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Home/ Questions/Q 8287337
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 8, 20262026-06-08T12:00:33+00:00 2026-06-08T12:00:33+00:00

I’m new to Lua, so I’m learning the operators part now. Is there a

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I’m new to Lua, so I’m learning the operators part now.
Is there a wildcard character that works with strings in Lua?

I come from a PHP background and I’m essentially trying to code this:

--scan the directory's files
for file in lfs.dir(doc_path) do

     --> look for any files ending with .jpg
     if file is like ".jpg" then
       --do something if any files ending with .JPG are scanned
     end

end

You’ll see I’m looking out for JPG files, while I’m looping through files in a directory.
I’m used to the percentage sign, or asterisk character for searching strings.
But perhaps Lua has a different way?

Also, I’m totally guessing with the statement: “if file is like…….”

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-08T12:00:34+00:00Added an answer on June 8, 2026 at 12:00 pm

    You want the function string.match(), which tests if a string matches a pattern.

    Here’s my re-write of your example (untested):

    --scan the directory's files
    for file in lfs.dir(doc_path) do
    
         --> look for any files ending with .jpg
         if file:match "%.jpg$" then
           --do something if any files ending with .JPG are scanned
         end
    
    end
    

    The notation file:match "%.jpg%" calls the function string.match using the method call syntax sugar, which works because all string values have string set as their metatable by default. For simplicity of expression, I’ve also dropped the parenthesis around the sole parameter.

    The pattern is anchored to the end of the string by the $ at the end, and tests for a literal . by quoting it with %. However, since patterns are case sensitive, this is only matching files where the extension is all lower case.

    To make it case-insensitive, the simplest answer is to fold the case of the file name before testing by writing file:lower:match"%.jpg$", which chains a call to string.lower() before the call to match. Alternatively, you can rewrite the pattern as "%.[Jj][Pp][Gg]$" to match each character explicitly in either case.

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