Источник:
http://www.axaptapedia.com/Regular_expressions
==============
Summary: /* Internal */
There are two kind of [
http://www.regular-expressions.info/ regular exressions] you can use in Ax
=== Internal ===
You can use the [[match function]] to chack whether string matches a regular exression or [[TextBuffer class]] to find a substring which matches reqular expression. Internal regexes have a very special syntax, which is described in a help for the match function in Ax 3.
boolean isCorrectPhone(str _s)
{
return match('', _s);
}
=== Reference (to be reformatted ) ===
Compares the fixed expression specified by pattern with the text string specified by text.
The system does not differentiate between lower and upper case.
A combination of fixed expressions is in itself a fixed expression.
The following special characters can be used to create the pattern in the fixed expression:
\
A backslash causes a specific character to be matched. For example, "\$" matches a dollar sign.
< or ^
A 'less than'( or & A 'greater than'(>) sign or an ampersand (&) at the end of the expression is used to match the end of a line.
? or . A question mark (?) or a full stop (.) will match any character (except Enter, new line).
:x A colon specifies a group of characters to be matched, indicated by the character which follows immediately after.
:a Sets the match to letters
:d Sets the match to numeric characters
:n Sets the match to alphanumeric characters
:SPACE Sets the match to blanks, tabulations, and control characters such as Enter (new line).
* An expression followed by an asterisk requires a match for none or several occurrences of the expression.
For example, "fo*" will locate "f", "fo", "foo" etc.
+
An expression followed by a plus (+) sign requires a match for one or several occurrences of the expression.
For example, "fo+" matches "fo" etc.
-
An expression followed by a minus (-) sign requires a match for no or one occurrence of the expression.
For example, "fo-" matches "f" and "fo".
[]
A string of characters enclosed within square brackets specifies that a match is required for every character in this text, and only for these characters.
For example, "[xyz]" matches "xx" and "zyx" etc.
A string of characters can be specified by two characters separated by '-' (minus). For example, "[a-z]" matches all letters, whereas "[z-a]" never matches.
[^]
If the first character in a text within square brackets is a circumflex (^) then the expression matches all characters except Enter (new line) and the characters in the string.
For example, "[^xyz]" matches "abc" but not "axb".
Выходное значение
=== External ===
You can use more rich regexes via COM in Ax 3 or .NET in Ax 4
Ax 4 business code uses System.Text.Regex for many purporses such as email validation ( \Classes\SysEmailDistributor\validateEmail )
=== See also ===
[
http://blogs.msdn.com/palle_agermark...nd-dialog.aspx Palle Agermark's WebLog : Use regular expressions in the Find dialog]
Источник:
http://www.axaptapedia.com/Regular_expressions