The advantage of using a regular expression for this, would be to assure that it wouldn't replace any [*
or *]
that would occur by themselves. The pattern can match the occurance of both.
A limitation of using such a pattern would be that it can't handle nested occurances, e.g. "Some [*text [*with*] nested*] tags."
.
Performance for using a regular expression compared to String.Replace
would be about the same. There is some overhead when creating the regular expression, but you need to run through the string twice when you use String.Replace
.
Using a regular expression would look like this:
s = Regex.Replace(s, @"\[\*(.+)\*\]", "$1");
The parentheses in the pattern captures what's within the tags, and $1
in the replacement string uses what was captured to replace the entire tag.