This regular expression (or regexp) can be broken down as follows.
(<([^>]+)>)
The parentheses are for grouping.
Sometimes they are used to memorize matches to use in later work, though I see no evidence that is happening in this limited sample of the code.
Sometimes they are used to allow multiple alternative choices (e.g. (a|b|c)
, but I don't see that here either.
Since the parentheses don't do anything in this expression, at least not as far as matching, let's ignore them. That leaves this:
<[^>]+>
Half of this are just literal characters to match. The beginning of the match must be the literal 4-character string <
, and the end of the string is the literal character >
. In the middle is the only regexp bit.
[^>]+
The square brackets denote a character class. Inside a character class, if ^
is the first character, as it is here, then it is an inverse character class, that is, it means "match things that are not these things". So, this character class says "match things that are not a >
."
The +
after the character class is called a quantifier, and it means "one or more of this thing".
So, taken together it means "one or more things that are not a >
."
The entire expression means: match <
followed by one or more things that are not >
, followed by a >
.
After the expression are two flags, i
and g
. The i
means match case-insensitively. It doesn't do anything here, because your expression has no match characters that are alphabetic. The g
flag means to match globally, that is, if there is more than one match against the input, match them all instead of matching only in the first case.
Now, looking at your example XML, I believe the expression would make a number of edits. Note that you posted the content of <wd:Question_Employee_Comment>
only, but the expression is actually operating on both that and the content of <wd:Question_Manager_Comment>
, if that has a value. I won't remark on <wd:Question_Manager_Comment>
here, because you didn't post what it contains.
- The leading
<p>
just before I don't even
will be replaced by a newline.
- Just after
important to success
, the </p><p></p><p>
will be replaced by 4 newlines.
- Just after
absent on
, the </p><ul><li>
will be replaced by 3 newlines.
- Just after
3/19/15
, the </li><li>
would be replaced by 2 newlines.
- Just after
March 20, 2015
, the </li><li>
would be replaced by 2 newlines.
- Just after
5/01/2015
, the </li>
would be replaced by a newline.
- Just before
All additional
, the `<p></p><p> would be replaced by 3 newlines.
- At the end,
</p>
would be replaced by a newline.
Note that there is a partial tag in there that is missed by the expression, /ul>
.
Result:
<wd:Question_Employee_Comment>
\nI don't even know where to start... Cupid wasn't @ his desk on 2/14/2015
and I'm really upset because I've been really patient with his personal needs.
Santa &amp; I sat him down and have discussed why his attendance is important
to success.\n\n\n\nHe's been absent
on:\n\n\n3/19/15\n\nMarch 20,
2015\n\n05/01/2015\n/ul>\n\n\nAll
additional dates will be documented.\n
</wd:Question_Employee_Comment>
That's from the .replace()
you specifically asked about. Further work is also done by the full expression, such as fixing &amp;
to be &
, and other things are done. I haven't made all of those transformations here since those weren't part of the core question you asked, but could elaborate if you don't understand those parts.