Yahoo! Sports: Match made in heaven: Arsenal ‘leading’ race to sign 48-goal star
Yahoo! Sports: Yankees reportedly missed out on $325M 'match-made-in-heaven' MVP, World Series champion
MSN: Paul Finebaum names "match made in heaven" for Virginia Tech's coaching vacancy
Paul Finebaum names "match made in heaven" for Virginia Tech's coaching vacancy
Yahoo! Sports: ‘Match made in heaven’: Josh Okogie explains why he joined the Rockets
‘Match made in heaven’: Josh Okogie explains why he joined the Rockets
Boxing Scene: Oscar De La Hoya: Ryan Garcia & Joe Goossen Are 'Match Made In Heaven'
Oscar De La Hoya: Ryan Garcia & Joe Goossen Are 'Match Made In Heaven'
AOL: Meatloaf Is a Match Made in Heaven With These Side Dishes
Yahoo: 'Match made in heaven': Former LSU wide receiver to open new Japanese restaurant in Metairie
'Match made in heaven': Former LSU wide receiver to open new Japanese restaurant in Metairie
BBC: 'We're a match made in heaven' - Andreatta on her year with Scotland
I think we're bringing the best out of each other - a match made in heaven, I'd say. "That's what's really nice about it is I think we're all in a position where we're comfortable being uncomfortable ...
'We're a match made in heaven' - Andreatta on her year with Scotland
The match will be $& unless you use look-before and look-behind (unsure whether using those will actually save any memory); if you are interested in just a part of the match, use a capturing group.
How to match, but not capture, part of a regex? - Stack Overflow
You can match directly against the type of v, but you need a value pattern to refer to the types to match, as a "dotless" name is a capture pattern that matches any value.