I would /expect/ that the regexp \d would match numbers, and numbers only. If 178 items in Unicode match, why? Are these just different ways of representing numbers in other languages perhaps? Perhaps things like 1/2 or 1/4? Or are you generating Unicode that is overly long, with different Unicode representations for the same numbers?

Does anyone have any explanation for why this would be the case? Does it even violate the assumption that \d matches numbers?


In reply to RE: (dchetlin: beware the unicode beast) Re(2): Number? by Fastolfe
in thread Number? by Anonymous Monk

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