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  1. How to match, but not capture, part of a regex? - Stack Overflow

    How to match, but not capture, part of a regex? Asked 15 years ago Modified 1 year, 9 months ago Viewed 318k times

  2. OR condition in Regex - Stack Overflow

    Apr 13, 2013 · For example, ab|de would match either side of the expression. However, for something like your case you might want to use the ? quantifier, which will match the previous …

  3. matchFeatures - Find matching features - MATLAB - MathWorks

    This MATLAB function returns indices of the matching features in the two input feature sets.

  4. Negative matching using grep (match lines that do not contain foo)

    How do I match all lines not matching a particular pattern using grep? I tried this: grep '[^foo]'

  5. How do if statements differ from match/case statments in Python?

    Jun 13, 2021 · 27 PEP 622 provides an in-depth explanation for how the new match-case statements work, what the rationale is behind them, and provides examples where they're …

  6. How to specify to only match first occurrence? - Stack Overflow

    Apr 13, 2010 · Yes. I am trying to first understand how to get the first occurrence and then next would like to find each match and replace.

  7. regexp - Match regular expression (case sensitive) - MATLAB

    This MATLAB function returns the starting index of each substring of str that matches the character patterns specified by the regular expression.

  8. regex - What do 'lazy' and 'greedy' mean in the context of regular ...

    Feb 20, 2010 · Taken From www.regular-expressions.info : Greedy quantifiers first tries to repeat the token as many times as possible, and gradually gives up matches as the engine …

  9. If two cells match, return value from third - Stack Overflow

    Oct 15, 2014 · If two cells match, return value from third Asked 11 years ago Modified 6 years, 8 months ago Viewed 631k times

  10. regex - Python extract pattern matches - Stack Overflow

    Mar 11, 2013 · If this is the case, having span indexes for your match is helpful and I'd recommend using re.finditer. As a shortcut, you know the name part of your regex is length 5 …