$interest is the thing you're applying the regex to. !~ is the "does not match" operator. The // enclose the regex ^ means to match beginning at the start of $interest -? means to optionally match a minus character \.? means to optionally match a literal period \d+ means to match one or more digits (?: ) does grouping in a noncapturing way \. matches a literal period \d+ matches one or more digits The ? after that () means to optionally match that grouping. $ means the line must end there. I don't quite know why someone told you to wrap that in a while loop -- it doesn't really make sense, unless perhaps the contents of the while loop might explain it. In sum though, reading through my description there, you see that a number is, for the purposes of this regex, optionally starts with a minus sign, and maybe a decimal point, then a sequence of digits, and possibly a decimal point plus a fractional part. Hope this helps..
In reply to Re: What does this regex do?
by Improv
in thread What does this regex do?
by sulfericacid
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