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

    The match will be $& unless you use look-before and look-behind (unsure whether using those will actually save any memory); if you are interested in just a part of the match, use a capturing …

  2. XSL: Meaning of `match="/"` for `xsl:template` - Stack Overflow

    Aug 30, 2023 · The value of the match attribute of the <xsl:template> instruction must be a match pattern. Match patterns form a subset of the set of all possible XPath expressions. The first, …

  3. Differences between re.match, re.search, re.fullmatch

    Answer (line anchors vs string anchors) What this tells me is that re.match and re.fullmatch don't match line anchors ^ and $ respectively, but that they instead match string anchors \A and \Z …

  4. matchFeatures - Find matching features - MATLAB - MathWorks

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

  5. Regular expression to match string starting with a specific word

    Nov 13, 2021 · How do I create a regular expression to match a word at the beginning of a string? We are looking to match stop at the beginning of a string and anything can follow it. For …

  6. Match case statement with multiple 'or' conditions in each case

    Dec 2, 2022 · Match case statement with multiple 'or' conditions in each case Asked 3 years, 1 month ago Modified 1 year, 4 months ago Viewed 38k times

  7. regex - Match groups in Python - Stack Overflow

    Is there a way in Python to access match groups without explicitly creating a match object (or another way to beautify the example below)? Here is an example to clarify my motivation for …

  8. Python: match/case by type of value - Stack Overflow

    May 18, 2022 · You can match directly against the type of v, but you need a value pattern to refer to the types to match, as a "dotless" name is a capture pattern that matches any value.

  9. 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]'

  10. Regular expression to stop at first match - Stack Overflow

    to capture a match between start and the first occurrence of end. Notice how the subexpression with nested parentheses spells out a number of alternatives which between them allow e only …