• @[email protected]
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    894 months ago

    no, this is one of the worst answers on Stack Overflow

    OP had a specific question to capture opening tags. The thing OP asked about can be done with regular expressions. It is true that arbitrarily nested languages like HTML cannot generally be parsed with regular expressions, but that is not what OP asked about.

    • @[email protected]
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      894 months ago

      This is StackOverflow after all. Your question is wrong. Your problem is wrong. You are wrong. I am right. Thread locked. Go read this other post that is totally unrelated to your problem I’ve decided isn’t the problem you’re facing because. I. Am. Right.

      • @Quetzalcutlass
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        4 months ago

        Could be worse. At least it’s not Microsoft’s support forums:

        Hey, I see you’re having problems with <copy-paste key words from OP>. Try the following and see if it fixes your issue.

        Open a command prompt and enter ”sfc /scannow".

        I hope this helps!

        (Reply marked as solution, thread closed.)

      • @errer
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        194 months ago

        That’s why LLMs are so infuriatingly stubborn, they’re trained on these keyboard warriors

      • JackbyDev
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        34 months ago

        I had a decade old question marked as a duplicate and downvoted three times after years no no activity. SE is such a joke nowadays.

    • @moriquende
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      74 months ago

      It can’t be done, as an opening tag in html can contain anything in its attributes, even JavaScript (e.g. onclick handler).

        • @moriquende
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          54 months ago

          You can’t parse every html opening tag with regex, because a html opening tag doesn’t have a set structure. How would you match, with regex, this opening tag? <mytag myattribute="<value of \"myattribute\">" >

          • @[email protected]
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            4 months ago

            Is this valid HTML? My understanding is that that attribute value needs to be escaped, i.e. &lt;value of \&quot;myattribute\&quot;&gt;.

            • @moriquende
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              44 months ago

              The quote must not be escaped when you start with a single quote. The rest doesn’t. This is valid and tested: <img alt='my "<img>"'>

    • kbal
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      04 months ago

      It can be done with simple regex of the kind proposed in various answers there iff the html is known to be limited to the subset of html where that sort of thing can easily be made to work. The question does not tell us whether or not that is the case, so everyone is free to make their own assumptions and argue as if they know what’s going on.