Hi, in regexps, there are \<, \> and also \b sequences, that match zero-length string on the word boundary. They are particularly useful for e.g.: refactoring substitutions, like e.g.: with sed: sed -r -i -e 's/\/other/' This automatically protects pre/suffixed strings like str_myvar and myvar_str. In mcedit, I often use \b that's available there (\< and \> do not work), to obtain the same effect with the regex: \bmyvat\b I'm not sure if distinction of left and right boundary offered by \<, \> actually makes a difference. Zsh has similar sequences already - (#s) and (#e). They do match 0=length strings on begin or end of the matched string. So maybe the topic is known to any implementing person? Is it hard to add such \b or \<,\> sequences? Could it be also possible to make it backward-safe, i.e. the sequence be ignored by proceeding Zsh versions? -- Best regards, Sebastian Gniazdowski