Re: Help in using regex in Validation.xml

2007-08-01 Thread Jasper Floor
On 8/1/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, This question can be termed as an OT as it is related to regex. I have a validation criteria which says: a number cannot start with 000 which is 9 digits in length. Can somebody help me in writing a regular expression for this?

RE: Help in using regex in Validation.xml

2007-08-01 Thread Rod Bollinger
Mailing List Subject: Re: Help in using regex in Validation.xml On 8/1/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, This question can be termed as an OT as it is related to regex. I have a validation criteria which says: a number cannot start with 000 which is 9 digits in length. Can

RE: Help in using regex in Validation.xml

2007-08-01 Thread Christopher Loschen
addressed. Chris -Original Message- From: Rod Bollinger [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2007 10:33 AM To: 'Struts Users Mailing List' Subject: RE: Help in using regex in Validation.xml This won't actually work. The parentheses should be braces and if you don't supply

RE: Help in using regex in Validation.xml

2007-08-01 Thread sriharsha . chevuru
pointers would be of great help. Christopher Loschen [EMAIL PROTECTED] 08/01/2007 10:47 AM Please respond to Struts Users Mailing List user@struts.apache.org To Struts Users Mailing List user@struts.apache.org cc Subject RE: Help in using regex in Validation.xml Not quite. With the regex

RE: Help in using regex in Validation.xml

2007-08-01 Thread Rod Bollinger
To: Struts Users Mailing List Subject: RE: Help in using regex in Validation.xml Not quite. With the regex ^000\d{6}$, if you DON'T get a match, the input could be any length and might not even be a number: after all, it isn't matching. All this checks is the particular case where you have a 9-digit

RE: Help in using regex in Validation.xml

2007-08-01 Thread sriharsha . chevuru
] Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2007 13:47 To: Struts Users Mailing List Subject: RE: Help in using regex in Validation.xml Not quite. With the regex ^000\d{6}$, if you DON'T get a match, the input could be any length and might not even be a number: after all, it isn't matching. All this checks