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secure shell access secure shell access [:graph:] Characters that are both printable and visible. (A space is printable, but not visible, while an a is both.) [:xdigit:] Characters that are hexadecimal digits. For example, before the POSIX standard, to match alphanu- meric characters, you would have had to write /[A-Za-z0-9]/. If your character set had other alphabetic characters in it, this would not match them, and if your character set collated differently from ASCII, this might not even match the ASCII alphanumeric characters.

secure shell access With the POSIX character classes, you can write /[[:alnum:]]/, and this matches the alphabetic and numeric characters in your character set. Two additional special sequences can appear in character lists. These apply to non-ASCII character sets, which can have single symbols (called collating elements) that are represented with more than one character, as well as sev- eral characters that are equivalent for collating, or sorting, purposes. (E.g.

secure shell access , in French, a plain "e" and a grave-accented e` are equivalent.) Collating Symbols A collating symbol is a multi-character collating element enclosed in [. and .]. For example, if ch is a collating element, then [[.

secure shell access ch.]] is a regular expression that matches this collating element, while [ch] is a regular expression that matches either c or h. Equivalence Classes An equivalence class is a locale-specific name for a list of characters that are equivalent. The name is enclosed in [= and =]. For example, the name e might be used to represent all of "e," "`," and "`.

secure shell access

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