(EDIT: the wiki change proposed below was incorporated in 2015)
The tag wiki for the regex
tag has been growing organically for many years, and now contains a substantial amount of tutorial and reference material.
To the best of my understanding, this is not best current practice for tag wikis -- the page should explain the tag in the context of Stack Overflow, not teach people programming. See also What is a tag wiki? How do I write a good one?
Towards fixing this problem, I have drafted a new version, but I hesitate to replace the existing one before receiving some feedback here.
The draft used to be at http://sopython.com/wiki/regex_tag_wiki_refactoring (EDIT: was removed 1/2016) and anybody with 100 rep can log in with their Stack Overflow credentials to make edits.
In summary, the draft replaces the current 17.5 KiB of Markdown with reference material and computing history with a somewhat more succinct 5 KiB (very approximate; excluding the proposed links section) version which focuses on common questions on Stack Overflow.
For what it's worth, my current definition of "common" is completely based on my personal subjective impression. If you can contribute some actual science here, that might be useful.
(EDIT: draft was accepted 1/2016) My current plan is to float this here for a few days and see whether I get more downvotes or upvotes. Ideally, some constructive criticism, or even (gasp!) actual edits to the draft would also be most welcome. If the reaction seems to be towards the positive, I will go ahead and commit the changes.