The third parameter of the REGEXP_SUBSTR function indicates the position in the target string (de_desc
in your example) where you want to start searching. Assuming a match is found in the given portion of the string, it doesn't affect what is returned.
In Oracle 11g, there is a sixth parameter to the function, that I think is what you are trying to use, which indicates the capture group that you want returned. An example of proper use would be:
SELECT regexp_substr('abc[def]ghi', '[(.+)]', 1,1,NULL,1) from dual;
Where the last parameter 1
indicate the number of the capture group you want returned. Here is a link to the documentation that describes the parameter.
10g does not appear to have this option, but in your case you can achieve the same result with:
select substr( match, 2, length(match)-2 ) from (
SELECT regexp_substr('abc[def]ghi', '[(.+)]') match FROM dual
);
since you know that a match will have exactly one excess character at the beginning and end. (Alternatively, you could use RTRIM and LTRIM to remove brackets from both ends of the result.)
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