Match everything except the text and <br> tags
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 @guy038 This RegEx helped stop searching as soon as it found a <p........>:-
 (?s)\A.+?\R\K\s*<div style="margin-bottom:-15px;width: 100%;background-color:#EBF4FB;">\s*.+?\s*<div class="left">(?=\s*+<p[^<>]*+>)
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 Hi, @dr-ramaanand and All, Ah, of course, if you add a <div class="left">line, right after the first<div style=".....line, it will not work !
 So, given this INPUT text, pasted in a new tab: <div style="margin-bottom:-15px;width: 100%;background-color:#EBF4FB;"> <div class="left"> <p class=MsoNormal><b><span style='font-size:13.5pt;line-height:115%; font-family:"Verdana","sans-serif";color:red'>SYNONYMS </span></b> </p> <div class="left">Simply, change the previous search regex by this new version : (?s)\A.+?\R\s*\K<div style="margin-bottom:-15px;width: 100%;background-color:#EBF4FB;">\s*.*?\s*<div class="left">Note the différence : between #EBF4FB;">\s*and\s*<div class="left">, I changed the part.+?by.*?I also slightly change the position of the \Kfeature
 Ax expected, this new regex will match the two consecutive lines : <div style="margin-bottom:-15px;width: 100%;background-color:#EBF4FB;"> <div class="left">BR guy038 
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 @guy038 This RegEx: (?s)\A.+?\R\K\s*<div style="margin-bottom:-15px;width: 100%;background-color:#EBF4FB;">.+(?=\s*+<div class="left">)would have stopped searching just before the second occurrence of<div class="left">if the sample to be searched was like this:-<div style="margin-bottom:-15px;width: 100%;background-color:#EBF4FB;"> <div class="left"> <div class="left">
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 Yes, your regex does match the same amount of text as my version but my regex seems more simple and logic ! BR guy038 
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 @guy038 d’accord, merci beaucoup! 
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 @guy038 your last RegEx finds the first occurrence of <div class="left">even if there is some other text above it. Lovely!
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 Hi, @dr-ramaanand and All, Again, I did not check all the possibilities before posting. Sorry for the NOISE ! So, the right regex to use should be : (?s)\A.*?\s*\K<div style="margin-bottom:-15px;width: 100%;background-color:#EBF4FB;">\s*.*?\s*<div class="left">
 This time, it will work if you pasted this text, in a new tab <div style="margin-bottom:-15px;width: 100%;background-color:#EBF4FB;"> <div class="left"> <div class="left">But it will also works, if you pasted the following text, in a new tab First non-blank line second line Third line before the block to match <div style="margin-bottom:-15px;width: 100%;background-color:#EBF4FB;"> <div class="left"> <div class="left">Best Regards, guy038 
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 @guy038 I am not sure if I am allowed to do it (as the solution was provided by you), so I am requesting you to post the last Regular Expression you provided with the sample to be edited with a new heading, “How to find the first occurrence of a tag ?” so that people can search and find it online. Thank you! 
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 Hello, @dr-ramaanand and All, You said in your previous post : … so I am requesting you to post the last Regular Expression you provided with the sample to be edited with a new heading, “How to find the first occurrence of a tag ?” so that people can search and find it online. Thank you! But, actually, my regex finds the first occurrence of the <div class="left">tag, AFTER a first occurrence of the<div style="margin-bottom:-15px;width: 100%;background-color:#EBF4FB;">tag !
 So, to my mind, the correct way to match the first occurrence of a specific tag, in current file, is to use the generic regex : (?s-i)\A.*?\K<TAG Name(?: .*?)?>Just replace the generic TAG Name value with a valid HTMLtagNote that, in case of the comment tag, replace the generic TAG Name, into the above regex, by the literal string !--.*?--
 Similarly, the correct way to match the last occurrence of a specific tag, in current file, is to use the generic regex : (?s-i)\A.*\K<TAG Name(?: .*?)?>BR guy038 
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 @guy038 said in Match everything except the text and <br> tags: (?s-i)\A.\K<TAG Name(?: .?)?> I think that that should be (?s-i)\A.*\K<TAG Name(?:.*?)?>with no spaces anywhere in the middle
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 Hi, @dr-ramaanand and All, In order to use a valid INPUT text to do some tests, just open the main page of our forum. Then hit the Ctrl + Ushortcut to open theHTMLsource page of our forum and paste its contents in a new tab
 My generic regex tries to match the syntax <TAG......, till the nearest>character and must be valid for any kind of tag.Thus, I prefer to insert a space char to verify that the tag is a valid one . Indeed, this regex will match, either, tags like <head>or for example<span style="color:blue">blue</span>If you replace the TAG Name in the generic regex (?s-i)\A.*?\K<TAG Name(?: .*?)?>, which matches the first tag, named TAG, in current file, you get, from the examples, the regexes :- 
(?s-i)\A.*?\K<head(?: .*?)?>
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(?s-i)\A.*?\K<span(?: .*?)?>
 Just test them against the HTML code source of our forum 
 Now, let’s suppose, for example, that you want to find out the first input ...>tag, AFTER the firstimg ......>tag, in theHTMLcode source of our forum :Then, from my previous post, you would have to use the following regex : (?s-i)\A.*?<img(?: .*?)?>.*?\K<input(?: .*?)?>which matches, as expected, the following line : <input autocomplete="off" type="text" class="form-control hidden" name="term" placeholder="Search"/>BR guy038 P.S. : You also replied in an old post, regarding this extra spacechar. However, I’ll not reply because this topic is old and not exactly related to the present discussion !
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 @guy038 Okay, thank you! 
