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Forum Update on Monday, May 27th 2025

using reqular expression wrong

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  • Chris KawaC Chris Kawa

    @JonB Ah, fair enough. I thought \u0001 is an actual string (6 characters) and not a single character.

    JonBJ Online
    JonBJ Online
    JonB
    wrote on last edited by JonB
    #13

    @Chris-Kawa
    You raise a good question though. I'm not sure whether QRegularExpression will interpret my \001 as I intended.

    How would you write the QRegularExpression to include matching characters like ASCII-1 or ASCII-27? I haven't kept up with how to reperesent that in reg exps nowadays? Maybe it's actually \u0001 & \u001B, is that a single (Unicode?) char sequence recognised in QRegularExpression??

    UPDATE
    I just looked on https://regex101.com/ and it does say

    \ddd

    Matches the 8-bit character with the given octal value.

    so I think my original dim recollection for using \001 & \002 may have been right/OK after all :)

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • VRoninV VRonin

      Try this

      qDebug() <<"stream raw line  \n " << line ;
      QString sanitisedLine;
      for (const QRegularExpressionMatch &match : QRegularExpression("[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*").globalMatch(line))
      sanitisedLine.append(match.captured(0));
      qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression applied  \n " << sanitisedLine;
      
      A Offline
      A Offline
      Anonymous_Banned275
      wrote on last edited by
      #14

      @VRonin

      I am missing something here , I do not understand the error .

      6ec658f0-4a0b-4ee7-8125-28777a12747f-image.png

      I need to read-up on QRegularExpressionMatch - but I think you are on right track...

      Would you kindly explain in few words what the code is doing ?
      I think that would help me...

      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • A Anonymous_Banned275

        @VRonin

        I am missing something here , I do not understand the error .

        6ec658f0-4a0b-4ee7-8125-28777a12747f-image.png

        I need to read-up on QRegularExpressionMatch - but I think you are on right track...

        Would you kindly explain in few words what the code is doing ?
        I think that would help me...

        JonBJ Online
        JonBJ Online
        JonB
        wrote on last edited by JonB
        #15

        @AnneRanch

        I am missing something here , I do not understand the error .

        https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qregularexpressionmatchiterator.html#details

        Starting with Qt 6.0, it is also possible to simply use the result of QRegularExpression::globalMatch in a range-based for loop, for instance like this:
        ...
        for (const QRegularExpressionMatch &match : re.globalMatch(subject)) {

        Are you using Qt6 or Qt5?

        1 Reply Last reply
        1
        • A Offline
          A Offline
          Anonymous_Banned275
          wrote on last edited by Anonymous_Banned275
          #16

          I hope this post does not distracts from the discussion .

          1. I believe the whole concept to "search for individual ascii characters" was misleading . I have been there before and using "words" "w" should make more sense from start. .

          2. The code snippet is "work in progress", hence has some stuff not really needed at this point.

          3. As seen , I can retieve "word" LIST m but I am stomped on how to get QString, not a :list":

          SOLVED
          QString test = match.captured();
          qDebug() <<"match name from ( list ) " << test;

          Code

                          line = stream.readLine();
                          //qDebug() <<"Stream raw line  ";
                          qDebug() <<"stream raw line  \n " << line ;
          
                          // extracts the words
          QRegularExpression re("(\\w+)");
          QString subject(line);
          QString *capture_name; //  = "                            ";
          QRegularExpressionMatchIterator i = re.globalMatch(subject);
          while (i.hasNext()) {
              QRegularExpressionMatch match = i.next();
              //  qDebug() <<"match (next)     " << i.next() ;
               qDebug() <<"match     " << match ;
          
          THIS SORT OF WORKS 
               qDebug() <<"match   list  " << match.capturedTexts();
          
          HOW TO GET INDIVIDUAL QSTRING HERE 
          **?????**
           **//     qDebug() <<"match  name ( from  list )  " << match.captured(*capture_name);**
          HOW TO GET INDIVIDUAL QSTRING HERE 
          
          }
          
          
          

          Output

          Stream file 
          Stream file ArrayIndex  0
          stream raw line  
            "\u0001\u001B[1;39m\u0002Menu main:\u0001\u001B[0m\u0002"
          match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(3, 4, "1"), 1:(3, 4, "1"))
          match   list  match.captured( ("1", "1")
          match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(5, 8, "39m"), 1:(5, 8, "39m"))
          match   list   ("39m", "39m")
          match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(9, 13, "Menu"), 1:(9, 13, "Menu"))
          **match   list   ("Menu", "Menu")**
          match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(14, 18, "main"), 1:(14, 18, "main"))
          **match   list   ("main", "main")**
          match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(22, 24, "0m"), 1:(22, 24, "0m"))
          match   list   ("0m", "0m")
          QRegularExpression remove ascii applied  
            "\u0001\u001B[1;39\u0002 :\u0001\u001B[0\u0002"
          single character DONE 
          
          VRoninV 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • A Offline
            A Offline
            Anonymous_Banned275
            wrote on last edited by
            #17

            I am trying to simplify the process

            This regular expression works and removes all control code

            QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\w\d ]+"));
            qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied \n " << result;

            This regal expression DOES NOT WORK
            I get run time error

            QString::replace: invalid QRegularExpression object

            It supposedly remove all control code

            result  = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\u0000-\\u007F]+"));
                    qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied  \n " << result;
            

            return result;

            Christian EhrlicherC JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • A Anonymous_Banned275

              I am trying to simplify the process

              This regular expression works and removes all control code

              QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\w\d ]+"));
              qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied \n " << result;

              This regal expression DOES NOT WORK
              I get run time error

              QString::replace: invalid QRegularExpression object

              It supposedly remove all control code

              result  = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\u0000-\\u007F]+"));
                      qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied  \n " << result;
              

              return result;

              Christian EhrlicherC Offline
              Christian EhrlicherC Offline
              Christian Ehrlicher
              Lifetime Qt Champion
              wrote on last edited by
              #18

              @AnneRanch said in using reqular expression wrong:

              This regal expression DOES NOT WORK

              Because \u0000 and \u007F are not valid for pcre -> https://www.regular-expressions.info/unicode.html#codepoint

              Qt Online Installer direct download: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/online_installers/
              Visit the Qt Academy at https://academy.qt.io/catalog

              1 Reply Last reply
              2
              • A Anonymous_Banned275

                I am trying to simplify the process

                This regular expression works and removes all control code

                QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\w\d ]+"));
                qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied \n " << result;

                This regal expression DOES NOT WORK
                I get run time error

                QString::replace: invalid QRegularExpression object

                It supposedly remove all control code

                result  = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\u0000-\\u007F]+"));
                        qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied  \n " << result;
                

                return result;

                JonBJ Online
                JonBJ Online
                JonB
                wrote on last edited by JonB
                #19

                @AnneRanch
                As @Christian-Ehrlicher has said.

                That should be QRegularExpression("[^\\000-\\177]+")

                However it will not do what you intend. It will remove all ASCII characters, as the comment said, and return an empty string.

                I suspect you are wanting to try:

                result  = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\000-\\037]+"));
                

                which will remove just the characters you have which are non-ASCII-printable control characters.
                Your \u0001\u001B[1;39m\u0002export should result in [1;39mexport.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • A Offline
                  A Offline
                  Anonymous_Banned275
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #20

                  I am not sure linking to other forums is OK , but here is a part of it

                  I am trying to port the Java code to C++ and this reference claims that
                  the "controls characters " are identified as "[^\u0000-\u007F]"

                  and that is my objective "remove" all control characters.

                  And this removes ascii , not control characters>

                  QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\000-\037]+"));

                  and that has been my issue since I started this - remove control characters using this expression "[^\000-\037]+"));

                  I thin I am not using "remove" and plain "match the expression " correctly .

                  https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24229262/match-non-printable-non-ascii-characters-and-remove-from-text
                  public static string RemoveTroublesomeCharacters(string inString)
                  {
                  if (inString == null)
                  {
                  return null;
                  }

                  else
                  {
                      char ch;
                      Regex regex = new Regex(@"[^\u0000-\u007F]", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
                      Match charMatch = regex.Match(inString);
                  
                  JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • A Anonymous_Banned275

                    I am not sure linking to other forums is OK , but here is a part of it

                    I am trying to port the Java code to C++ and this reference claims that
                    the "controls characters " are identified as "[^\u0000-\u007F]"

                    and that is my objective "remove" all control characters.

                    And this removes ascii , not control characters>

                    QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\000-\037]+"));

                    and that has been my issue since I started this - remove control characters using this expression "[^\000-\037]+"));

                    I thin I am not using "remove" and plain "match the expression " correctly .

                    https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24229262/match-non-printable-non-ascii-characters-and-remove-from-text
                    public static string RemoveTroublesomeCharacters(string inString)
                    {
                    if (inString == null)
                    {
                    return null;
                    }

                    else
                    {
                        char ch;
                        Regex regex = new Regex(@"[^\u0000-\u007F]", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
                        Match charMatch = regex.Match(inString);
                    
                    JonBJ Online
                    JonBJ Online
                    JonB
                    wrote on last edited by JonB
                    #21

                    @AnneRanch
                    That code you are trying to use is for regular expressions understood by .NET. They are not identical to those used by Qt.

                    And this removes ascii , not control characters>

                    QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\000-\\037]+"));

                    Just remove the ^ I wrote (I forgot you were removing rather than retaining). Should be:

                    QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[\\000-\\037]+"));
                    
                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • A Anonymous_Banned275

                      I hope this post does not distracts from the discussion .

                      1. I believe the whole concept to "search for individual ascii characters" was misleading . I have been there before and using "words" "w" should make more sense from start. .

                      2. The code snippet is "work in progress", hence has some stuff not really needed at this point.

                      3. As seen , I can retieve "word" LIST m but I am stomped on how to get QString, not a :list":

                      SOLVED
                      QString test = match.captured();
                      qDebug() <<"match name from ( list ) " << test;

                      Code

                                      line = stream.readLine();
                                      //qDebug() <<"Stream raw line  ";
                                      qDebug() <<"stream raw line  \n " << line ;
                      
                                      // extracts the words
                      QRegularExpression re("(\\w+)");
                      QString subject(line);
                      QString *capture_name; //  = "                            ";
                      QRegularExpressionMatchIterator i = re.globalMatch(subject);
                      while (i.hasNext()) {
                          QRegularExpressionMatch match = i.next();
                          //  qDebug() <<"match (next)     " << i.next() ;
                           qDebug() <<"match     " << match ;
                      
                      THIS SORT OF WORKS 
                           qDebug() <<"match   list  " << match.capturedTexts();
                      
                      HOW TO GET INDIVIDUAL QSTRING HERE 
                      **?????**
                       **//     qDebug() <<"match  name ( from  list )  " << match.captured(*capture_name);**
                      HOW TO GET INDIVIDUAL QSTRING HERE 
                      
                      }
                      
                      
                      

                      Output

                      Stream file 
                      Stream file ArrayIndex  0
                      stream raw line  
                        "\u0001\u001B[1;39m\u0002Menu main:\u0001\u001B[0m\u0002"
                      match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(3, 4, "1"), 1:(3, 4, "1"))
                      match   list  match.captured( ("1", "1")
                      match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(5, 8, "39m"), 1:(5, 8, "39m"))
                      match   list   ("39m", "39m")
                      match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(9, 13, "Menu"), 1:(9, 13, "Menu"))
                      **match   list   ("Menu", "Menu")**
                      match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(14, 18, "main"), 1:(14, 18, "main"))
                      **match   list   ("main", "main")**
                      match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(22, 24, "0m"), 1:(22, 24, "0m"))
                      match   list   ("0m", "0m")
                      QRegularExpression remove ascii applied  
                        "\u0001\u001B[1;39\u0002 :\u0001\u001B[0\u0002"
                      single character DONE 
                      
                      VRoninV Offline
                      VRoninV Offline
                      VRonin
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #22

                      @AnneRanch said in using reqular expression wrong:

                      THIS SORT OF WORKS
                      qDebug() <<"match list " << match.capturedTexts();

                      HOW TO GET INDIVIDUAL QSTRING HERE

                      match.captured(0);

                      "La mort n'est rien, mais vivre vaincu et sans gloire, c'est mourir tous les jours"
                      ~Napoleon Bonaparte

                      On a crusade to banish setIndexWidget() from the holy land of Qt

                      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • VRoninV VRonin

                        @AnneRanch said in using reqular expression wrong:

                        THIS SORT OF WORKS
                        qDebug() <<"match list " << match.capturedTexts();

                        HOW TO GET INDIVIDUAL QSTRING HERE

                        match.captured(0);

                        JonBJ Online
                        JonBJ Online
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                        #23

                        @VRonin
                        If the OP ever returns to look at the answers to this question, it would be a shame if she did not first try the simple

                        QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[\\000-\\037]+"));
                        

                        at least to see if that is acceptable to her, compared to other more complex regular expression solutions....

                        [I have said that none proposed so far will be perfect, she would have to deal properly with removing just the ANSI escape sequences if she wants it to be really right.]

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        1
                        • C Offline
                          C Offline
                          ChrisW67
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #24

                          @AnneRanch said in using reqular expression wrong:

                          I am trying to port the Java code to C++ and this reference claims that
                          the "controls characters " are identified as "[^\u0000-\u007F]"

                          Well, that reference is wrong. This is the Unicode basic Latin page, covering code points from 0 through 127 decimal, which were specifically designed to be identical to ASCII codes. You will see that only the first 32 code points (0x0000 through 0x001F) and last code point (0x007f, Del) are non-printables: the remainder are printable characters. There are other non-printables outside this range also.

                          and that is my objective "remove" all control characters.
                          And this removes ascii , not control characters>
                          QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\000-\037]+"));
                          and that has been my issue since I started this - remove control characters using this expression "[^\000-\037]+"));

                          The regular expression matches any run of characters that is not in the range 0 to 31 decimal. You ask Qt to remove any character that the pattern matches: it does, leaving only those things in the control character block. You want the opposite of that.

                          It turns out that the documented regular expression dialect allows the POSIX character classes which can make life easier:

                          #include <QCoreApplication>
                          #include <QString>
                          #include <QRegularExpression>
                          #include <QDebug>
                          
                          int main(int argc, char **argv) {
                                  QCoreApplication app(argc, argv);
                          
                                  QString testString("ABC\tabc\177DEF-def\n\007");
                          
                                  // following removes all the ASCII printables (i.e. your broken result)
                                  QString temp(testString);
                                  temp.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\000-\\037]+"));
                                  qDebug() << testString << "==>" << temp;
                          
                                  // following removes all except the ASCII printables
                                  temp = testString;
                                  temp.remove(QRegularExpression("[\\000-\\037\\177]+"));
                                  qDebug() << testString << "==>" << temp;
                          
                                  // Following uses a POSIX character class to remove control characters
                                  // (which include TAB and NL).
                                  temp = testString;
                                  temp.remove(QRegularExpression("[[:cntrl:]]+"));
                                  qDebug() << testString << "==>" << temp;
                          
                                  return 0;
                          }
                          

                          Output:

                          "ABC\tabc\u007FDEF-def\n\u0007" ==> "\t\n\u0007"
                          "ABC\tabc\u007FDEF-def\n\u0007" ==> "ABCabcDEF-def"
                          "ABC\tabc\u007FDEF-def\n\u0007" ==> "ABCabcDEF-def"
                          
                          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                          1
                          • C ChrisW67

                            @AnneRanch said in using reqular expression wrong:

                            I am trying to port the Java code to C++ and this reference claims that
                            the "controls characters " are identified as "[^\u0000-\u007F]"

                            Well, that reference is wrong. This is the Unicode basic Latin page, covering code points from 0 through 127 decimal, which were specifically designed to be identical to ASCII codes. You will see that only the first 32 code points (0x0000 through 0x001F) and last code point (0x007f, Del) are non-printables: the remainder are printable characters. There are other non-printables outside this range also.

                            and that is my objective "remove" all control characters.
                            And this removes ascii , not control characters>
                            QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\000-\037]+"));
                            and that has been my issue since I started this - remove control characters using this expression "[^\000-\037]+"));

                            The regular expression matches any run of characters that is not in the range 0 to 31 decimal. You ask Qt to remove any character that the pattern matches: it does, leaving only those things in the control character block. You want the opposite of that.

                            It turns out that the documented regular expression dialect allows the POSIX character classes which can make life easier:

                            #include <QCoreApplication>
                            #include <QString>
                            #include <QRegularExpression>
                            #include <QDebug>
                            
                            int main(int argc, char **argv) {
                                    QCoreApplication app(argc, argv);
                            
                                    QString testString("ABC\tabc\177DEF-def\n\007");
                            
                                    // following removes all the ASCII printables (i.e. your broken result)
                                    QString temp(testString);
                                    temp.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\000-\\037]+"));
                                    qDebug() << testString << "==>" << temp;
                            
                                    // following removes all except the ASCII printables
                                    temp = testString;
                                    temp.remove(QRegularExpression("[\\000-\\037\\177]+"));
                                    qDebug() << testString << "==>" << temp;
                            
                                    // Following uses a POSIX character class to remove control characters
                                    // (which include TAB and NL).
                                    temp = testString;
                                    temp.remove(QRegularExpression("[[:cntrl:]]+"));
                                    qDebug() << testString << "==>" << temp;
                            
                                    return 0;
                            }
                            

                            Output:

                            "ABC\tabc\u007FDEF-def\n\u0007" ==> "\t\n\u0007"
                            "ABC\tabc\u007FDEF-def\n\u0007" ==> "ABCabcDEF-def"
                            "ABC\tabc\u007FDEF-def\n\u0007" ==> "ABCabcDEF-def"
                            
                            JonBJ Online
                            JonBJ Online
                            JonB
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #25

                            @ChrisW67 said in using reqular expression wrong:

                            You want the opposite of that.

                            I did reply earlier:

                            Just remove the ^ I wrote (I forgot you were removing rather than retaining). Should be:

                            QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[\\000-\\037]+"));
                            
                            1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • A Offline
                              A Offline
                              Anonymous_Banned275
                              wrote on last edited by Anonymous_Banned275
                              #26
                              1. JobB please get off your horse - this is a discussions and we all have difference of opinions - which is what discussions are for.
                                ( You remind me of "study group " I had years ago where certain cultures insisted on "we all have to have same opinion and agree ... then we can go home ')
                              2. I did state I am porting from Java , hence the source ( I used ) is different...
                                ( I realize things get missed . miss-read etc. )
                              3. There are two concepts ( to get the job done ) - so far
                                identify all ASCII characters
                                remove all control characters

                              Here is the code :

                              #ifdef BYPASS
                                    
                                      QRegularExpression re("[^\\w\\d (:/<>) ]+");
                                      QString result  = inString.remove(re); // keep  all ascii plus some 
                                      qDebug() <<"remove all controls \n    " << result;
                                      return result;
                              #endif
                                      
                                      QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[\\000-\\037]+"));
                                      qDebug() <<"remove all controls \n    " << result;
                                      return result;
                              

                              They both leave some unwanted characters. Those are easy to remove after
                              "regular expression" is done.
                              4. Looks as "match" is OK but too complex to accomplish what I want.

                              1. AS the original title said - I was using the concept wrong - did not pay attention to actual expression - identifying or deleting stuff.

                              I really appreciate everybody input , it has been educational.

                              Cheers

                              JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • A Anonymous_Banned275
                                1. JobB please get off your horse - this is a discussions and we all have difference of opinions - which is what discussions are for.
                                  ( You remind me of "study group " I had years ago where certain cultures insisted on "we all have to have same opinion and agree ... then we can go home ')
                                2. I did state I am porting from Java , hence the source ( I used ) is different...
                                  ( I realize things get missed . miss-read etc. )
                                3. There are two concepts ( to get the job done ) - so far
                                  identify all ASCII characters
                                  remove all control characters

                                Here is the code :

                                #ifdef BYPASS
                                      
                                        QRegularExpression re("[^\\w\\d (:/<>) ]+");
                                        QString result  = inString.remove(re); // keep  all ascii plus some 
                                        qDebug() <<"remove all controls \n    " << result;
                                        return result;
                                #endif
                                        
                                        QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[\\000-\\037]+"));
                                        qDebug() <<"remove all controls \n    " << result;
                                        return result;
                                

                                They both leave some unwanted characters. Those are easy to remove after
                                "regular expression" is done.
                                4. Looks as "match" is OK but too complex to accomplish what I want.

                                1. AS the original title said - I was using the concept wrong - did not pay attention to actual expression - identifying or deleting stuff.

                                I really appreciate everybody input , it has been educational.

                                Cheers

                                JonBJ Online
                                JonBJ Online
                                JonB
                                wrote on last edited by JonB
                                #27

                                @AnneRanch said in using reqular expression wrong:

                                JobB please get off your horse - this is a discussions and we all have difference of opinions - which is what discussions are for.

                                What are you talking about? I gave you the code you need to remove all non-ASCII chars. That's all. And as usual got abuse back. I know you are rude to everybody, but any reason to single me out? :) Oh, and I just saw you use what I suggested and still are cross with me!

                                A 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • JonBJ JonB

                                  @AnneRanch said in using reqular expression wrong:

                                  JobB please get off your horse - this is a discussions and we all have difference of opinions - which is what discussions are for.

                                  What are you talking about? I gave you the code you need to remove all non-ASCII chars. That's all. And as usual got abuse back. I know you are rude to everybody, but any reason to single me out? :) Oh, and I just saw you use what I suggested and still are cross with me!

                                  A Offline
                                  A Offline
                                  Anonymous_Banned275
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #28

                                  @JonB ok let's get serious Your posts are great technically, but you just cannot say it without making comments - such as " if he comes back ..."
                                  "I told you so ..." etc.
                                  I realize that each of us has different way to express stuff and that is perfectly OK .
                                  My gut feeling is - I am not native English speaker and not used to this sentence structure:

                                  " ...YOU can do it this way , I ALREADY TOLD YOU SO . "

                                  In may native language I would say
                                  " ... do it this way, "

                                  Cheers

                                  JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • A Anonymous_Banned275

                                    @JonB ok let's get serious Your posts are great technically, but you just cannot say it without making comments - such as " if he comes back ..."
                                    "I told you so ..." etc.
                                    I realize that each of us has different way to express stuff and that is perfectly OK .
                                    My gut feeling is - I am not native English speaker and not used to this sentence structure:

                                    " ...YOU can do it this way , I ALREADY TOLD YOU SO . "

                                    In may native language I would say
                                    " ... do it this way, "

                                    Cheers

                                    JonBJ Online
                                    JonBJ Online
                                    JonB
                                    wrote on last edited by JonB
                                    #29

                                    @AnneRanch
                                    Ah, OK. The trouble is we seem to tell you stuff and you often seem to ignore it and not act on it. That can be frustrating. But I will (try to) bear in mind what you say when replying in your threads :)

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                                      Anonymous_Banned275
                                      wrote on last edited by Anonymous_Banned275
                                      #30

                                      SOLVED
                                      use QString "replace" instead...

                                      I need more help making the actual expression

                                      QRegularExpression re("[\000-\037[1;139m]+")

                                      This works BUT deletes EVERY occurrence of "m" .

                                      I like to delete ONLY this string "[1;139m"

                                      PS
                                      can anybody recommend "use regular expressing examples in C++"?
                                      I am getting too many "tutorials" and like to know group recommendation .

                                      This one does not really explain stuff, just looks pretty (IMHO) ,,,

                                      https://www.softwaretestinghelp.com/regex-in-cpp/

                                      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • A Anonymous_Banned275

                                        SOLVED
                                        use QString "replace" instead...

                                        I need more help making the actual expression

                                        QRegularExpression re("[\000-\037[1;139m]+")

                                        This works BUT deletes EVERY occurrence of "m" .

                                        I like to delete ONLY this string "[1;139m"

                                        PS
                                        can anybody recommend "use regular expressing examples in C++"?
                                        I am getting too many "tutorials" and like to know group recommendation .

                                        This one does not really explain stuff, just looks pretty (IMHO) ,,,

                                        https://www.softwaretestinghelp.com/regex-in-cpp/

                                        JonBJ Online
                                        JonBJ Online
                                        JonB
                                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                                        #31

                                        @AnneRanch
                                        It gets harder to write the the regular expression for that case.

                                        In all the examples you have shown so far, like

                                        stream raw line  
                                          "\u0001\u001B[1;39m\u0002export          \u0001\u001B[0m\u0002Print environment variables"
                                        

                                        they all look like

                                        \u0001...\u0002
                                        

                                        That means they have an ASCII-1 at the start and an ASCII-2 at the end. If all your cases look like this, then:

                                        line.remove(QRegularExpression("\\001[^\\002]*\\002"));
                                        

                                        should get rid of just what you want, and leave no "artefact bits".

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