REGEX Globber (Wild Card Matching) A *IX SH style pattern matcher written in C V1.10 Dedicated to the Public Domain March 12, 1991 J. Kercheval [72450,3702] -- johnk@wrq.com *IX SH style Regular Expressions ================================ The *IX command SH is a working shell similar in feel to the MSDOS shell COMMAND.COM. In point of fact much of what we see in our familiar DOS PROMPT was gleaned from the early UNIX shells available for many of machines the people involved in the computing arena had at the time of the development of DOS and it's much maligned precursor CP/M (although the UNIX shells were and are much more flexible and powerful then those on the current flock of micro machines). The designers of DOS and CP/M did some fairly strange things with their command processor and OS. One of those things was to only selectively adopt the regular expressions allowed within the *IX shells. Only '?' and '*' were allowed in filenames and even with these the '*' was allowed only at the end of a pattern and in fact when used to specify the filename the '*' did not apply to extension. This gave rise to the all too common expression "*.*". REGEX Globber is a SH pattern matcher. This allows such specifications as *75.zip or * (equivelant to *.* in DOS lingo). Expressions such as [a-e]*t would fit the name "apple.crt" or "catspaw.bat" or "elegant". This allows considerably wider flexibility in file specification, general parsing or any other circumstance in which this type of pattern matching is wanted. A match would mean that the entire string TEXT is used up in matching the PATTERN and conversely the matched TEXT uses up the entire PATTERN. In the specified pattern string: `*' matches any sequence of characters (zero or more) `?' matches any character `\' suppresses syntactic significance of a special character [SET] matches any character in the specified set, [!SET] or [^SET] matches any character not in the specified set. A set is composed of characters or ranges; a range looks like 'character hyphen character' (as in 0-9 or A-Z). [0-9a-zA-Z_] is the minimal set of characters allowed in the [..] pattern construct. Other characters are allowed (ie. 8 bit characters) if your system will support them (it almost certainly will). To suppress the special syntactic significance of any of `[]*?!^-\', and match the character exactly, precede it with a `\'.