"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

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