I think the general rule with anything is to explicitly permit what you think is acceptable, rather than deny what you can think of that shouldn't be there. So, if you think the path should containt letters and shouldn't contain % or $ then don't use
^%$ but instead look for
a-z0-9. That'll not only stop people putting in NT variables, but also disallow all sorts of weird character escape methods.
From what you've already said, you can assume your environment is fairly sanely set up, so maybe specify that the first character after a directory separator is alphanumeric, which will stop people using blah/. blah/../ blah/.somethingsomeonehid/ etc
There are probably lots of other examples of things your environment wouldn't have, so to begin with, put in something exceedingly restrictive like /([0-9a-z -]+\\)*[a-z0-9 -]+/i then come up with several real, acceptable paths and make sure they'd work. If not, loosen your definition by as little as possible to permit them to work.
the hatter
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