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I found [.] in a regular expression on manpage of notmuch:

notmuch search 'from:"/bob@.*[.]example[.]com/"'

It seemed to be useless because brackets are for list but have only one character, but finally I learned it matches a literal dot.

Then, why they use it rather than \.? Are there any advantages on this expression?

1 Answers1

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At first I thought that this is to avoid double escaping but on further consideration I think this is because a dot in a character set ([]) is treated differently than normal. It makes sense that in a character set a dot only matches a literal dot, the whole point is to match a specific set of characters so having a wildcard in the set doesn't make sense.

So [.,;:] may be used to match punctuation marks.

Once you take that into account it's obvious that [.] just matches dot.

Whether to use \. or [.] is left as an aesthetic decision.

Motti
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