HP Browse/XL User's Guide

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(a|[c-z]|[1-4])A single character chosen from the following: "a", the range "c" to "z", or the range 1 to 4.
([A-Z])BUF Any one capital letter followed by "BUF".
[A-Z]\(@\); Any string starting with an uppercase alphabetic character followed by an open parenthesis,
anynumberof characters, and a close parenthesis.Theentire string must be terminated with
a semicolon.
BUF+$ Any line ending with a string that begins with "BU", followed by one or more occurrences of
"F".
BUF* The character string "BU" followed by zero or more occurrences of "F".
???_BUF# Any three characters followed by the string "_BUF" followed by any one digit.
\@\?\\ The string "@?\".
Find Matching Delimiter
If the cursor is on a parenthesis, brace, or bracket, you can use the Find Matching Delimiter function to
move the cursor to the matching parenthesis, brace, or bracket if such a match exists. For example, if the
cursor is on a close parenthesis character (")") and you want to find the corresponding open parenthesis
character ("("), simply press the Match Delimitr function key and HP Browse will move the cursor to the
matching delimiter if it exists. If a matching delimiter does not exist, HP Browse will tell you so and leave
the cursor where it was when you executed the function.
Find All Occurrences
The Find All Occurrences function displays all the lines in a file containing your search pattern. It also
enables you to move quickly to a particular line containing your search pattern. If you specify a count
when you use this function, HP Browse searches the next count lines beginning with the current line. If
no count is given, HP Browse searches the entire file.
If the pattern cannot be found during a Find All Occurrences search, HP Browse displays "Not found." in
the message line. When a pattern is found, HP Browse displays the first 19 lines containing the search
pattern. (Note that if you press Control Y while the occurrence lines are being printed, HP Browse