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Regular Expressions

Dreamweaver also allows the use of regular expressions in your searches—all you need to do is select "Use Regular Expressions" when using Find and Replace. Regular expressions are outside the scope of the hands-on tutorial, but the following information from Dreamweaver's Help system can help you learn to use this powerful functionality on your own.

Regular expressions are patterns that describe character combinations in text. They typically utilize special characters for special search syntax—see the table below for a list of common special characters. To search for text actually containing one of the special characters while also using regular expressions, “escape” the special character by preceding it with a backslash. For example, to search for the actual asterisk in the phrase some conditions apply*, your search pattern might look like this: apply\*. If you don’t escape the asterisk, you’ll find all the occurrences of “apply” (as well as any of “appl”, “applyy”, and “applyyy”), not just the ones followed by an asterisk.

Character
Matches
Example
^
Beginning of input or line.
^T matches “T” in “This good earth” but not in “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”
$
End of input or line.
h$ matches “h” in “teach” but not in “teacher”
*
The preceding character 0 or more times.
um* matches “um” in “rum”, “umm” in “yummy”, and “u” in “huge”
+
The preceding character 1 or more times.
um+ matches “um” in “rum” and “umm” in “yummy” but nothing in “huge”
?
The preceding character at most once (that is, indicates that the preceding character is optional).
st?on matches “son” in “Johnson” and “ston” in “Johnston” but nothing in “Appleton” or “tension”
.
Any single character except newline.
.an matches “ran” and “can” in the phrase “bran muffins can be tasty”
x|y
Either x or y.
FF0000|0000FF matches “FF0000” in bgcolor=”#FF0000” and “0000FF’” in font color=”#0000FF”
{n}
Exactly n occurrences of the preceding character.
o{2} matches “oo” in “loom” and the first two o’s in “mooooo” but nothing in “money”
{n,m}
At least n, and at most m, occurrences of the preceding character.
F{2,4} matches “FF” in “#FF0000” and the first four F’s in #FFFFFF
[abc]
Any one of the characters enclosed in the brackets. Specify a range of characters with a hyphen (for example, [a-f] is equivalent to [abcdef]).
[e-g] matches “e” in “bed”, “f” in “folly”, and ”g” in “guard”
[^abc]
Any character not enclosed in the brackets. Specify a range of characters with a hyphen (for example, [^a-f] is equivalent to [^abcdef]).
[^aeiou] initially matches “r” in “orange”, “b” in “book”, and “k” in “eek!”
\b
A word boundary (such as a space or carriage return).
\bb matches “b” in “book” but nothing in “goober” or “snob”
\B
A non-word boundary.
\Bb matches “b” in “goober” but nothing in “book”
\d
Any digit character. Equivalent to [0-9].
\d matches “3” in “C3PO” and “2” in “apartment 2G”
\D
Any non-digit character. Equivalent to [^0-9].
\D matches “S” in “900S” and “Q” in “Q45”
\f
Form feed.
 
\n
Line feed.
 
\r
Carriage return.
 
\s
Any single white-space character, including space, tab, form feed, or line feed.
\sbook matches ”book” in “blue book” but nothing in “notebook”
\S
Any single non-white-space character.
\Sbook matches “book” in “notebook” but nothing in “blue book”
\t
A tab.
 
\w
Any alphanumeric character, including underscore. Equivalent to [A-Za-z0-9_].
b\w* matches “barking” in “the barking dog” and both “big” and “black” in “the big black dog”
\W
Any non-alphanumeric character. Equivalent to [^A-Za-z0-9_].
\W matches “&” in “Jake & Mattie” and “%” in “100%”
Control+Enter or Shift+Enter (Windows), or Control+ Return or Shift+Return or Command+ Return (Macintosh)
Return character. Make sure that you deselect the Ignore Whitespace Differences option when searching for this, if not using regular expressions. Note that this matches a particular character, not the general notion of a line break; for instance, it doesn’t match a <br> tag or a <p> tag. Return characters appear as spaces in the Document window, not as line breaks.
 

Use parentheses to set off groupings within the regular expression to be referred to later; use $1, $2, $3, and so on (use ($) in the Find field and use the backslash (\) in the Replace field) to refer to the first, second, third, and later parenthetical groupings. For example, searching for (\d+)\/(\d+)\/(\d+) and replacing it with $2/$1/$3 swaps the day and month in a date separated by slashes (to convert between American-style dates and European-style dates).

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NIS  |  OIT  |  Boston University  |   September 28, 2005