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These functions operate on regular expressions.
looking-at will
succeed only if the next characters in the buffer are string;
using it in a search function will succeed if the text being searched
contains string.
This allows you to request an exact string match or search when calling a function that wants a regular expression.
| (regexp-quote "^The cat$")
     => "\\^The cat\\$"
 | 
One use of regexp-quote is to combine an exact string match with
context described as a regular expression.  For example, this searches
for the string that is the value of string, surrounded by
whitespace:
| (re-search-forward (concat "\\s-" (regexp-quote string) "\\s-")) | 
If the optional argument paren is non-nil, then the
returned regular expression is always enclosed by at least one
parentheses-grouping construct.
This simplified definition of regexp-opt produces a
regular expression which is equivalent to the actual value
(but not as efficient):
| (defun regexp-opt (strings paren)
  (let ((open-paren (if paren "\\(" ""))
        (close-paren (if paren "\\)" "")))
    (concat open-paren
            (mapconcat 'regexp-quote strings "\\|")
            close-paren)))
 |