Appendix B. Regular Expression Reference
Regular expressions play an important role in most text parsing and text matching tasks. They form an important underpinning of the -split
and -match
operators, the switch
statement, the Select-String
cmdlet, and more. Tables B-1 through B-9 list commonly used regular expressions.
Character class | Matches |
---|---|
|
Any character except for a newline. If the regular expression uses the PS > "T" -match '.' True |
|
Any character in the brackets. For example: PS > "Test" -match '[Tes]' True |
|
Any character not in the brackets. For example: PS > "Test" -match '[^Tes]' False |
|
Any character between the characters PS > "Test" -match '[e-t]' True |
|
Any character not between any of the character ranges PS > "Test" -match '[^e-t]' False |
|
Any character in the Unicode group or block range specified by PS > "+" -match '\p{Sm}' True |
|
Any character not in the Unicode group or block range specified by PS > "+" -match '\P{Sm}' False |
|
Any word character. ... |
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