• expr
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    2 years ago

    Every day pretty much with Unix tools. Vim, awk, sed, etc.

  • borup
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    2 years ago

    Usually many times a day… Even today which have been mostly meetings.

  • spartanatreyu
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    2 years ago

    At least once every few days while coding, usually to do one of the following:

    1. Select multiple things in the same file at the same time without needing to click all over the place

      Normally I use multicursor keyboard shortcuts to select what I want and for the trickier scenarios there are also commands to go through selections one at a time so you can skip certain matches to end up with only what you want.

      But sometimes there are too many false matches that you don’t want to select by hand and that’s where regex comes in handy.

      For instance, finding:

      • parent but not apparent, transparent, parentheses, apparently, transparently
      • test but not latest, fastest, testing, greatest, shortest
      • trie but not entries, retries, countries, retrieve
      • http but not https

      … which can be easily done by searching for a word that doesn’t include a letter immediately before or immediately after: e.g. \Wtest\W.

    2. Search for things across all files that come back with too many results that aren’t relevant

      Basically using the same things above.

    3. Finding something I already know makes a pattern. Like finding all years: \d{4}, finding all versions: \d+\.\d+\.\d+, finding random things that a linter may have missed such as two empty lines touching each other: \n\s*\n\s*\n, etc…

        • kionite231@lemmy.cadeleted by creatorOP
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          2 years ago

          If we want to include every protocol then the RE could be complex.

          • lad
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            2 years ago

            Depending on the use-case it maybe should. On the other hand, some things are better left to library implementations rather than custom regex, e.g. email validation

  • Oneironaut21@ani.social
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    2 years ago

    On average I’ve probably had to work with them or write one from scratch only a handful of times per year over my career. Not often enough to be an expert or anything but I’m not so afraid of them as I used to be.

  • NostraDavid
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    2 years ago

    Yesterday, when I had a file with a list of JSON objects, and I wanted to move the date field at the end to the beginning, so I used regex find and replace to move it. Something like \{(.*?), ("date": ".*?") in Search, and then {$2, $1 in replace (or something close to it).

    Yes, I refactor code and data using regex. I can’t be arsed to learn AWK (even though I should).

    • kionite231@lemmy.cadeleted by creatorOP
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      2 years ago

      AWK doesn’t work with json IIRC. You have to use jq to deal with json.

      • NostraDavid
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        2 years ago

        While yes, the way I had it structured looked like a CSV if you squinted a little, I do fully agree AWK can’t be used for just any old JSON.

        jq is dope, but that language still feels pretty confusing IMO.

  • bitcrafter
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    2 years ago

    I don’t always use regular expressions, but when I do, I use it to parse XML,

      • bitcrafter
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        2 years ago

        Sure, but if you are not regularly expressing code that has the potential of summoning elder gods that will swallow your soul into a dimension of ceaseless screaming then are you really living?

  • lysdexic
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    2 years ago

    Asking this question is like asking when was the last time you had to search through text.

  • livingcoder
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    2 years ago

    Yesterday doing a search using vim for a class that shared a lot of characters at the front with many other classes: /Bas.*Some I could have done a more precise search with better regex, but this was quick, easy, and worked.

  • verstra
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    2 years ago

    Today, to configure fail2ban. Before that, yesterday to select which tests to run.

    • nik9000
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      2 years ago

      Usually I use glob patterns for test selection.

      But I did use reges yesterday to find something else. A java security file definition.

  • towerful
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    2 years ago

    Interesting to see a lot of these responses (so far) are workflow related instead of being used in production.

    • lad
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      2 years ago

      Probably, because in production there are really few things that are best done with regex. Most use I had for regex in production is filling in data from user-provided files with specifically crafted names, and even there there was some guesswork because of errors in naming, and the same thing may have been achieved without regex by splitting and/or iterating