Background
I'd like to parse quite a few of strings representing chess moves:
1.e4e62.d3d53.Nd2c54.g3Nf6
Each move begins with an increasing number 1., 2., 3. etc. There are no spaces in-between the moves.
The perfect match would be an array like this:
["1.e4e6", "2.d3d5", "3.Nd2c5", "4.g3Nf6"]
Regex Question
My regex so far is:
([0-9]\.)(.*?)(?=[0-9]\.)
This works in an online .NET Regex Tester (Regex Storm), apart not including the last move (4th).
How to include the last one too?
C# Question
My code is:
var regex = new Regex(#"([0-9]\.)(.*?)(?=[0-9]\.)");
var match = regex.Match(game);
The match here includes only one entry "1.e4e6" and not three (or four).
How to fix?
Thanks,
pom
It can not match the last item because the lookahead assertion is not true as there is no digit and dot following.
You can add to match the end of the string using an alternation.
To get all the results you could use Matches instead.
([0-9]\.)(.*?)(?=[0-9]\.|$)
Regex demo | C# demo
For example
string pattern = #"([0-9]\.)(.*?)(?=[0-9]\.|$)";
string input = #"1.e4e62.d3d53.Nd2c54.g3Nf6";
foreach (Match m in Regex.Matches(input, pattern))
{
Console.WriteLine(m.Value);
}
Note that if you want to get a match only and don't want to match spaces, you can use \S instead of a . and omit the capturing group:
[0-9]\.\S*?(?=[0-9]\.|$)
Regex demo
Related
I've always been really bad when it comes to using regular expressions but it is something I want to seriously understand because as we all know, it is quite useful.
This is for a personal project, to keep my folders organized and neat.
I have a bunch of folders with the following naming pattern XXXXXXXX.XXXXXXX.XXXXXX.SYY.EYY.SOMETHINGELSE
There can be any amount of X repeating separated by ".", but the SYY.EYY is always there. So what I want is a regular expression to retrieve all the text represented by XXX without the "." if possible up until the SYY.EYY pattern.
I managed to detect the pattern because YY are always numbers, so doing something like \d{2} will detect it but I'm wondering if its possible to also add the rest of the pattern to that \d{2}.
Any help is appreciate it :)
If the YY is as you stated 2 digits and you want to get the text except the . up until for example S11.E22 you could make use of the \G anchor and a capturing group to get the text without a dot.
The value is in the Match.Groups property.
\G(?!S[0-9]{2}\.E[0-9]{2})([^.]+)\.
In parts
\G Assert position at the end of previous match (start at the beginning)
(?! Negative lookahead, assert what is directly to the right is not
S[0-9]{2}\.E[0-9]{2} Math S, 2 digits, . E and 2 digits
) Close lookahead
( Capture group 1
[^.]+ Match 1+ times any char except a dot
) Close group 1
\. Match dot literal
Regex demo | C# demo
For example
string pattern = #"\G(?!S[0-9]{2}\.E[0-9]{2})([^.]+)\.";
string input = #"XXXXXXXX.XXXXXXX.XXXXXX.S11.E22.SOMETHINGELSE";
foreach (Match m in Regex.Matches(input, pattern))
{
Console.WriteLine(m.Groups[1].Value);
}
Output
XXXXXXXX
XXXXXXX
XXXXXX
You can "replace/cut" the "." with C#.
The regex to get up until the SYY.EYY can be like this:
.SYY.EYY$
Line ends with word -> Regex: ExampleWord$
I would do something like:
var leftPart = Regex.Match(x, "^.*?(?=SYY)").Captures.First().Value;
// this now has XXXXXXXX.XXXXXXX.XXXXXX.
// And we can:
var left = leftPart.Replace(".", " "); // or any other char
I tried \w+\:(\w+\-?\.?(\d+)?) but that is not correct
I have following text
<staticText:HelloWorld>_<xmlNode:Node.03>_<date:yyy-MM-dd>_<time:HH-mm-ss-fff>
The end result I want is something like the following
["staticText:HelloWorld", "xmlNode:Node.03","date:yyy-MM-dd","time:HH-mm-ss-fff"]
You could use the following regex.
<(.*?)>
Then have a look at how groups work to retrieve the result.
Regex rx = new Regex("<(.*?)>");
string text = "<staticText:HelloWorld>_<xmlNode:Node.03>_<date:yyy-MM-dd>_<time:HH-mm-ss-fff>";
MatchCollection matches = rx.Matches(text);
Console.WriteLine(matches.Count);
foreach(Match match in matches){
var groups = match.Groups;
Console.WriteLine(groups[1]);
}
This line should be able to match the content:
<(.*?)>
It will catch the arrows at the end which you don't seem to want, but you could remove them after words without regex.
You should consider a website like https://regexr.com - it helps exponentially in writing regex by allowing you to paste your cases and see how it works with them.
Matches any string within the <>. Hope this helps.
<(.*?)>
Your pattern does not match the 3rd and the 4th part of the example data because in this part \w+\-?\.?(\d+)? the dash and the digits match only once and are not repeated.
For your example data, you might use a character class [\w.-]+to match the part after the colon to make the match a bit more broad:
<(\w+\:[\w.-]+)>
Regex demo | C# demo
Or to make it more specific, specify a pattern for either the Node.03 part and for the year month date hour etc parts using a repeated pattern.
<(\w+\:\w+(?:\.\d+|\d+(?:-\d+)+)?)>
Explanation
< Match <
( Capturing group
\w+\:\w+ Match 1+ word chars, : and 1+ word chars
(?: Non capturing group
\.\d+ Match . and 1+ digits
| Or
\d+(?:-\d+)+ Match 1+ digits and repeat 1+ times matching - and 1+ digits
)? Close non capturing group and make it optional
) Close capturing group
>
Regex demo | C# Demo
I have a regex that I've verified in 3 separate sources as successfully matching the desired text.
http://regexlib.com/RETester.aspx
http://derekslager.com/blog/posts/2007/09/a-better-dotnet-regular-expression-tester.ashx,
http://sourceforge.net/projects/regextester/
But, when I use the regex in my code. It does not produce a match. I have used other regex with this code and they have resulted in the desired matches. I'm at a loss...
string SampleText = "starttexthere\r\nothertexthereendtexthere";
string RegexPattern = "(?<=starttexthere)(.*?)(?=endtexthere)";
Regex FindRegex = new Regex(#RegexPattern);
Match m = FindRegex.Match(SampleText);
I don't know if the problem is my regex, or my code.
The problem is that your text contains a \r\n which means it is split across two lines. If you want to match the whole string you have to set the option to match across multiple lines, and to change the behavior of the . to include the \n (new-line character) in matched
Regex FindRegex = new Regex(#RegexPattern, RegexOptions.Multiline | RegexOptions.Singleline);
You don't need RegexOptions.Multiline.
The problem in your case is that the dot matches any character except line break characters (\r\ and \n).
So, you'll need to define your regex pattern like so: (?<=starttexthere)[\w\r\n]+(?=endtexthere) in order to specifically match text across line breaks.
Here's an online running sample: http://ideone.com/ZXgKar
I've been playing around with retrieving data from a string using regular expression, mostly as an exercise for myself. The pattern that I'm trying to match looks like this:
"(SomeWord,OtherWord)"
After reading some documentation and looking at a cheat sheet I came to the conclusion that the following regex should give me 2 matches:
"\((\w),(\w)\)"
Because according to the documentation the parenthesis should do the following:
(pattern) Matches pattern and remembers the match. The matched
substring can be retrieved from the resulting Matches collection,
using Item [0]...[n]. To match parentheses characters ( ), use "\ (" or
"\ )".
However using the following code (removed error checking for conciseness) matches quite something different:
string line = "(A,B)";
string pattern = #"\((\w),(\w)\)";
MatchCollection matches = Regex.Matches(line, pattern);
string left = matches[0].Value;
string right = matches[1].Value;
Now I would expect left to become "A" and right to become "B". However left becomes "(A,B)" and there is no second match at all. What am I missing here?
(I know this example is trivial to solve without regexes but to learn how to properly use regexes I should be able to make something simple as this work)
You want the Groups member of the first match. In your example case there is only 1 match, which is the whole string. In the Groups collection you will have 3 items. Try this sample code, left should be A, and right should be B. If you look at the group[0] value it will be the whole string.
string line = "(A,B)";
string pattern = #"\((\w),(\w)\)";
MatchCollection matches = Regex.Matches(line, pattern);
GroupCollection groups = matches[0].Groups;
string left = groups[1].Value;
string right = groups[2].Value;
\w matches only one word character. If words have to contain at least one character, the expression should be:
string pattern = #"\((\w+),(\w+)\)";
if words may be empty:
string pattern = #"\((\w*),(\w*)\)";
+: means one or more repetitions.
*: means zero, one or more repetitions.
In any case, you will get one match with three groups, the first containing the whole string including the left and right parentheses, the two others the two words.
I think the problem is that you're confusing the concept of a match and a group.
A MatchCollection contains a list of strings that matched your entire regex, not just the parenthetical groups inside that Regex. For example, if the string you searched looked like this...
(A,B)(C,D)
...then you would have two matches: (A,B) and (C,D).
However, there's good news: you can get the groups from each match very easily, like so:
string line = "(A,B)";
string pattern = #"\((\w),(\w)\)";
MatchCollection matches = Regex.Matches(line, pattern);
string left = matches[0].Groups[1].Value;
string right = matches[0].Groups[2].Value;
That Groups variable is a collection of parenthetical groups from a single match.
Edit:
Olivier Jacot-Descombes made a very good point: we all got so hung up explaining match vs. group that we forgot to notice a second problem: \w will only match a SINGLE character. You need to add a quantifier (such as +) in order to grab more than one character at a time. Olivier's answer should explain that part clearly.
First off, it's one "match", with 2 "groups"...
I would recommend you name the groups anyway...
string pattern = #"\((?<FirstWord>\w+),(?<SecondWord>\w+)\)";
Then you could do...
Match m = Regex.Match(line, pattern);
string firstWord = m.Groups["FirstWord"].Value;
Since all you are looking for are the characters separated by a comma, you can simply use \w as your pattern. The matches will be A and B.
A handy site for testing your Regex is http://gskinner.com/RegExr/
i have the following string
Fat mass loss was 2121,323.222 greater for GPLC (2–2.4kg vs. 0.5kg)
i want to capture
212,323.222
2-2.24
0.5
i.e. i want the above three results from the string,
can any one help me with this regex
I noticed that your hyphen in 2–2.4kg is not really hyphen, its a unicode 0x2013 "DASH".
So, here is another regex in C#
#"[0-9]+([,.\u2013-][0-9]+)*"
Test
MatchCollection matches = Regex.Matches("Fat mass loss was 2121,323.222 greater for GPLC (2–2.4kg vs. 0.5kg)", #"[0-9]+([,.\u2013-][0-9]+)*");
foreach (Match m in matches) {
Console.WriteLine(m.Groups[0]);
}
Here is the results, my console does not support printing unicode char 2013, so its "?" but its properly matched.
2121,323.222
2?2.4
0.5
Okay I didn't notice the C# tag until now. I will leave the answer but I know that's not what you expected, see if you can do something with it. Perhaps the title should have mentioned the programming language?
Sure:
Fat mass loss was (.*) greater for GPLC \((.*) vs. (.*)kg\)
Find your substrings in \1, \2 and \3.
If for Emacs, swap all parentheses and escaped parentheses.
How about something like this:
^.*((?:\d+,)*\d+(?:\.\d+)?).*(\d+(?:\.\d+)?(?:-\d+(?:\.\d+))?).*(\d+(?:\.\d+)).*$
A little more general, I think. I'm a little concerned about .* being greedy.
Fat mass loss was 2121,323.222 greater
for GPLC (2–2.4kg vs. 0.5kg)
a generalized extractor:
/\D+?([\d\,\.\-]+)/g
explanation:
/ # start pattern
\D+ # 1 or more non-digits
( # capture group 1
[\d,.-]+ # character class, 1 or more of digits, comma, period, hyphen
) # end capture group 1
/g # trailing regex g modifier (make regex continue after last match)
sorry I don't know c# well enough for a full writeup, but the pattern should plug right in.
see: http://www.radsoftware.com.au/articles/regexsyntaxadvanced.aspx for some implementation examples.
I came out with something like this atrocity:
-?\d(?:,?\d)*(?:\.(?:\d(?:,?\d)*\d|\d))?(?:[–-]-?\d(?:,?\d)*(?:\.(?:\d(?:,?\d)*\d|\d))?)?
Out of witch -?\d(?:,?\d)*(?:\.(?:\d(?:,?\d)*\d|\d))? is repeated twice, with – in the middle (note that this is a long hyphen).
This should take care of dots and commas outside of numbers, eg: hello,23,45.2-7world - will capture 23,45.2-7.
It looks like you're trying to find all numbers in the string (possibly with commas inside the number), and all ranges of numbers such as "2-2.4". Here is a regex that should work:
\d+(?:[,.-]\d+)*
From C# 3, you can use it like this:
var input = "Fat mass loss was 2121,323.222 greater for GPLC (2-2.4kg vs. 0.5kg)";
var pattern = #"\d+(?:[,.-]\d+)*";
var matches = Regex.Matches(input, pattern);
foreach ( var match in matches )
Console.WriteLine(match.Value);
Hmm, this is a tricky question, especially because the input string contains unicode character – (EN DASH) instead of - (HYPHEN-MINUS). Therefore the correct regex to match the numbers in the original string would be:
\d+(?:[\u2013,.]\d+)*
If you want a more generic approach would be:
\d+(?:[\p{Pd}\p{Pc}\p{Po}]\d+)*
which matches dash punctuation, connecter punctuation and other punctuation. See here for more information about those.
An implementation in C# would look like this:
string input = "Fat mass loss was 2121,323.222 greater for GPLC (2–2.4kg vs. 0.5kg)";
try {
Regex rx = new Regex(#"\d+(?:[\p{Pd}\p{Pc}\p{Po}\p{C}]\d+)*", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase | RegexOptions.Multiline);
Match match = rx.Match(input);
while (match.Success) {
// matched text: match.Value
// match start: match.Index
// match length: match.Length
match = match.NextMatch();
}
} catch (ArgumentException ex) {
// Syntax error in the regular expression
}
Let's try this one :
(?=\d)([0-9,.-]+)(?<=\d)
It captures all expressions containing only :
"[0-9,.-]" characters,
must start with a digit "(?=\d)",
must finish with a digit "(?<=\d)"
It works with a single digit expression and does not include beginning or trailing [.,-].
Hope this helps.
I got the solution to my problem.
The following is the Regex that gave my desired result:
(([0-9]+)([–.,-]*))+