Related
I have a requirement to find and extract a number contained within a string.
For example, from these strings:
string test = "1 test"
string test1 = " 1 test"
string test2 = "test 99"
How can I do this?
\d+ is the regex for an integer number. So
//System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex
resultString = Regex.Match(subjectString, #"\d+").Value;
returns a string containing the first occurrence of a number in subjectString.
Int32.Parse(resultString) will then give you the number.
Here's how I cleanse phone numbers to get the digits only:
string numericPhone = new String(phone.Where(Char.IsDigit).ToArray());
go through the string and use Char.IsDigit
string a = "str123";
string b = string.Empty;
int val;
for (int i=0; i< a.Length; i++)
{
if (Char.IsDigit(a[i]))
b += a[i];
}
if (b.Length>0)
val = int.Parse(b);
use regular expression ...
Regex re = new Regex(#"\d+");
Match m = re.Match("test 66");
if (m.Success)
{
Console.WriteLine(string.Format("RegEx found " + m.Value + " at position " + m.Index.ToString()));
}
else
{
Console.WriteLine("You didn't enter a string containing a number!");
}
What I use to get Phone Numbers without any punctuation...
var phone = "(787) 763-6511";
string.Join("", phone.ToCharArray().Where(Char.IsDigit));
// result: 7877636511
Regex.Split can extract numbers from strings. You get all the numbers that are found in a string.
string input = "There are 4 numbers in this string: 40, 30, and 10.";
// Split on one or more non-digit characters.
string[] numbers = Regex.Split(input, #"\D+");
foreach (string value in numbers)
{
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(value))
{
int i = int.Parse(value);
Console.WriteLine("Number: {0}", i);
}
}
Output:
Number: 4
Number: 40
Number: 30
Number: 10
if the number has a decimal points, you can use below
using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
namespace Rextester
{
public class Program
{
public static void Main(string[] args)
{
//Your code goes here
Console.WriteLine(Regex.Match("anything 876.8 anything", #"\d+\.*\d*").Value);
Console.WriteLine(Regex.Match("anything 876 anything", #"\d+\.*\d*").Value);
Console.WriteLine(Regex.Match("$876435", #"\d+\.*\d*").Value);
Console.WriteLine(Regex.Match("$876.435", #"\d+\.*\d*").Value);
}
}
}
results :
"anything 876.8 anything" ==> 876.8
"anything 876 anything" ==> 876
"$876435" ==> 876435
"$876.435" ==> 876.435
Sample : https://dotnetfiddle.net/IrtqVt
Here's a Linq version:
string s = "123iuow45ss";
var getNumbers = (from t in s
where char.IsDigit(t)
select t).ToArray();
Console.WriteLine(new string(getNumbers));
Another simple solution using Regex
You should need to use this
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
and the code is
string var = "Hello3453232wor705Ld";
string mystr = Regex.Replace(var, #"\d", "");
string mynumber = Regex.Replace(var, #"\D", "");
Console.WriteLine(mystr);
Console.WriteLine(mynumber);
You can also try this
string.Join(null,System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex.Split(expr, "[^\\d]"));
Here is another Linq approach which extracts the first number out of a string.
string input = "123 foo 456";
int result = 0;
bool success = int.TryParse(new string(input
.SkipWhile(x => !char.IsDigit(x))
.TakeWhile(x => char.IsDigit(x))
.ToArray()), out result);
Examples:
string input = "123 foo 456"; // 123
string input = "foo 456"; // 456
string input = "123 foo"; // 123
Just use a RegEx to match the string, then convert:
Match match = Regex.Match(test , #"(\d+)");
if (match.Success) {
return int.Parse(match.Groups[1].Value);
}
string input = "Hello 20, I am 30 and he is 40";
var numbers = Regex.Matches(input, #"\d+").OfType<Match>().Select(m => int.Parse(m.Value)).ToArray();
You can do this using String property like below:
return new String(input.Where(Char.IsDigit).ToArray());
which gives only number from string.
For those who want decimal number from a string with Regex in TWO line:
decimal result = 0;
decimal.TryParse(Regex.Match(s, #"\d+").Value, out result);
Same thing applys to float, long, etc...
var match=Regex.Match(#"a99b",#"\d+");
if(match.Success)
{
int val;
if(int.TryParse(match.Value,out val))
{
//val is set
}
}
The question doesn't explicitly state that you just want the characters 0 to 9 but it wouldn't be a stretch to believe that is true from your example set and comments. So here is the code that does that.
string digitsOnly = String.Empty;
foreach (char c in s)
{
// Do not use IsDigit as it will include more than the characters 0 through to 9
if (c >= '0' && c <= '9') digitsOnly += c;
}
Why you don't want to use Char.IsDigit() - Numbers include characters such as fractions, subscripts, superscripts, Roman numerals, currency numerators, encircled numbers, and script-specific digits.
Here is another simple solution using Linq which extracts only the numeric values from a string.
var numbers = string.Concat(stringInput.Where(char.IsNumber));
Example:
var numbers = string.Concat("(787) 763-6511".Where(char.IsNumber));
Gives: "7877636511"
var outputString = String.Join("", inputString.Where(Char.IsDigit));
Get all numbers in the string.
So if you use for examaple '1 plus 2' it will get '12'.
Extension method to get all positive numbers contained in a string:
public static List<long> Numbers(this string str)
{
var nums = new List<long>();
var start = -1;
for (int i = 0; i < str.Length; i++)
{
if (start < 0 && Char.IsDigit(str[i]))
{
start = i;
}
else if (start >= 0 && !Char.IsDigit(str[i]))
{
nums.Add(long.Parse(str.Substring(start, i - start)));
start = -1;
}
}
if (start >= 0)
nums.Add(long.Parse(str.Substring(start, str.Length - start)));
return nums;
}
If you want negative numbers as well simply modify this code to handle the minus sign (-)
Given this input:
"I was born in 1989, 27 years ago from now (2016)"
The resulting numbers list will be:
[1989, 27, 2016]
An interesting approach is provided here by Ahmad Mageed, uses Regex and StringBuilder to extract the integers in the order in which they appear in the string.
An example using Regex.Split based on the post by Ahmad Mageed is as follows:
var dateText = "MARCH-14-Tue";
string splitPattern = #"[^\d]";
string[] result = Regex.Split(dateText, splitPattern);
var finalresult = string.Join("", result.Where(e => !String.IsNullOrEmpty(e)));
int DayDateInt = 0;
int.TryParse(finalresult, out DayDateInt);
I have used this one-liner to pull all numbers from any string.
var phoneNumber = "(555)123-4567";
var numsOnly = string.Join("", new Regex("[0-9]").Matches(phoneNumber)); // 5551234567
string verificationCode ="dmdsnjds5344gfgk65585";
string code = "";
Regex r1 = new Regex("\\d+");
Match m1 = r1.Match(verificationCode);
while (m1.Success)
{
code += m1.Value;
m1 = m1.NextMatch();
}
Did the reverse of one of the answers to this question:
How to remove numbers from string using Regex.Replace?
// Pull out only the numbers from the string using LINQ
var numbersFromString = new String(input.Where(x => x >= '0' && x <= '9').ToArray());
var numericVal = Int32.Parse(numbersFromString);
Here is my Algorithm
//Fast, C Language friendly
public static int GetNumber(string Text)
{
int val = 0;
for(int i = 0; i < Text.Length; i++)
{
char c = Text[i];
if (c >= '0' && c <= '9')
{
val *= 10;
//(ASCII code reference)
val += c - 48;
}
}
return val;
}
static string GetdigitFromString(string str)
{
char[] refArray = { '0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9' };
char[] inputArray = str.ToCharArray();
string ext = string.Empty;
foreach (char item in inputArray)
{
if (refArray.Contains(item))
{
ext += item.ToString();
}
}
return ext;
}
here is my solution
string var = "Hello345wor705Ld";
string alpha = string.Empty;
string numer = string.Empty;
foreach (char str in var)
{
if (char.IsDigit(str))
numer += str.ToString();
else
alpha += str.ToString();
}
Console.WriteLine("String is: " + alpha);
Console.WriteLine("Numeric character is: " + numer);
Console.Read();
You will have to use Regex as \d+
\d matches digits in the given string.
string s = "kg g L000145.50\r\n";
char theCharacter = '.';
var getNumbers = (from t in s
where char.IsDigit(t) || t.Equals(theCharacter)
select t).ToArray();
var _str = string.Empty;
foreach (var item in getNumbers)
{
_str += item.ToString();
}
double _dou = Convert.ToDouble(_str);
MessageBox.Show(_dou.ToString("#,##0.00"));
Using #tim-pietzcker answer from above, the following will work for PowerShell.
PS C:\> $str = '1 test'
PS C:\> [regex]::match($str,'\d+').value
1
I would like to split a string with delimiters but keep the delimiters in the result.
How would I do this in C#?
If the split chars were ,, ., and ;, I'd try:
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
...
string[] parts = Regex.Split(originalString, #"(?<=[.,;])")
(?<=PATTERN) is positive look-behind for PATTERN. It should match at any place where the preceding text fits PATTERN so there should be a match (and a split) after each occurrence of any of the characters.
If you want the delimiter to be its "own split", you can use Regex.Split e.g.:
string input = "plum-pear";
string pattern = "(-)";
string[] substrings = Regex.Split(input, pattern); // Split on hyphens
foreach (string match in substrings)
{
Console.WriteLine("'{0}'", match);
}
// The method writes the following to the console:
// 'plum'
// '-'
// 'pear'
So if you are looking for splitting a mathematical formula, you can use the following Regex
#"([*()\^\/]|(?<!E)[\+\-])"
This will ensure you can also use constants like 1E-02 and avoid having them split into 1E, - and 02
So:
Regex.Split("10E-02*x+sin(x)^2", #"([*()\^\/]|(?<!E)[\+\-])")
Yields:
10E-02
*
x
+
sin
(
x
)
^
2
Building off from BFree's answer, I had the same goal, but I wanted to split on an array of characters similar to the original Split method, and I also have multiple splits per string:
public static IEnumerable<string> SplitAndKeep(this string s, char[] delims)
{
int start = 0, index;
while ((index = s.IndexOfAny(delims, start)) != -1)
{
if(index-start > 0)
yield return s.Substring(start, index - start);
yield return s.Substring(index, 1);
start = index + 1;
}
if (start < s.Length)
{
yield return s.Substring(start);
}
}
Just in case anyone wants this answer aswell...
Instead of string[] parts = Regex.Split(originalString, #"(?<=[.,;])") you could use string[] parts = Regex.Split(originalString, #"(?=yourmatch)") where yourmatch is whatever your separator is.
Supposing the original string was
777- cat
777 - dog
777 - mouse
777 - rat
777 - wolf
Regex.Split(originalString, #"(?=777)") would return
777 - cat
777 - dog
and so on
This version does not use LINQ or Regex and so it's probably relatively efficient. I think it might be easier to use than the Regex because you don't have to worry about escaping special delimiters. It returns an IList<string> which is more efficient than always converting to an array. It's an extension method, which is convenient. You can pass in the delimiters as either an array or as multiple parameters.
/// <summary>
/// Splits the given string into a list of substrings, while outputting the splitting
/// delimiters (each in its own string) as well. It's just like String.Split() except
/// the delimiters are preserved. No empty strings are output.</summary>
/// <param name="s">String to parse. Can be null or empty.</param>
/// <param name="delimiters">The delimiting characters. Can be an empty array.</param>
/// <returns></returns>
public static IList<string> SplitAndKeepDelimiters(this string s, params char[] delimiters)
{
var parts = new List<string>();
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(s))
{
int iFirst = 0;
do
{
int iLast = s.IndexOfAny(delimiters, iFirst);
if (iLast >= 0)
{
if (iLast > iFirst)
parts.Add(s.Substring(iFirst, iLast - iFirst)); //part before the delimiter
parts.Add(new string(s[iLast], 1));//the delimiter
iFirst = iLast + 1;
continue;
}
//No delimiters were found, but at least one character remains. Add the rest and stop.
parts.Add(s.Substring(iFirst, s.Length - iFirst));
break;
} while (iFirst < s.Length);
}
return parts;
}
Some unit tests:
text = "[a link|http://www.google.com]";
result = text.SplitAndKeepDelimiters('[', '|', ']');
Assert.IsTrue(result.Count == 5);
Assert.AreEqual(result[0], "[");
Assert.AreEqual(result[1], "a link");
Assert.AreEqual(result[2], "|");
Assert.AreEqual(result[3], "http://www.google.com");
Assert.AreEqual(result[4], "]");
A lot of answers to this! One I knocked up to split by various strings (the original answer caters for just characters i.e. length of 1). This hasn't been fully tested.
public static IEnumerable<string> SplitAndKeep(string s, params string[] delims)
{
var rows = new List<string>() { s };
foreach (string delim in delims)//delimiter counter
{
for (int i = 0; i < rows.Count; i++)//row counter
{
int index = rows[i].IndexOf(delim);
if (index > -1
&& rows[i].Length > index + 1)
{
string leftPart = rows[i].Substring(0, index + delim.Length);
string rightPart = rows[i].Substring(index + delim.Length);
rows[i] = leftPart;
rows.Insert(i + 1, rightPart);
}
}
}
return rows;
}
This seems to work, but its not been tested much.
public static string[] SplitAndKeepSeparators(string value, char[] separators, StringSplitOptions splitOptions)
{
List<string> splitValues = new List<string>();
int itemStart = 0;
for (int pos = 0; pos < value.Length; pos++)
{
for (int sepIndex = 0; sepIndex < separators.Length; sepIndex++)
{
if (separators[sepIndex] == value[pos])
{
// add the section of string before the separator
// (unless its empty and we are discarding empty sections)
if (itemStart != pos || splitOptions == StringSplitOptions.None)
{
splitValues.Add(value.Substring(itemStart, pos - itemStart));
}
itemStart = pos + 1;
// add the separator
splitValues.Add(separators[sepIndex].ToString());
break;
}
}
}
// add anything after the final separator
// (unless its empty and we are discarding empty sections)
if (itemStart != value.Length || splitOptions == StringSplitOptions.None)
{
splitValues.Add(value.Substring(itemStart, value.Length - itemStart));
}
return splitValues.ToArray();
}
Recently I wrote an extension method do to this:
public static class StringExtensions
{
public static IEnumerable<string> SplitAndKeep(this string s, string seperator)
{
string[] obj = s.Split(new string[] { seperator }, StringSplitOptions.None);
for (int i = 0; i < obj.Length; i++)
{
string result = i == obj.Length - 1 ? obj[i] : obj[i] + seperator;
yield return result;
}
}
}
I'd say the easiest way to accomplish this (except for the argument Hans Kesting brought up) is to split the string the regular way, then iterate over the array and add the delimiter to every element but the last.
To avoid adding character to new line try this :
string[] substrings = Regex.Split(input,#"(?<=[-])");
result = originalString.Split(separator);
for(int i = 0; i < result.Length - 1; i++)
result[i] += separator;
(EDIT - this is a bad answer - I misread his question and didn't see that he was splitting by multiple characters.)
(EDIT - a correct LINQ version is awkward, since the separator shouldn't get concatenated onto the final string in the split array.)
Iterate through the string character by character (which is what regex does anyway.
When you find a splitter, then spin off a substring.
pseudo code
int hold, counter;
List<String> afterSplit;
string toSplit
for(hold = 0, counter = 0; counter < toSplit.Length; counter++)
{
if(toSplit[counter] = /*split charaters*/)
{
afterSplit.Add(toSplit.Substring(hold, counter));
hold = counter;
}
}
That's sort of C# but not really. Obviously, choose the appropriate function names.
Also, I think there might be an off-by-1 error in there.
But that will do what you're asking.
veggerby's answer modified to
have no string items in the list
have fixed string as delimiter like "ab" instead of single character
var delimiter = "ab";
var text = "ab33ab9ab"
var parts = Regex.Split(text, $#"({Regex.Escape(delimiter)})")
.Where(p => p != string.Empty)
.ToList();
// parts = "ab", "33", "ab", "9", "ab"
The Regex.Escape() is there just in case your delimiter contains characters which regex interprets as special pattern commands (like *, () and thus have to be escaped.
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
namespace ConsoleApplication9
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
string input = #"This;is:a.test";
char sep0 = ';', sep1 = ':', sep2 = '.';
string pattern = string.Format("[{0}{1}{2}]|[^{0}{1}{2}]+", sep0, sep1, sep2);
Regex regex = new Regex(pattern);
MatchCollection matches = regex.Matches(input);
List<string> parts=new List<string>();
foreach (Match match in matches)
{
parts.Add(match.ToString());
}
}
}
}
I wanted to do a multiline string like this but needed to keep the line breaks so I did this
string x =
#"line 1 {0}
line 2 {1}
";
foreach(var line in string.Format(x, "one", "two")
.Split("\n")
.Select(x => x.Contains('\r') ? x + '\n' : x)
.AsEnumerable()
) {
Console.Write(line);
}
yields
line 1 one
line 2 two
I came across same problem but with multiple delimiters. Here's my solution:
public static string[] SplitLeft(this string #this, char[] delimiters, int count)
{
var splits = new List<string>();
int next = -1;
while (splits.Count + 1 < count && (next = #this.IndexOfAny(delimiters, next + 1)) >= 0)
{
splits.Add(#this.Substring(0, next));
#this = new string(#this.Skip(next).ToArray());
}
splits.Add(#this);
return splits.ToArray();
}
Sample with separating CamelCase variable names:
var variableSplit = variableName.SplitLeft(
Enumerable.Range('A', 26).Select(i => (char)i).ToArray());
I wrote this code to split and keep delimiters:
private static string[] SplitKeepDelimiters(string toSplit, char[] delimiters, StringSplitOptions splitOptions = StringSplitOptions.None)
{
var tokens = new List<string>();
int idx = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < toSplit.Length; ++i)
{
if (delimiters.Contains(toSplit[i]))
{
tokens.Add(toSplit.Substring(idx, i - idx)); // token found
tokens.Add(toSplit[i].ToString()); // delimiter
idx = i + 1; // start idx for the next token
}
}
// last token
tokens.Add(toSplit.Substring(idx));
if (splitOptions == StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries)
{
tokens = tokens.Where(token => token.Length > 0).ToList();
}
return tokens.ToArray();
}
Usage example:
string toSplit = "AAA,BBB,CCC;DD;,EE,";
char[] delimiters = new char[] {',', ';'};
string[] tokens = SplitKeepDelimiters(toSplit, delimiters, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries);
foreach (var token in tokens)
{
Console.WriteLine(token);
}
I have a string that contains several instances of a substring, as well as other text. The substring is specified by beginning with a given sequence of letters (e.g. CNTY) and ending with a double slash (//). How could I efficiently remove all text that does not fall inside the specified substring? Thanks for the help. I found that this Regex will return the result needed:
string result = Regex.Matches(text, "CNTY(.*)//").Cast<Match>().Aggregate("", (s, t) => s + t.Value, s => s);
But, I have another more complicated substring, which begins with WEATHLOC, then contains wildcard text across several lines, and ends with a line beginning RMKS, more wildcard text, and then //. Here is an example:
WEATHLOC/ICAO:KCOS//
OBSTIME/052005Z//
WIND/360/10//
VSBY/10/SM//
CLDLYR/-/LYR:BKN//
TEMP/MAXTEMP:15/MINTEMP:18//
ALTSTG/HG:29.92//
RMKS/SAMPLE//
Everything from WEATHLOC to the final // needs to be captured, and I can only rely on its beginning with WEATHLOC and ending with RMKS*//. Is there a way to express that in a Regex match?
This should work:
string text = "hiCNTYhello//content What /-CNTYworld//12texCNTY!//That's it";
string search = "CNTY(.*?)//";
MatchCollection matches = Regex.Matches(text, search);
Will match "hello", "world" and "!"
This little code segment works. The RegEx method was too difficult for me, but this does work. We are trying to check if we are in bounds of CNTY // and to output that text to the StringBuilder.
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var input = #"CNTYTestingTesting//This is some more test CNTY1234//And some moreCNTYWhat is this?//";
var sb = new StringBuilder();
int inCnty = -1;
for (int i = 0; i < input.Length; i ++)
{
// Test for start
if (i < input.Length - 4)
{
if (input.Substring(i, 4) == "CNTY")
{
inCnty = i + 4; // Index of first CNTY
}
}
// Test for end
if (i < input.Length - 1)
{
if (input.Substring(i, 2) == #"//")
{
inCnty = -1; // Reset
}
}
// Test if we are in the segment
if (i >= inCnty && inCnty > 0)
{
// Outside string
sb.Append(input[i]);
}
}
var output = sb.ToString();
Console.WriteLine(output);
Console.Read();
}
This is my code. How can I edit it to show every word which is at the odd position ONLY to be reversed?
for (int i = input.Length - 1; i >= 0; i--)
{
if (input[i] == ' ')
{
result = tmp + " " + result;
tmp = "";
}
else
tmp += input[i];
}
result = tmp + " " + result;
Console.WriteLine(result);
Example input:
"How are you today"
to output:
"How era you yadot"
Based on the position of a word ['How' -> 0] do not reverse; [are -> 1 odd index] Reverse
You can achieve it with the help of LINQ:
var input = "hello this is a test message";
var inputWords = input.Split(new char[] { ' ' }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries);
var result = string.Join(" ",
inputWords.Select((w, i) =>
i % 2 == 0
? w
: new string(w.Reverse().ToArray())
));
Where w in the select is the word, and i is the index, starting at 0 for the first word. % is the modulus operator and gets the remainder. If i % 2 == 0 (i.e. i can be divided by 2 with no remainder), then the original is returned. If there is a remainder (odd) then the reversed word is returned. Finally, it's all wrapped up in a string.Join(" ", items); which turns it back into a normal string rather than an array of items.
Try it online
So far you have a string, like this:
string input = "I want to reverse all odd words (odd words only!).";
And you, naturally, want to perform the task. Now it's the main question what's an odd word?
If you mean word's position (I at position 0, want at 1 - should be reversed etc.)
then you can use regular expressions to match words and Linq to process them:
using System.Linq; // To reverse single word
using System.Text.RegularExpressions; // To match the words within the text
...
// Let's elaborate the test example: add
// 1. some punctuation - ()!. - to preserve it
// 2. different white spaces (spaces and tabulation - \t)
// to add difficulties for naive algorithms
// 3. double spaces (after "to") to mislead split based algorithms
string input = "I want to reverse all\todd words (odd words only!).";
int index = 0; // words' indexes start from zero
string result = Regex.Replace(
input,
"[A-Za-z']+", // word is letters and apostrophes
match => index++ % 2 == 0
? match.Value // Even words intact
: string.Concat(match.Value.Reverse())); // Odd words reversed
Console.WriteLine(result);
If you want to reverse the words with odd Length, i.e. I, all, odd then all you have to do is to change the condition to
match => match.Value % 2 == 0
Outcome:
I tnaw to esrever all ddo words (ddo words ylno!).
Please, notice, that the punctuation has been preserved (only words are reversed).
OP: Based on the position of a word ['How' -> 0] do not reverse; [are -> 1 odd index] Reverse
public static void Main()
{
string input = "How are you today Laken-C";
//As pointed out by #Dmitry Bychenko string input = "How are you today";
//(double space after How) leads to How are uoy today outcome
input = Regex.Replace(input, #"\s+", " ");
var inp = input.Split(' ').ToList();
for (int j = 0; j < inp.Count(); j++)
{
if(j % 2 == 1)
{
Console.Write(inp[j].Reverse().ToArray());
Console.Write(" ");
}
else
Console.Write(inp[j] + " ");
}
}
OUTPUT:
DEMO:
dotNetFiddle
try this is perfect working code..
static void Main(string[] args)
{
string orgstr = "my name is sagar";
string revstr = "";
foreach (var word in orgstr.Split(' '))
{
string temp = "";
foreach (var ch in word.ToCharArray())
{
temp = ch + temp;
}
revstr = revstr + temp + " ";
}
Console.Write(revstr);
Console.ReadKey();
}
Output: ym eman si ragas
I am scraping some website content which is like this - "Company Stock Rs. 7100".
Now, what i want is to extract the numeric value from this string. I tried split but something or the other goes wrong with my regular expression.
Please let me know how to get this value.
Use:
var result = Regex.Match(input, #"\d+").Value;
If you want to find only number which is last "entity" in the string you should use this regex:
\d+$
If you want to match last number in the string, you can use:
\d+(?!\D*\d)
int val = int.Parse(Regex.Match(input, #"\d+", RegexOptions.RightToLeft).Value);
I always liked LINQ:
var theNumber = theString.Where(x => char.IsNumber(x));
Though Regex sounds like the native choice...
This code will return the integer at the end of the string. This will work better than the regular expressions in the case that there is a number somewhere else in the string.
public int getLastInt(string line)
{
int offset = line.Length;
for (int i = line.Length - 1; i >= 0; i--)
{
char c = line[i];
if (char.IsDigit(c))
{
offset--;
}
else
{
if (offset == line.Length)
{
// No int at the end
return -1;
}
return int.Parse(line.Substring(offset));
}
}
return int.Parse(line.Substring(offset));
}
If your number is always after the last space and your string always ends with this number, you can get it this way:
str.Substring(str.LastIndexOf(" ") + 1)
Here is my answer ....it is separating numeric from string using C#....
static void Main(string[] args)
{
String details = "XSD34AB67";
string numeric = "";
string nonnumeric = "";
char[] mychar = details.ToCharArray();
foreach (char ch in mychar)
{
if (char.IsDigit(ch))
{
numeric = numeric + ch.ToString();
}
else
{
nonnumeric = nonnumeric + ch.ToString();
}
}
int i = Convert.ToInt32(numeric);
Console.WriteLine(numeric);
Console.WriteLine(nonnumeric);
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
}
You can use \d+ to match the first occurrence of a number:
string num = Regex.Match(input, #"\d+").Value;