Every single flavor of regex I have ever used has always had the "." character match everything but a new line (\r or \n)... unless, of course, you enable the single-line flag.
So when I tried the following C# code I was shocked:
Regex rgx = new Regex(".");
if (rgx.Match("\r\n").Success)
MessageBox.Show("There is something rotten in the state of Redmond!");
It showed the message. Just to make sure I wasn't going insane, I tried the following JavaScript code:
if (/./.test("\r\n"))
alert("Something's wrong with JavaScript too.");
The JavaScript didn't show the message, meaning it's working exactly as it should.
Apparently, the "." character in .NET is matching the "\r" character. I checked the documentation to see if the mention anything about it:
Wildcard: Matches any single character except \n.
Wow... since when does a Regex flavor ever have the dot match a carriage return? You would think .NET would behave like all the rest of the Regex flavors... especially because it's in a Windows environment which uses "\r\n" as line delimiters.
Is there any flag/setting I can enable to make it work as it does in other Regex flavors? Are there any alternative solutions which don't involve replacing all .
characters with [^\r\n]
?