You can easily search for all characters except those in square brackets by putting a caret (^) as the first character after the left square bracket ([). To match all characters except lowercase vowels, use [^aeiou].
Like the anchors in places that can't be considered an anchor, the right square bracket (]) and dash (-) do not have a special meaning if they directly follow a [. Table 32-2 has some examples.
Regular expression |
Matches |
---|---|
[0-9] |
Any digit |
[^0-9] |
Any character other than a digit |
[-0-9] |
Any digit or a - |
[0-9-] |
Any digit or a - |
[^-0-9] |
Any character except a digit or a - |
[ ]0-9] |
Any digit or a ] |
[0-9]] |
Any digit followed by a ] |
[0-99-z] |
Any digit or any character between 9 and z |
[ ]0-9-] |
Any digit, a -, or a ] |
Many languages have adopted the Perl regular expression syntax for ranges; for example, \w is equivalent to "any word character" or [A-Za-z0-9_], while \W matches anything but a word character. See the perlre(1) manual page for more details.
-- BB
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