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Concerning this question:

Regex any character as long as the character is the same

I have a string representing cards in a deck, i.e. 7c9hQsKsAs

 

Is it possible to use Regex to specify .*x.*x.*x.*x.*x where x would specify any character (c/h/d/s) as long as the character is the same character throughout? This would be used to determine if there was a flush.

This was marked (with some sort of tag super power single vote, I haven't been as active lately so I don't know the term) as a duplicate of:

Have trouble understanding capturing groups and back references

To me this seems like a dubious duplicate. By that logic, literally any question about regex back references would be a duplicate of the target question.

This new question asks how to solve a specific problem, and the answer happens to be back references.

On the contrary, the target question is about understanding and interpreting the function of backreferences when already aware of them.

This seems like a kind of sad use of the dupe-hammer, since it shuts down answers to novel problems, just because the same tool is used to answer the problem. ๐Ÿ˜ž

Concerning this question:

Regex any character as long as the character is the same

I have a string representing cards in a deck, i.e. 7c9hQsKsAs

 

Is it possible to use Regex to specify .*x.*x.*x.*x.*x where x would specify any character (c/h/d/s) as long as the character is the same character throughout? This would be used to determine if there was a flush.

This was marked (with some sort of tag super power single vote, I haven't been as active lately so I don't know the term) as a duplicate of:

Have trouble understanding capturing groups and back references

To me this seems like a dubious duplicate. By that logic, literally any question about regex back references would be a duplicate of the target question.

This new question asks how to solve a specific problem, and the answer happens to be back references.

On the contrary, the target question is about understanding and interpreting the function of backreferences when already aware of them.

This seems like a kind of sad use of the dupe-hammer, since it shuts down answers to novel problems, just because the same tool is used to answer the problem. ๐Ÿ˜ž

Concerning this question:

Regex any character as long as the character is the same

I have a string representing cards in a deck, i.e. 7c9hQsKsAs

Is it possible to use Regex to specify .*x.*x.*x.*x.*x where x would specify any character (c/h/d/s) as long as the character is the same character throughout? This would be used to determine if there was a flush.

This was marked (with some sort of tag super power single vote, I haven't been as active lately so I don't know the term) as a duplicate of:

Have trouble understanding capturing groups and back references

To me this seems like a dubious duplicate. By that logic, literally any question about regex back references would be a duplicate of the target question.

This new question asks how to solve a specific problem, and the answer happens to be back references.

On the contrary, the target question is about understanding and interpreting the function of backreferences when already aware of them.

This seems like a kind of sad use of the dupe-hammer, since it shuts down answers to novel problems, just because the same tool is used to answer the problem. ๐Ÿ˜ž

Post Closed as "Duplicate" by Wiktor Stribiลผew, Makoto discussion
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Nicole
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How broadly are similarities considered duplicates?

Concerning this question:

Regex any character as long as the character is the same

I have a string representing cards in a deck, i.e. 7c9hQsKsAs

Is it possible to use Regex to specify .*x.*x.*x.*x.*x where x would specify any character (c/h/d/s) as long as the character is the same character throughout? This would be used to determine if there was a flush.

This was marked (with some sort of tag super power single vote, I haven't been as active lately so I don't know the term) as a duplicate of:

Have trouble understanding capturing groups and back references

To me this seems like a dubious duplicate. By that logic, literally any question about regex back references would be a duplicate of the target question.

This new question asks how to solve a specific problem, and the answer happens to be back references.

On the contrary, the target question is about understanding and interpreting the function of backreferences when already aware of them.

This seems like a kind of sad use of the dupe-hammer, since it shuts down answers to novel problems, just because the same tool is used to answer the problem. ๐Ÿ˜ž