"Halley Pacheco de Oliveira" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Maybe it would be easier to see the the problem I'm having with regular > expressions this way:
> Maybe it would be easier to see the the problem I'm having with regular > expressions this way: > SELECT '192.168.0.15' SIMILAR TO > '([[:alnum:]_-]+).([[:alnum:]_-]+).([[:alnum:]_]+)'; > ?column? > ---------- > t > SELECT '192.168.0.15' SIMILAR TO '([\\w-]+).([\\w-]+).([\\w]+)'; > ?column? > ---------- > f SIMILAR TO patterns are required to match the whole data string; so the above fails because it only matches 3 digit groups not 4. The others all fail because you put explicit ^ and $ into them. The reason the first one works is that you put _ into the pattern, which means "match anything" in SIMILAR-TO land; so it gets translated to "." to be fed to the regular regexp engine. (Arguably that should not happen inside square brackets, but similar_escape() isn't smart enough to distinguish.) And that makes it possible for one of the []-expressions to match two digit groups plus the intervening dot. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster