I would like to retrieve the alphabet only but the code is not enough to make it.
What am I missing?
[A-Öa-ö]+$
16440 dallas
23941 cityO < You also have white space after "O"
931 00 Texas
10581 New Orleans
It's because you specify a sequence from the ASCII character table. And åäö is not directly after Z in the ascii table.
You can see it here: http://www.asciitable.com/
So what you need is a regex that specifies those separately:
[A-Za-zåäöÅÄÖ]+$
So the complete regex is:
var re = new Regex("([A-Za-zåäöÅÄÖ]+)$", RegexOptions.Multiline);
var matches = re.Matches(data);
Console.WriteLine(matches[0].Groups[1].Value);
However, since you want to allow white spaces within the name (as for "New Orleans") you need to allow it, simply include it in the regex:
var re = new Regex("([A-Za-zåäöÅÄÖ ]+)$", RegexOptions.Multiline);
Unfortunately that also includes white spaces in the beginning and the end:
" New Orleans "
To fix that you start by specifying the regex as greedy, i.e. tell it to use less characters:
new Regex("([A-Za-zåäöÅÄÖ ]+?)$", RegexOptions.Multiline)
The problem with that is that it do not take other lines than New orleans. Don't ask me why. To fix that I told the regex that it must have a space between the digits and the text and that there may be a space after the text:
var re = new Regex("\\s([A-Za-zåäöÅÄÖ ]+?)[\\s]*$", RegexOptions.Multiline);
which works with all lines.
Regex breakdown:
\\s A single whitespace (which should not be included in the match since it's not in the parenthesis expression)
([A-Za-zåäöÅÄÖ ]+?)
Find a character which either is in the alphabet or space
+ there must be one or more
? use greedy search.
[\\s]*
[\\s] Find a white space character
* There must be zero or more if it
Alternative
As an alternative to regex you can do something like this:
public IEnumerable<string> GetCodes(string data)
{
var lines = data.Split(new[] { Environment.NewLine }, StringSplitOptions.None);
foreach (var line in lines)
{
for (var i = 0; i < line.Length; i++)
{
if (!char.IsLetter(line[i]))
continue;
var text = line.Substring(i).TrimEnd(' ');
yield return text;
break;
}
}
}
Which is invoked like:
var codes = GetCodes(yourData).ToList();
In C#, you can use \p{L} Unicode category class to match all Unicode characters. You may match zero or more whitespace characters with \s*. End of string is $ (or \Z or \z). The word you need can be captured and this capture can easily be retrieved from the match result via GroupCollection.
Thus, you can use
(\p{L}+)\s*$
or - if you plan to match specific Finnish, etc. letters:
(?i)([A-ZÅÄÖ]+)\s*$
See the regex demo
C# demo:
var strs = new string[] {"16440 dallas", "23941 cityO ", "931 00 Texas", "10581 New Orleans"};
foreach (var s in strs) {
var match = Regex.Match(s, #"(\p{L}+)\s*$");
if (match.Success)
{
Console.WriteLine(match.Groups[1].Value);
}
}
Related
Using regex want to remove adjacent Space near replacement Character
replacementCharcter = '-'
this._adjacentSpace = new Regex($#"\s*([\{replacementCharacter}])\s*");
MatchCollection replaceCharacterMatch = this._adjacentSpace.Matches(extractedText);
foreach (Match replaceCharacter in replaceCharacterMatch)
{
if (replaceCharacter.Success)
{
cleanedText = Extactedtext.Replace(replaceCharacter.Value, replaceCharacter.Value.Trim());
}
}
Extractedtext = - whi, - ch
cleanedtext = -whi, -ch
expected result : cleanedtext = -whi,-ch
You can use
var Extactedtext = "- whi, - ch";
var replacementCharacter = "-";
var _adjacentSpace = new Regex($#"\s*({Regex.Escape(replacementCharacter)})\s*");
var cleanedText = _adjacentSpace.Replace(Extactedtext, "$1");
Console.WriteLine(cleanedText); // => -whi,-ch
See the C# demo.
NOTE:
replacementCharacter is of type string in the code above
$#"\s*({Regex.Escape(replacementCharacter)})\s*" will create a regex like \s*-\s*, Regex.Escape() will escape any regex-special char (like +, (, etc.) correctly to be used in a regex pattern, and the whole regex simply matches (and captured into Group 1 with the capturing parentheses) the replacementCharacter enclosed with zero or more whitespaces
No need using Regex.Matches, just replace all matches if there are any, that is how Regex.Replace works.
_adjacentSpace is the compiled Regex object, to replace, just call the .Replace() method of the regex object instance
The replacement is a backreference to the Group 1 value, the - char here.
I am working on a Xamarin.Forms PCL project in C# and would like to detect all the hashtags.
I tried splitting at spaces and checking if the word begins with an # but the problem is if the post contains two spaces like "Hello #World Test" it would lose that the double space
string body = "Example string with a #hashtag in it";
string newbody = "";
foreach (var word in body.Split(' '))
{
if (word.StartsWith("#"))
newbody += "[" + word + "]";
newbody += word;
}
Goal output:
Example string with a [#hashtag] in it
I also only want it to have A-Z a-z 0-9 and _ stopping at any other character
Test #H3ll0_W0rld$%Test => Test [#H3ll0_W0rld]$%Test
Other Stack questions try to detect the string and extract it, I would like it work with it and put it back in the string without losing anything that methods such as splitting by certain characters would lose.
You can use Regex with #\w+ and $&
Explanation
# matches the character # literally (case sensitive)
\w+ matches any word character (equal to [a-zA-Z0-9_])
+ Quantifier — Matches between one and unlimited times, as many times as possible, giving back as needed (greedy)
$& Includes a copy of the entire match in the replacement string.
Example
var input = "asdads sdfdsf #burgers, #rabbits dsfsdfds #sdf #dfgdfg";
var regex = new Regex(#"#\w+");
var matches = regex.Matches(input);
foreach (var match in matches)
{
Console.WriteLine(match);
}
or
var result = regex.Replace(input, "[$&]" );
Console.WriteLine(result);
Ouput
#burgers
#rabbits
#sdf
#dfgdfg
asdads sdfdsf [#burgers], [#rabbits] dsfsdfds [#sdf] [#dfgdfg]
Updated Demo here
Another Example
Use a regular expression: \#\w*
string pattern = "\#\w*";
Regex rgx = new Regex(pattern, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
MatchCollection matches = rgx.Matches(input);
I'm looking for a way to search a string for everything before a set of characters in C#. For Example, if this is my string value:
This is is a test.... 12345
I want build a new string with all of the characters before "12345".
So my new string would equal "This is is a test.... "
Is there a way to do this?
I've found Regex examples where you can focus on one character but not a sequence of characters.
You don't need to use a Regex:
public string GetBitBefore(string text, string end)
{
var index = text.IndexOf(end);
if (index == -1) return text;
return text.Substring(0, index);
}
You can use a lazy quantifier to match anything, followed by a lookahead:
var match = Regex.Match("This is is a test.... 12345", #".*?(?=\d{5})");
where:
.*? lazily matches everything (up to the lookahead)
(?=…) is a positive lookahead: the pattern must be matched, but is not included in the result
\d{5} matches exactly five digits. I'm assuming this is your lookahead; you can replace it
You can do so with help of regex lookahead.
.*(?=12345)
Example:
var data = "This is is a test.... 12345";
var rxStr = ".*(?=12345)";
var rx = new System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex (rxStr,
System.Text.RegularExpressions.RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
var match = rx.Match(data);
if (match.Success) {
Console.WriteLine (match.Value);
}
Above code snippet will print every thing upto 12345:
This is is a test....
For more detail about see regex positive lookahead
This should get you started:
var reg = new Regex("^(.+)12345$");
var match = reg.Match("This is is a test.... 12345");
var group = match.Groups[1]; // This is is a test....
Of course you'd want to do some additional validation, but this is the basic idea.
^ means start of string
$ means end of string
The asterisk tells the engine to attempt to match the preceding token zero or more times. The plus tells the engine to attempt to match the preceding token once or more
{min,max} indicate the minimum/maximum number of matches.
\d matches a single character that is a digit, \w matches a "word character" (alphanumeric characters plus underscore), and \s matches a whitespace character (includes tabs and line breaks).
[^a] means not so exclude a
The dot matches a single character, except line break characters
In your case there many way to accomplish the task.
Eg excluding digit: ^[^\d]*
If you know the set of characters and they are not only digit, don't use regex but IndexOf(). If you know the separator between first and second part as "..." you can use Split()
Take a look at this snippet:
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
string input = "This is is a test.... 12345";
// Here we call Regex.Match.
MatchCollection matches = Regex.Matches(input, #"(?<MySentence>(\w+\s*)*)(?<MyNumberPart>\d*)");
foreach (Match item in matches)
{
Console.WriteLine(item.Groups["MySentence"]);
Console.WriteLine("******");
Console.WriteLine(item.Groups["MyNumberPart"]);
}
Console.ReadKey();
}
}
You could just split, not as optimal as the indexOf solution
string value = "oiasjdoiasj12345";
string end = "12345";
string result = value.Split(new string[] { end }, StringSplitOptions.None)[0] //Take first part of the result, not the quickest but fairly simple
I have a long string composed of a number of different words.
I want to go through all of them, and if the word contains a special character or number (except '-'), or starts with a Capital letter, I want to delete it (the whole word not just that character). For all intents and purposes 'foreign' letters can count as special characters.
The obvious solution is to run a loop through each word (after splitting it) and then a loop through each character - but I'm hoping there's a faster way of doing it? Perhaps using Regex but I've almost no experience with it.
Thanks
ADDED:
(What I want for example:)
Input: "this Is an Example of 5 words in an input like-so from example.com"
Output: {this,an,of,words,in,an,input,like-so,from}
(What I've tried so far)
List<string> response = new List<string>();
string[] splitString = text.Split(' ');
foreach (string s in splitString)
{
bool add = true;
foreach (char c in s.ToCharArray())
{
if (!(c.Equals('-') || (Char.IsLetter(c) && Char.IsLower(c))))
{
add = false;
break;
}
if (add)
{
response.Add(s);
}
}
}
Edit 2:
For me a word should be a number of characters (a..z) seperated by a space. ,/./!/... at the end shouldn't count for the 'special character' condition (which is really mostly just to remove urls or the like)
So:
"I saw a dog. It was black!"
should result in
{saw,a,dog,was,black}
So you want to find all "words" that only contain characters a-z or -, for words that are separated by spaces?
A regex like this will find such words:
(?<!\S)[a-z-]+(?!\S)
To also allow for words that end with single punctuation, you could use:
(?<!\S)[a-z-]+(?=[,.!?:;]?(?!\S))
Example (ideone):
var re = #"(?<!\S)[a-z-]+(?=[,.!?:;]?(?!\S))";
var str = "this, Is an! Example of 5 words in an input like-so from example.com foo: bar?";
var m = Regex.Matches(str, re);
Console.WriteLine("Matched: ");
foreach (Match i in m)
Console.Write(i + " ");
Notice the punctuation in the string.
Output:
Matched:
this an of words in an input like-so from foo bar
How about this?
(?<=^|\s+)(?[a-z-]+)(?=$|\s+)
Edit: Meant (?<=^|\s+)(?<word>[a-z\-]+)(?=(?:\.|,|!|\.\.\.)?(?:$|\s+))
Rules:
Word can only be preceded by start of line or some number of whitespace characters
Word can only be followed by end of line or some number of whitespace characters (Edit supports words ending with periods, commas, exclamation points, and ellipses)
Word can only contain lower case (latin) letters and dashes
The named group containing each word is "word"
Have a look at Microsoft's How to: Search Strings Using Regular Expressions (C# Programming Guide) - it's about regexes in C#.
List<string> strings = new List<string>() {"asdf", "sdf-sd", "sdfsdf"};
for (int i = strings.Count-1; i > 0; i--)
{
if (strings[i].Contains("-"))
{
strings.Remove(strings[i]);
}
}
This could be a starting point. right now it just checks only for "." as a special char. This outputs : "this an of words in an like-so from"
string pattern = #"[A-Z]\w+|\w*[0-9]+\w*|\w*[\.]+\w*";
string line = "this Is an Example of 5 words in an in3put like-so from example.com";
System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex r = new System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex(pattern);
line = r.Replace(line,"");
You can do this in two ways, the white-list way and the black-list way. With a white-list you define the set of characters that you consider to be acceptable and with the black-list its the opposite.
Lets assume the white-list way and that you accept only characters a-z, A-Z and the - character. Additionally you have the rule that the first character of a word cannot be an upper case character.
With this you can do something like this:
string target = "This is a white-list example: (Foo, bar1)";
var matches = Regex.Matches(target, #"(?:\b)(?<Word>[a-z]{1}[a-zA-Z\-]*)(?:\b)");
string[] words = matches.Cast<Match>().Select(m => m.Value).ToArray();
Console.WriteLine(string.Join(", ", words));
Outputs:
// is, a, white-list, example
You can use look-aheads and look-behinds to do this. Here's a regex that matches your example:
(?<=\s|^)[a-z-]+(?=\s|$)
The explanation is: match one or more alphabetic characters (lowercase only, plus hyphen), as long as what comes before the characters is whitespace (or the start of the string), and as long as what comes after is whitespace or the end of the string.
All you need to do now is plug that into System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex.Matches(input, regexString) to get your list of words.
Reference: http://www.mikesdotnetting.com/Article/46/CSharp-Regular-Expressions-Cheat-Sheet
How would I go about using Regex to match Unicode strings? I'm loading in a couple keywords from a text file and using them with Regex on another file. The keywords both contain unicode (such as á, etc). I'm not sure where the problem is. Is there some option I have to set?
Code:
foreach (string currWord in _keywordList)
{
MatchCollection mCount = Regex.Matches(
nSearch.InnerHtml, "\\b" + #currWord + "\\b", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
if (mCount.Count > 0)
{
wordFound.Add(currWord);
MessageBox.Show(#currWord, mCount.ToString());
}
}
And reading the keywords to a list:
var rdComp = new StreamReader(opnDiag.FileName);
string compSplit = rdComp.ReadToEnd()
.Replace("\r\n", "\n")
.Replace("\n\r", "\n");
rdComp.Dispose();
string[] compList = compSplit.Split(new[] {'\n'});
Then I change the array to a list.
When matching on a specific character, I believe regular expressions only support literals for the ASCII character set. Beyond that, you can use \uxxxx to match on the Unicode code point.
See here.
You can use [\u0000-\uffff]+ to match at least the BMP