| Title | Test
                    Find
                    
                    Pattern Title | 
            
                | Expression | <(?:[^"']+?|.+?(?:"|').*?(?:"|')?.*?)*?> | 
            
                | Description | This will match all tags in a string, it's good for stripping HTML or XML tags to get the plain text.It works with attributes that include javascript or "<>".
It will match all these
    <hr size="3"
        noshade
        color="#000000"
        align="left">
    <p style="margin-top:0px;margin-bottom:0px"
       align="center"><font face="Times New Roman"
          size="5"><b>UNITED STATES</b></font></p>
<input type=button onclick='if(n.value>5)do_this();'> not this <br> <input type=button onclick="n>5?a():b();" value=test> not this <br> <input type=button onclick="n>5?a(\"OK\"):b('Not Ok');" value=test> not this <br> <input type=button onclick='n>5' value=test onmouseover="n<5&&n>8" onmouseout='if(n>5)alert(\'True\');else alert("False")'> not this <br>
 | 
            
                | Matches | <input type=button onclick='n>5' value=test onmouseover="n<5&&n>8" onm | 
            
                | Non-Matches | haven't found any exceptions yet | 
            
                | Author | Rating:  Toby Henderson | 
            
                | Source |  | 
            
              | Your Rating |  | 
        
    
 
    
    
     
        
                
	                Title: Memory Peak
	                Name: Dave S
	                Date: 1/25/2006 10:06:34 AM
	                Comment: 
This regexp choked on a string containing the 'less-than' character as part of invalid HTML.  As in: 1 is < 2.
Everything following the < character causes greedy validation and with a long string (748 characters long), this regular expression caused CPU usage to peak and remain at 100%.  This problem happened consistently (i.e. EVERY TIME that string was passed through the regex.  I tracked down the problem to THIS regex with a Microsoft Tech agent who studied the memory dump produced by Windows and IIS.  The memory dump pointed to this line:
isHTML = objRegExp.Test(str)
This indicates that the .Test method (in VBScript) of the regular expression object would choke on the 748-character-long string containing the 'less-than' character.
Obviously, in valid HTML that should be written as: 1 is < 2.  But many users don't know proper HTML entities.  I've reverted to <[^>]+> for the time being.
                
                
            
                
	                Title: best one so
	                Name: manit chanthavong
	                Date: 11/3/2005 6:42:57 PM
	                Comment: 
looked for RE to strip html tags from a document. This is the best one I've seen.
                
                
            
                
	                Title: Very good
	                Name: Simon Cann
	                Date: 10/3/2005 11:34:30 AM
	                Comment: 
Well done for a great expression, it's just what I needed.
                
                
            
                
	                Title: RE:Half right, half wrong
	                Name: Toby Henderson
	                Date: 4/5/2005 6:11:32 AM
	                Comment: 
Gideon you are correct as those are not valid html tags. But seeing that they are meant to be a tags, I would want them captured. I'm not testing for validity I just want to find every tag in document to do something with them.
                
                
            
                
	                Title: Half right, half wrong
	                Name: Gideon Engelberth
	                Date: 4/4/2005 11:27:53 AM
	                Comment: 
This expression may not give false negatives (because it allows things inside tags), but it definately gives false positives.  Two examples of matches that as far as I know should not match are:
<tag attr="test>
<tag attr="test'>