Wildcard character

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The term wildcard character has several meanings.

Telecommunication

In telecommunications, a wildcard is a character that may be substituted for any of a defined subset of all possible characters.

  • In high-frequency (HF) radio automatic link establishment, the wildcard character "?" may be substituted for any one of the 36 characters, "A" through "Z" and "0" through "9."
  • Whether the wildcard character represents a single character or a string of characters must be specified.

Computing

In computer (software) technology, a wildcard character can be used to substitute for any other character or characters in a string.

File and directory patterns

When specifying file names (or paths) in CP/M, DOS, Microsoft Windows, and Unix-like operating systems, the asterisk pattern character ("*", also called "star") matches zero or more characters.

In Unix-like and DOS operating systems, the question mark ("?") matches exactly one character; in DOS, if the question mark is placed at the end of the word, it will also match missing (zero) trailing characters. For example, in DOS, the pattern 123??? will match 1234 or 12345, but not 1234567.

In Unix shells and Windows PowerShell, ranges of characters enclosed in square brackets ("[" and "]") match a single character within the range; for example, [A-Za-z] matches any single uppercase or lowercase letter. Unix shells allow negation of the specified character set by using a leading "!" (e.g., foo.[!ch], which will match names like foo.o). In shells that interpret "!" as a history substitution, a leading "^" can be used instead of "!" to negate the character set.

The operation of matching of wildcard patterns to multiple file or path names is referred to as globbing.

Databases

In SQL, wildcard characters can be used in "LIKE" expressions; the percent sign (%) matches zero or more characters, and underscore (_) a single character. Transact-SQL also supports square brackets ("[" and "]") to list sets and ranges of characters to match, a leading caret (^) matches only a character not specified within the brackets. In Microsoft Access, wildcard characters can be used in "LIKE" expressions; the asterisk sign (*) matches zero or more characters, the question mark (?) matches a single character, the Number_sign (#) matches a single digit (0-9), and square brackets can be used to enclose sets or ranges of characters to match.

Regular expressions

In regular expressions, the period (".", also called "dot") is the wildcard pattern character that matches a single character. Combined with the asterisk operator (.*) it will match any number of characters.

In this case the asterisk is also known as the Kleene star.

See also

References

External links