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andrew-coleman committed Nov 18, 2023
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion next/regex.html
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Expand Up @@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ <h2><a class="anchor" aria-hidden="true" id="functions-which-use-regular-express
<h2><a class="anchor" aria-hidden="true" id="regular-expressions-in-query-predicates"></a><a href="#regular-expressions-in-query-predicates" aria-hidden="true" class="hash-link"><svg class="hash-link-icon" aria-hidden="true" height="16" version="1.1" viewBox="0 0 16 16" width="16"><path fill-rule="evenodd" d="M4 9h1v1H4c-1.5 0-3-1.69-3-3.5S2.55 3 4 3h4c1.45 0 3 1.69 3 3.5 0 1.41-.91 2.72-2 3.25V8.59c.58-.45 1-1.27 1-2.09C10 5.22 8.98 4 8 4H4c-.98 0-2 1.22-2 2.5S3 9 4 9zm9-3h-1v1h1c1 0 2 1.22 2 2.5S13.98 12 13 12H9c-.98 0-2-1.22-2-2.5 0-.83.42-1.64 1-2.09V6.25c-1.09.53-2 1.84-2 3.25C6 11.31 7.55 13 9 13h4c1.45 0 3-1.69 3-3.5S14.5 6 13 6z"></path></svg></a>Regular expressions in query predicates</h2>
<p>Regexes are often used in query predicates (filter expressions) when selecting objects that contain a matching string property. For this, a short cut notation can be used as follows:</p>
<p><code>path.to.object[stringProperty ~&gt; /regex/]</code></p>
<p>The <code>~&gt;</code> is the <a href="control-operators#chain">chain operator</a>, and its use here implies that the result of <code>/regex/</code> is a function. We'll see below that this is in fact the case.</p>
<p>The <code>~&gt;</code> is the <a href="other-operators#-chain">chain operator</a>, and its use here implies that the result of <code>/regex/</code> is a function. We'll see below that this is in fact the case.</p>
<p><strong>Examples</strong></p>
<p><code>Account.Order.Product[`Product Name` ~&gt; /hat/i ]</code></p>
<p>will match all products that have 'hat' in their name.</p>
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion next/regex/index.html
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ <h2><a class="anchor" aria-hidden="true" id="functions-which-use-regular-express
<h2><a class="anchor" aria-hidden="true" id="regular-expressions-in-query-predicates"></a><a href="#regular-expressions-in-query-predicates" aria-hidden="true" class="hash-link"><svg class="hash-link-icon" aria-hidden="true" height="16" version="1.1" viewBox="0 0 16 16" width="16"><path fill-rule="evenodd" d="M4 9h1v1H4c-1.5 0-3-1.69-3-3.5S2.55 3 4 3h4c1.45 0 3 1.69 3 3.5 0 1.41-.91 2.72-2 3.25V8.59c.58-.45 1-1.27 1-2.09C10 5.22 8.98 4 8 4H4c-.98 0-2 1.22-2 2.5S3 9 4 9zm9-3h-1v1h1c1 0 2 1.22 2 2.5S13.98 12 13 12H9c-.98 0-2-1.22-2-2.5 0-.83.42-1.64 1-2.09V6.25c-1.09.53-2 1.84-2 3.25C6 11.31 7.55 13 9 13h4c1.45 0 3-1.69 3-3.5S14.5 6 13 6z"></path></svg></a>Regular expressions in query predicates</h2>
<p>Regexes are often used in query predicates (filter expressions) when selecting objects that contain a matching string property. For this, a short cut notation can be used as follows:</p>
<p><code>path.to.object[stringProperty ~&gt; /regex/]</code></p>
<p>The <code>~&gt;</code> is the <a href="control-operators#chain">chain operator</a>, and its use here implies that the result of <code>/regex/</code> is a function. We'll see below that this is in fact the case.</p>
<p>The <code>~&gt;</code> is the <a href="other-operators#-chain">chain operator</a>, and its use here implies that the result of <code>/regex/</code> is a function. We'll see below that this is in fact the case.</p>
<p><strong>Examples</strong></p>
<p><code>Account.Order.Product[`Product Name` ~&gt; /hat/i ]</code></p>
<p>will match all products that have 'hat' in their name.</p>
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