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  2. RE2 (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RE2_(software)

    RE2 is a software library which implements a regular expression engine. It uses finite-state machines, in contrast to most other regular expression libraries. RE2 supports a C++ interface. RE2 was implemented by Google and Google uses RE2 for Google products. [3]

  3. Comparison of regular expression engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_regular...

    Fuzzy Regular Expressions for Java: Java: LGPL GLib/GRegex [Note 3] GLib reference manual: C: LGPL GNU regex Gnulib reference manual: C LGPL GNU libc, GNU programs GRETA Microsoft Research: C++ Proprietary Gregex: Grovf Inc. RTL, HLS Proprietary: FPGA accelerated >100 Gbit/s regex engine for cybersecurity, financial, e-commerce industries ...

  4. Sam (text editor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_(text_editor)

    Sam is a multi-file text editor based on structural regular expressions. It was originally designed in the early 1980s at Bell Labs by Rob Pike with the help of Ken Thompson and other Unix developers for the Blit windowing terminal running on v9 Unix; [1] it was later ported to other systems. Sam follows a classical modular Unix aesthetic.

  5. Oniguruma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oniguruma

    Oniguruma (鬼車) is a free and open-source regular expression library that supports a variety of character encodings, written by K. Kosako.The Ruby programming language, in version 1.9, as well as PHP's multi-byte string module (since PHP5), use Oniguruma as their regular expression engine. [2]

  6. Sublime Text - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sublime_Text

    Sublime Text is a text and source code editor featuring a minimal interface, syntax highlighting and code folding with native support for numerous programming and markup languages, search and replace with support for regular expressions, an integrated terminal/console window, and customizable themes.

  7. Regular expression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression

    He later added this capability to the Unix editor ed, which eventually led to the popular search tool grep's use of regular expressions ("grep" is a word derived from the command for regular expression searching in the ed editor: g/re/p meaning "Global search for Regular Expression and Print matching lines"). [15]

  8. grep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grep

    The pcregrep command is an implementation of grep that uses Perl regular expression syntax. [17] Similar functionality can be invoked in the GNU version of grep with the -P flag. [18] Ports of grep (within Cygwin and GnuWin32, for example) also run under Microsoft Windows. Some versions of Windows feature the similar qgrep or findstr command. [19]

  9. Scintilla (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scintilla_(software)

    Scintilla's regular expression library can also be replaced or avoided with direct buffer access. Currently, Scintilla has experimental support for right-to-left languages. [4] Scinterm is a version of Scintilla for the curses text user interface. It is written by the developer of the Textadept editor.