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Full Discussion: Regex patterns
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Regex patterns Post 302925838 by Corona688 on Wednesday 19th of November 2014 02:21:12 PM
Old 11-19-2014
Let's break it down.

Code:
ORA- # String must begin in this
         0*    # Zero or more zeroes, i.e. 600, 0600, 0000000000600...
         # And one of the following:
                600?  # 60 or 600
                7445 # this exact string
                4[0-9][0-9][0-9] # 4000-4999
         # Followed by at least one non-numeric character:
        [^0-9]

So it's hard to tell if any of those would work. That non-numeric doesn't seem to have anything to match.
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Ns_ConnStatus(3aolserver)				   AOLserver Library Procedures 				 Ns_ConnStatus(3aolserver)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
Ns_ConnGetStatus, Ns_ConnSetStatus - Routines to manage the HTTP response status SYNOPSIS
#include "ns.h" int Ns_ConnGetStatus(conn) void Ns_ConnSetStatus(conn, status) ARGUMENTS
Ns_Conn conn (in) Pointer to open connection. int status (in) Integer HTTP status code. _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
These routines manage the HTTP response code sent to the client in a later call to Ns_ConnFlush or Ns_ConnFlushDirect. Higher level rou- tines such as the Ns_ConnReturn functions normally call these routines automatically using standard HTTP status codes and the Ns_ConnQueue- Headers routine can be used to set the status code for lower level code which bypasses Ns_ConnFlush. int Ns_ConnGetStatus(conn) Return the current HTTP status to be sent. int Ns_ConnSetStatus(conn, status) Set the status code to be sent in the response, for example, 200 for a normal "OK" response. A later call to Ns_ConnFlush will con- struct the appropriate HTTP response including the given status with the cooresponding string status code. EXAMPLES
The following example demonstrates setting an odd status code followed by a call to Ns_ConnFlushDirect to send some data: Ns_ConnSetStatus(conn, 600); Ns_ConnSetType(conn, "text/plain"); Ns_ConnFlushDirect(conn, "hello", 5, 0); The following should provide similar results: Ns_ConnSetRequiredHeaders(conn, "text/plain", 5); Ns_ConnQueueHeaders(conn, 600); Ns_ConnPuts(conn, "hello"); Ns_ConnClose(conn); SEE ALSO
Ns_ConnGetType(3), Ns_ConnSetType(3), Ns_ConnFlush(3), Ns_ConnFlushDirect(3), Ns_ConnSetRequiredHeaders(3), Ns_ConnQueueHeaders(3), ns_conn(n) KEYWORDS
connectionn, response, status AOLserver 4.0 Ns_ConnStatus(3aolserver)
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