SWORD supports compiling with a variety of regex engines-- typically GNU regex on most linux system. We include 'internal regex' copy of this, as well. We also will compile against the C++ standard regex engine including the language spec. Each handles unicode characters different.

. is certainly recognized, but I would guess that in whatever regex library you are using during compile, it represents a byte and not a literal character. Try .{1-6}


On 03/03/2017 07:36 AM, David Haslam wrote:
Created http://tracker.crosswire.org/browse/MODTOOLS-101

David



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