12-28-2012
Some flavors of regex have + for one or more, but you can just say 'ee*'. Also, there is '\{1,99\}' for 1 to 99 in the sed flavor. There must be about a dozen regex flavors, especially after the PERL guys dominated a POSIX version, so the word edge '\>' became '\b':
Regex Tutorial - \b Word Boundaries
There are even schemes to make the * lazy as opposed to the normal greedy behavior. Consider the ksh/bash ${pathname##*/} is greedy, leaves just the entry name, but the ${pathname#*/} just removes the first slash and anything before it. This is not a standard regex, but I recall MULTICS qedx having a way to do the agressive/lazy switch back when. I wonder if regex are older than UNIX?
The g says how many times to apply the substitution: infinite. You can also say 3 to skip to the third match before substituting. It has to do with the writing, not the matching. With no flag, same as 1.
http://www.regular-expressions.info/possessive.html
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