Field, we‘ll combine a regex with one of word’s special meta characters to target phone numbers regardless of their current, inconsistent formatting. Finding and replacing characters using wildcards. To begin, you must first turn wildcards on in the find/replace dialog
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To do so, bring up the find dialog, click more and check use wildcards
If you do not do this, word treats the wildcard characters as if they were ordinary text.
This tool can use the standard regular expressions syntax to search and replace any text within a word document For example, to search for any html tags, you can just use < [^>]+> which will find opening, closing and standalone html tags. You can search for an expression and use the \ n wildcard character to replace the search string with the rearranged expression For example, type (newman) (belinda) in the find what box and \2 \1 in the replace with box.
Click on the button find in and click main document That will select all the occurrences in the body of the document Then click the change case button on the home ribbon and choose lower case That will change all the selected upper case letters to lower case.
Word supports find/replace with it own variation of regular expressions (regex), which is called wildcards
Microsoft word provides the option to use wildcards and regular expressions for advanced search and replace operations These features allow you to perform complex searches, pattern matching, and replacement tasks. If you want real regular expression in ms word, vba is the way to go A good place to learn how to use ms word wildcards