Great work Scott! Keep these rolling. I've been contemplating on how to connect Getguru with Coda so team members can search coda for answers in slack. If you could solve this it would be a huge value add. Plus, I could see this being a paid pack! Searching coda with slack. Nonetheless, we will be using this for inside Coda searches!
Wow, i love how elegant your use of formulas is. Pleas keep posting these videos, i always learn so much. BTW, the term Regex comes from REGular EXpression. I am not an expert, but i have always heard people say it Reg-ex with “Reg” from regular; rhymes with Reggie. I don’t think that regex is supposed to rhyme with reject. Just trying to be helpful. I am sure you put plenty of time into these videos.
It's with a hard "G" as you said, from the word REGular. This is from "Mastering Regular Expressions" by Jeffrey Friedl, 2006: I normally use 'regex.' It just rolls right off the tongue (it rhymes with 'FedEx,' with a hard g sound like 'regular' and not a soft one like in 'Regina').
How big of a data set have you tested this on? Also, am I the only one who pronounces it “reg-ex,” as in “regular expression”? Or have I been mispronouncing this forever?
This is awesome Scott!!
Great work Scott! Keep these rolling. I've been contemplating on how to connect Getguru with Coda so team members can search coda for answers in slack. If you could solve this it would be a huge value add. Plus, I could see this being a paid pack! Searching coda with slack.
Nonetheless, we will be using this for inside Coda searches!
Wow, i love how elegant your use of formulas is. Pleas keep posting these videos, i always learn so much.
BTW, the term Regex comes from REGular EXpression. I am not an expert, but i have always heard people say it Reg-ex with “Reg” from regular; rhymes with Reggie. I don’t think that regex is supposed to rhyme with reject. Just trying to be helpful. I am sure you put plenty of time into these videos.
It's with a hard "G" as you said, from the word REGular.
This is from "Mastering Regular Expressions" by Jeffrey Friedl, 2006:
I normally use 'regex.' It just rolls right off the tongue (it rhymes with 'FedEx,' with a hard g sound like 'regular' and not a soft one like in 'Regina').
Very neat! Well done.
Omg. Thank you. 😢 🙏🏾
How big of a data set have you tested this on?
Also, am I the only one who pronounces it “reg-ex,” as in “regular expression”? Or have I been mispronouncing this forever?
Notes:
00:00 How to build a company wiki and search