using uCalcSoftware; var uc = new uCalc(); // (See alternate version of this example using ItemOf instead of ExpressionTokens) // In this section underscore, _, and numeric digits // are accepted as part of alphanumeric tokens uc.DefineVariable("My_Variable = 111"); Console.WriteLine(uc.Error.Message); uc.DefineVariable("Variable123 = 222"); Console.WriteLine(uc.Error.Message); Console.WriteLine(uc.ExpressionTokens[TokenType.AlphaNumeric].Regex); Console.WriteLine(uc.EvalStr("My_Variable")); Console.WriteLine(uc.EvalStr("Variable123")); Console.WriteLine("---"); // Now we no longer want underscore, _, or numeric digits // to be accepted in alphanumeric tokens; only A-Z uc.ExpressionTokens[TokenType.AlphaNumeric].Regex = "[a-zA-Z]+"; uc.DefineVariable("Other_Variable = 333"); Console.WriteLine(uc.Error.Message); uc.DefineVariable("OtherVariable123 = 444"); Console.WriteLine(uc.Error.Message); Console.WriteLine(uc.EvalStr("Other_Variable")); Console.WriteLine(uc.EvalStr("OtherVariable123 ")); Console.WriteLine(uc.EvalStr("My_Variable")); Console.WriteLine(uc.EvalStr("Variable123")); Console.WriteLine("---"); // We restore the alphanumeric regex to support _ and numbers again // Note: My_Variable and Variable123 remained; they were simply inaccessible uc.ExpressionTokens[TokenType.AlphaNumeric].Regex = "[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*"; Console.WriteLine(uc.EvalStr("My_Variable")); Console.WriteLine(uc.EvalStr("Variable123"));