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    Using sets to find A-Za-z plus the # and - chars ..?

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    • PeterJonesP
      PeterJones @PeterJones
      last edited by

      @PeterJones said in Using sets to find A-Za-z plus the # and - chars ..?:

      As is documented

      Actually, it’s not documented in our character classes section. I will remedy that.

      IanSunlunI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • IanSunlunI
        IanSunlun @PeterJones
        last edited by IanSunlun

        @PeterJones
        My search term is not finding the URL in my html page.
        e1171fc4-f61d-46e5-b069-6cc0b0be6192-image.png

        html page (its not finding this, but it should):
        http://mysitename.net/index.php/New_Video#column-one"

        PeterJonesP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • PeterJonesP
          PeterJones @IanSunlun
          last edited by PeterJones

          @IanSunlun said in Using sets to find A-Za-z plus the # and - chars ..?:

          http://mysitename.net/index.php/New_Video#column-one"

          Um, no it shouldn’t. New_Video#column-one is more than one character. [A-Za-z%#_-] only matches one character.

          I think what you want is http://mysitename.net/index.php/[A-Za-z%#_-]+" , which wants one or more charaters from that set.

          Also, I hope you don’t have a URL like http://mysitename.net/index.php/one1#column2

          Or http://school.edu/~username/o.n.e.#2 , which is something I might have had back in my university homepage days, lo those two-and-a-half decades ago.

          Maybe use http://mysitename.net/index.php/[\w%#.~-]+", since \w encompases the [A-Za-z0-9_] portion, and it adds in the URL-safe characters of . and ~, as well as the # separator and %-encoding-start.

          IanSunlunI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • José Luis Montero CastellanosJ
            José Luis Montero Castellanos @IanSunlun
            last edited by José Luis Montero Castellanos

            @IanSunlun
            Hello :) Try this in Npp: (Just to easily verify that it matches)

            Find: [.#\-%]
            

            Inside a character class [set]:

            The character # is literal
            The character % is literal
            The . It is literal (remember that outside equals any character.)
            \- The only one that needs an escape sequence using \ .

            So:
            [A-Za-z#\-%.]
            The second hyphen is inside in an escape sequence (preceded by \ ).

            Another character that needs escape is ^ because of its negation meaning within the brackets [\^].

            PeterJonesP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • IanSunlunI
              IanSunlun @PeterJones
              last edited by

              @PeterJones Ah, thats seems to work thanks.
              Does [\w%#.~-]+ put whatever it matches into ${1} ?

              PeterJonesP 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • PeterJonesP
                PeterJones @IanSunlun
                last edited by PeterJones

                This post is deleted!
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                • PeterJonesP
                  PeterJones @José Luis Montero Castellanos
                  last edited by

                  This post is deleted!
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                  • PeterJonesP
                    PeterJones @IanSunlun
                    last edited by PeterJones

                    @IanSunlun said in Using sets to find A-Za-z plus the # and - chars ..?:

                    Does [\w%#.~-]+ put whatever it matches into ${1} ?

                    Sorry, when I answered, I had forgotten that you previously said,

                    (So I need to store pagename in ${1} and bookmark in ${2}.)

                    Putting the # into either match is not what you want, either. You really need two groups, one before the # and one after.

                    FIND = http://mysitename.net/index.php/([\w%.~-]+)#([\w%.~-]+)"
                    will only match if there is a bookmark, and the # will not be inside the ${2} group. If you want the # to be included in ${2}, use http://mysitename.net/index.php/([\w%.~-]+)(#[\w%.~-]+)"

                    IanSunlunI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • IanSunlunI
                      IanSunlun @PeterJones
                      last edited by IanSunlun

                      @PeterJones said in Using sets to find A-Za-z plus the # and - chars ..?:

                      FIND = http://mysitename.net/index.php/([\w%.~-]+)#([\w%.~-]+)"

                      With the period . inbetween the % and the ~ it did not find:
                      http://mysitename.net/index.php/New_Video#column-one"
                      But taking the period out, it did find it.
                      Whats the thinking behind the period in this context ?

                      PeterJonesP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • PeterJonesP
                        PeterJones @IanSunlun
                        last edited by PeterJones

                        @IanSunlun ,

                        Except for -, order doesn’t matter inside the [] character class. The period is there because New.Video#column-one is also a valid URL ender end-string.

                        FIND = http://mysitename.net/index.php/([\w%.~-]+)#([\w%.~-]+)"
                        does match http://mysitename.net/index.php/New_Video#column-one":

                        2fb36c05-cd1f-406d-92f6-ec71aec5bb2a-image.png

                        Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                        • Alan KilbornA
                          Alan Kilborn @PeterJones
                          last edited by

                          @PeterJones said in Using sets to find A-Za-z plus the # and - chars ..?:

                          FIND = http://mysitename.net/index.php/([\w%.~-]+)#([\w%.~-]+)"

                          Is it worth pointing out that the first two periods here really aren’t periods but rather “match any char”, because they aren’t escaped? Sure, an unescaped . will match a literal period, but it will match other things as well (obviously).

                          IMO, OP here needs to stop asking forum questions and go off and study regex.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • guy038G
                            guy038
                            last edited by guy038

                            Hello, @peterjones,

                            In the post below, Peter :

                            https://community.notepad-plus-plus.org/post/81643

                            You said :

                            Actually, it’s not documented in our character classes section. I will remedy that.

                            Then, regarding the Character Class feature, may be, this part could be added to the Official Notepad++ Documentation : :

                            If we consider the following CHARACTER CLASS structure :
                            
                            [.......]
                            123456789
                            
                            The POSSIBLE location(s), in order to find the LITERAL character below, are :
                            
                            LITERAL Character [    :     POSSIBLE at any position, BETWEEN 2 to 8 
                                                         POSSIBLE at any position, BETWEEN 2 to 8, if PRECEDED with an ANTI-SLASH character
                            							 
                            LITERAL Character ]    :     POSSIBLE at position 2 ONLY
                                                         POSSIBLE at any position, BETWEEN 2 to 8, if PRECEDED with an ANTI-SLASH character
                            							 
                            LITERAL Character -    :     POSSIBLE at position 2
                                                         POSSIBLE at position 8
                                                         POSSIBLE at any position, BETWEEN 2 to 8, if PRECEDED with an ANTI-SLASH character
                            							 
                            LITERAL Character \    :     POSSIBLE at any position, BETWEEN 2 to 8, if PRECEDED with an ANTI-SLASH character
                            

                            Of course, change this layout as you like !

                            Best Regards,

                            guy038

                            Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                            • Alan KilbornA
                              Alan Kilborn @guy038
                              last edited by Alan Kilborn

                              @guy038

                              It is rather awkward to express, but I like your idea.

                              My idea for expression:

                              • To use a “literal [” in a character class: Use it directly like any other character, e.g. [ab[c]; “escaping” is not necessary (but is permissible), e.g. [ab\\[c]

                              • To use a “literal ]” in a character class: Directly right after the opening [ of the class notation, e.g. []abc], OR “escaped” at any position, e.g. [\\]abc] or [a\\]bc]

                              • To use a “literal -” in a character class: Directly as the first or last character in the enclosing class notation, e.g. [-abc] or [abc-], OR “escaped” at any position, e.g. [\-abc] or [a\-bc]

                              • To use a “literal \” in a character class: Must be doubled (i.e., \\) inside the enclosing class notation, e.g. [ab\\c]

                              PeterJonesP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                              • PeterJonesP
                                PeterJones @Alan Kilborn
                                last edited by

                                @Alan-Kilborn & @guy038 ,

                                I like those suggestions, especially the way Alan rephrased it: it works much better than my clunky first attempt in the manual, that only included - and was not not very readable.

                                Thanks.

                                Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                • Alan KilbornA
                                  Alan Kilborn @PeterJones
                                  last edited by Alan Kilborn

                                  @PeterJones

                                  Maybe my first-of-4 bullet points previously should be moved to be the last-of-4, and changed to:

                                  • To use any other literal character in a character class, just use it directly, i.e., no “escaping” needed

                                  Maybe it works well as a 2 column 4 row table, headers:

                                  • Character
                                  • To use it literally in a character class

                                  With those headers, the “cell contents” for column 2 could be appropriately shortened to remove redundant verbiage.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • guy038G
                                    guy038
                                    last edited by

                                    Hi, @peterjones,

                                    BTW, Peter, do you intend to include, in some way, the end part of this post, regarding the Free-space mode, which is in the Notes section ?

                                    https://community.notepad-plus-plus.org/post/81368


                                    Also, did you correctly receive, by e-mail, my attached text file, regarding the TextFX features ?

                                    Please, I do not want to stress you, unnecessarily ! Just go at your own pace !

                                    Best Regards

                                    guy038

                                    Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • Alan KilbornA
                                      Alan Kilborn @guy038
                                      last edited by

                                      @guy038 said in Using sets to find A-Za-z plus the # and - chars ..?:

                                      do you intend to include, in some way, the end part of this post, regarding the Free-space mode

                                      He already did, see HERE.

                                      Andrew McPA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • Andrew McPA
                                        Andrew McP @Alan Kilborn
                                        last edited by

                                        @Alan-Kilborn I really admire you guys for figuring out Regular Expressions; I bet you never get lost in real life when you can keep track of the patterns/positions so well, aka good spatial awareness :)

                                        Oh and I like the trick of having - as last character before ]

                                        Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • Alan KilbornA
                                          Alan Kilborn @Andrew McP
                                          last edited by Alan Kilborn

                                          @Andrew-McP said in Using sets to find A-Za-z plus the # and - chars ..?:

                                          I really admire you guys for figuring out Regular Expressions

                                          So if someone says they have “figured out regular expressions”, I pity them. Because it just means they are ripe for an upcoming whipping when a regex misunderstanding of theirs really embarrasses them. :-)

                                          It pays to always be humble when discussing regular expressions with others. :-)

                                          I bet you never get lost

                                          GPS!

                                          I like the trick of having - as last character before ]

                                          Not so much a trick, as a logical place to put it when you realize that anywhere except the first or last position it must form some sort of “range”.

                                          Andrew McPA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                          • Andrew McPA
                                            Andrew McP @Alan Kilborn
                                            last edited by

                                            @Alan-Kilborn hahahah yes no way would I bet my house on any regular expression I recommend covering all, no matter how perverse, eventualities…

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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