,//abc?? matches ab or abc /\*\?/g,//".*?" matches "def" and "ghi" in abc "def" "ghi" jkl /\+\?/g,//".+?" matches "def" and "ghi" in abc "def" "ghi" jkl /{[0-9],[0-9]}\?/g, /{[0-9],}\?/g, /\\u[a-fA-F0-9]{4}/g,//Matches a specific Unicode code point. /\(\?\:.*?\)/g,//Non-capturing parentheses group the regex so you can apply regex operators, but do not capture anything. /\(.*?\)=\\[0-9]/g,//(abc|def)=\1 matches abc=abc or def=def, but not abc=def or def=abc. /\(\?\=.*?\)/g,//Matches at a position where the pattern inside the lookahead can be matched. Matches only the position. It does not consume any characters or expand the match. In a pattern like one(?=two)three, both two and three have to match at the position where the match of one ends. /\(\?\!.*?\)/g,//Similar to positive lookahead, except that negative lookahead only succeeds if the regex inside the lookahead fails to match. /\[\:(.*)\:\]/g,
The following table illustrates some commonly used metacharacters and constructs in a regular expression.
Metacharacter Behavior ^ matches the position at the beginning of the searched string $ matches the position at the end of the searched string […] matches any character specified inside the square brackets [^…] matches any character not specified inside the square brackets * matches the preceding character zero or more times + matches preceding character one or more times {n} matches n number of instances of the preceding character {m,n} matches from m to n number of instances of the preceding character
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