Do you not want to use lookbehind because of efficiency concerns, or some other reason? It seems to be just the right tool for the job... It's doing what you were trying to do in your original code: making sure "abc" does not match before "nevermind".

As far as using [^abc] to do the job, [] represents a character class within regular expressions, and can only match a single character at a time. So unfortunately, you can't use [] to match anything more than a single character.

-- Mike

--
just,my${.02}


In reply to Re: Re: Re: stupid question about regexp - not matching a word by thelenm
in thread stupid question about regexp - not matching a word by Anonymous Monk

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