Both regexes end with a "*." which means the previous match can be
omitted, and then the . allows them to match any input at all.
This means tools like coreutils' `rm -i` will always delete things
when prompted because the yesexpr regex matches all inputs (even
the negative ones).
(cherry picked from commit
a035eb6928bc63fb798dcc1421529f933122d74f)
(cherry picked from commit
7e4405c50fc374d5e80141554c7887a52d1f9118)
END LC_CTYPE
LC_MESSAGES
-yesexpr "<U005E><U005B><U002B><U0031><U0064><U0044><U0079><U0059><U005D><U002A><U002E>"
-noexpr "<U005E><U005B><U002D><U0030><U006E><U004E><U005D><U002A><U002E>"
+yesexpr "<U005E><U005B><U002B><U0031><U0064><U0044><U0079><U0059><U005D>"
+noexpr "<U005E><U005B><U002D><U0030><U006E><U004E><U005D>"
yesstr "<U0064><U0061>"
nostr "<U006E><U0065>"
END LC_MESSAGES