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3:10 AM
@zx81 it's been along time..
 
@hwnd hey bro, yes long time no speak!
You been breaking all kinds of records? :)
 
3:39 AM
@zx81 no not quite. I don't have much time on here.
 
3:55 AM
@hwnd Same here… Ah well, hope you're enjoying your other activities
@hwnd If you were on windows I'd talk you ear off about this cool regex-powered tool I came across lately… But I know you're a 'nix man.
 
 
3 hours later…
6:45 AM
@Unihedro @MartinBüttner How did you guys eliminate B while A and B are rather similar?
 
7:12 AM
@zx81 which tool?
@nhahtdh nice answer :)
 
7:45 AM
@HamZa You know how in a file manager such as the default "windows explorer" (or Finder in OSX) you have columns with the file name, size, date, attributes, and if you're lucky some metadata such as the width of an image etc. The tool I mentioned allows you to add more columns that are based on a regex on the file name. This lets you create any file naming convention you like: for instance "Groundhog Day [yr=1993_rating=8.3_star=Bill Murray_tags=comedy].avi"
Then in the file manager you have columns with the year, rating, tags etc and you can sort by these columns. This way you can have a s
Groundhog Day [yr=1993_rating=8.3_star=Bill Murray_tags=comedy].avi
I'm sure you got it but in case that wasn't clear, you use a regex to parse the file name into columns
You have to work with the limitation that windows (path + file name)<261
 
@zx81 seems handy in some cases...
 
@HamZa Yeah… Haven't been using it long enough to see the limitations, but so far loving the control it gives me over certain types of files. Otherwise you always have to rely on external programs to manage certain file types and their metadata. Not a problem when the metadata is embedded, but that's a minority of files.
Definitely a niche though, the tiny subset of people who (care about file management x love regex)
(x use windows x have cash to invest in an alternate file manager)
 
8:00 AM
@nhahtdh B ends with .*, a starts with .*; For what I'd guess from my limited knowledge in regex, the second isn't problematic because it has a minimum match of nothing.
Hopefully this doesn't distract your speech, but @zx81 - might want to update a dead link in your About Me :p
> Options for Forced Failure (ignore the accepted answer). This is just for fun—the standard is (?!) or (*F) in Perl and PCRE.
 
8:21 AM
@Unihedro That somewhat makes sense, but the regex engine isn't that smart, actually
 

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