yes.
\w matches any "word" character =
[a-zA-Z_0-9].
\W matches anything else. the
/i makes no difference in this example (it does not make the regex
/[\w\W][\W\w]/ as I think you may believe).
The following will not match:
- empty strings
- single character strings
- any 2 character string with a \W char followed by a \w char (e.g. '*f', '£L', '+3' etc.)
- any string > 2 chars comprised solely of \w or \W chars (e.g. 'abcdef', '%^£$' etc.)
Can't think of any more!
Hope this helps - larryk
"Argument is futile - you will be ignorralated!"
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