Re: regular expressions matching only numeric characters in order

2008-12-01 Thread Paul Nowosielski
IL PROTECTED]> To: Paul Nowosielski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; mysql@lists.mysql.com Sent: Monday, December 1, 2008 6:42:19 PM Subject: RE: regular expressions matching only numeric characters in order Hi I am a bit of novice at Regexp, but I believe this will work for you (\d+\d+\d+).*(\d+\

Re: Regular Expressions

2003-02-10 Thread Nasser Ossareh
here's another example from the manual... SELECT * FROM pet WHERE name REGEXP "^b"; see: 3.3.4.7 Pattern Matching --- Dobromir Velev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi, > I use it in queries like > > SELECT * FROM table WHERE field REGEXP "patern"; > > It is the same as using the LIKE operator wi

Re: Regular Expressions

2003-02-08 Thread Dobromir Velev
Hi, I use it in queries like SELECT * FROM table WHERE field REGEXP "patern"; It is the same as using the LIKE operator wit more complex patterns Dobromir Velev [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.websitepulse.com - Original Message - From: "Darren Young" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PRO

Re: Regular Expressions

2003-02-07 Thread Keith C. Ivey
On 5 Feb 2003, at 16:02, Darren Young wrote: > I've looked through the mysql manual for information on regualar > expressions, and all that it seems to have are references such as: > > SELECT "fo\nfo" REGEXP "^fo$"; > > How can the REGEXP be applied to a 'SELECT field FROM table' kind of > state

Re: REGULAR EXPRESSIONS

2002-03-04 Thread Jeremy Zawodny
On Mon, Mar 04, 2002 at 12:25:44PM +0100, Angela Harneit wrote: > I've a question concerning negations of regular expressions - e.g. I > want the sentence "this is nice" to match, while the sentence "this > is not nice" should not match. I only found possibilities for the > negation of single ch