@anchor{Non-greedy repetition}
@item @samp{*?}, @samp{+?}, @samp{??}
@cindex non-greedy repetition characters in regexp
-These are @dfn{non-greedy} variants of the operators @samp{*}, @samp{+}
+are @dfn{non-greedy} variants of the operators @samp{*}, @samp{+}
and @samp{?}. Where those operators match the largest possible
substring (consistent with matching the entire containing expression),
the non-greedy variants match the smallest possible substring
the letter @samp{z} to the letter @samp{a} to make it clear that it is
not a typo; for example, @samp{[+-*/]} should be avoided, because it
matches only @samp{/} rather than the likely-intended four characters.
+
+@item
+If the end points of a range are raw 8-bit bytes (@pxref{Text
+Representations}), or if the range start is ASCII and the end is a raw
+byte (as in @samp{[a-\377]}), the range will match only ASCII
+characters and raw 8-bit bytes, but not non-ASCII characters. This
+feature is intended for searching text in unibyte buffers and strings.
@end enumerate
Some kinds of character alternatives are not the best style even