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I know that the dollar sign is used to match the character at the end of the string, to make sure that search does not stop in the middle of the string but instead goes on till the end of the string.

But how does it deal with the newline character, does it match just before the new line character or does it take that into account.

I checked it in eclipse regex, for a regex matching array of strings ([A-Za-z ]+)$\n worked, not the other way around ([A-Za-z ]+\n)$

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2 Answers 2

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Note that ^ and $ are zero-width tokens. So, they don't match any character, but rather matches a position.

  • ^ matches the position before the first character in a string.
  • $ matches the position before the first newline in the string.

So, the String before the $ would of course not include the newline, and that is why ([A-Za-z ]+\n)$ regex of yours failed, and ([A-Za-z ]+)$\n succeeded.

In simple words, your $ should be followed by a newline, and no other character.

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    This depends on the engine, though. This is correct for common engines, but I have seen several minor regex implementations which actually "eat" the newline when you use $.
    – tripleee
    Dec 17, 2012 at 11:00
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    @tripleee.. Awww!! Haven't experienced that demon till now though. thanks for your comments, which will be more useful if you can give an example.
    – Rohit Jain
    Dec 17, 2012 at 11:04
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    Off the top of my head, I can point to Procmail, but I recall seeing this in multiple places. In Procmail, $ is sort-of documented to match a literal newline, so you can say $$ to match an empty line.
    – tripleee
    Dec 17, 2012 at 12:08
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If the pattern ends with a newline then $ usually matches before that character. That goes at least for Perl, PCRE, Java and .NET. (edit: as Tim Pietzker points out in a comment, \r is not considered a line break by .NET)

This was introduced, because input that is read from a line is terminated with a newline (at least in Perl), which can be conveniently ignored this way.

Use \z to signify the very end of the string (if it's supported by your regex engine).

Source

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  • And careful, in .NET, \r is not considered a newline character. Dec 17, 2012 at 10:43

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