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authorGuido van Rossum <guido@python.org>1997-03-14 04:10:13 (GMT)
committerGuido van Rossum <guido@python.org>1997-03-14 04:10:13 (GMT)
commit1f8cee2521e8a659bf7dc02ace280dd025500409 (patch)
tree725f4aaff3c6207e27524d2c17483008361cff73
parentdb5a41f16bf41db30e20e584e2fc163ac4f205ed (diff)
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Hint about [\] trick to avoid quad backslashes.
-rw-r--r--Doc/lib/libregex.tex5
-rw-r--r--Doc/libregex.tex5
2 files changed, 6 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libregex.tex b/Doc/lib/libregex.tex
index 9766c2c..d3f44ba 100644
--- a/Doc/lib/libregex.tex
+++ b/Doc/lib/libregex.tex
@@ -22,9 +22,10 @@ is because Python doesn't remove backslashes from string literals if
they are followed by an unrecognized escape character.
\emph{However}, if you want to include a literal \dfn{backslash} in a
regular expression represented as a string literal, you have to
-\emph{quadruple} it. E.g.\ to extract \LaTeX\ \samp{\e section\{{\rm
+\emph{quadruple} it or enclose it in a singleton character class.
+E.g.\ to extract \LaTeX\ \samp{\e section\{{\rm
\ldots}\}} headers from a document, you can use this pattern:
-\code{'\e \e \e \e section\{\e (.*\e )\}'}. \emph{Another exception:}
+\code{'[\e ] section\{\e (.*\e )\}'}. \emph{Another exception:}
the escape sequece \samp{\e b} is significant in string literals
(where it means the ASCII bell character) as well as in Emacs regular
expressions (where it stands for a word boundary), so in order to
diff --git a/Doc/libregex.tex b/Doc/libregex.tex
index 9766c2c..d3f44ba 100644
--- a/Doc/libregex.tex
+++ b/Doc/libregex.tex
@@ -22,9 +22,10 @@ is because Python doesn't remove backslashes from string literals if
they are followed by an unrecognized escape character.
\emph{However}, if you want to include a literal \dfn{backslash} in a
regular expression represented as a string literal, you have to
-\emph{quadruple} it. E.g.\ to extract \LaTeX\ \samp{\e section\{{\rm
+\emph{quadruple} it or enclose it in a singleton character class.
+E.g.\ to extract \LaTeX\ \samp{\e section\{{\rm
\ldots}\}} headers from a document, you can use this pattern:
-\code{'\e \e \e \e section\{\e (.*\e )\}'}. \emph{Another exception:}
+\code{'[\e ] section\{\e (.*\e )\}'}. \emph{Another exception:}
the escape sequece \samp{\e b} is significant in string literals
(where it means the ASCII bell character) as well as in Emacs regular
expressions (where it stands for a word boundary), so in order to