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- javascript - Getting the state with rematch - Stack Overflow
I'm Rematch maintainer, you should review our documentation or consider buying the official Redux made easy with Rematch book where you'll learn all this questions
- Why does BASH_REMATCH not work for a quoted regular expression?
14 Thanks to your debugging statement, echo The regex matches!, you should have noticed there is no problem with BASH_REMATCH, since the if statement evaluates to false In bash, regular expressions used with =~ are unquoted If the string on the right is quoted, then it is treated as a string literal
- Using Rematch Store in React Native - Stack Overflow
I'm building a screen in React Native using expo I'm new to both React Native and the Rematch framework, and I want to render the first and last names of the basketball players from this endpoint
- regex - BASH_REMATCH empty - Stack Overflow
Note, however, that if =~ signals success, BASH_REMATCH is never fully empty: at the very least - in the absence of any capture groups - ${BASH_REMATCH[0]} will be defined
- How to convert a string to lower case in Bash - Stack Overflow
Is there a way in bash to convert a string into a lower case string? For example, if I have: a="Hi all" I want to convert it to: "hi all"
- What is the zsh equivalent for $BASH_REMATCH []?
The first element of the BASH_REMATCH array will contain the entire matched text and subsequent elements will contain extracted substrings This option makes more sense when KSH_ARRAYS is also set, so that the entire matched portion is stored at index 0 and the first substring is at index 1
- bash_rematch and regex (with nested parens) - Stack Overflow
The matching have a strange behaviour, I don't find the other portion of the input string in $ {BASH_REMATCH [3]} although is in the 3rd parens of the regex What's happen with nested parens?
- How do I extract a string using a regex in a shell script?
Subsequent elements of this array will be subsequent results of submatches Note you can have multiple submatch () within a regular expression - The BASH_REMATCH elements will correspond to these in order So in this case ${BASH_REMATCH[1]} will contain "www google com", which I think is the string you want
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