regular expression for special chars and numerics - c#

I need a regular expression for accepting alpha numerics and special charecters also
like : abc & def12
thanks in advance
Nagesh

This might be the syntax you are looking for /^[a-zA-Z0-9&:\/ ]+$/, insert any other characters you want to match between the square brackets.
I would recommend you to read up on regular expressions if you intend to use them in the future, check out this tutorial http://perldoc.perl.org/perlretut.html

^[\w]+$ this regex will match all alphanumerics, if you want to match some other chars as well just specify them in the [] brackets, i.e. if you wan't to also match ampersand you will have ^[\w&]+$ regex, if you wan't to match white characters as well (tabs, spaces, line feeds, carriage returns) you add \d and end up with ^[\w&\s]+$ and so on until you have all your special characters handled.

not got a specific answer, but regexlib.com has come in handy for me.

Related

Extract string from a pattern preceded by any length

I'm looking for a regular expression to extract a string from a file name
eg if filename format is "anythingatallanylength_123_TESTNAME.docx", I'm interested in extracting "TESTNAME" ... probably fixed length of 8. (btw, 123 can be any three digit number)
I think I can use regex match ...
".*_[0-9][0-9][0-9]_[A-Z][A-Z][A-Z][A-Z][A-Z][A-Z][A-Z][A-Z].docx$"
However this matches the whole thing. How can I just get "TESTNAME"?
Thanks
Use parenthesis to match a specific piece of the whole regex.
You can also use the curly braces to specify counts of matching characters, and \d for [0-9].
In C#:
var myRegex = new Regex(#"*._\d{3}_([A-Za-z]{8})\.docx$");
Now "TESTNAME" or whatever your 8 letter piece is will be found in the captures collection of your regex after using it.
Also note, there will be a performance overhead for look-ahead and look-behind, as presented in some other solutions.
You can use a look-behind and a look-ahead to check parts without matching them:
(?<=_[0-9]{3}_)[A-Z]{8}(?=\.docx$)
Note that this is case-sensitive, you may want to use other character classes and/or quantifiers to fit your exact pattern.
In your file name format "anythingatallanylength_123_TESTNAME.docx", the pattern you are trying to match is a string before .docx and the underscore _. Keeping the thing in mind that any _ before doesn't get matched I came up with following solution.
Regex: (?<=_)[A-Za-z]*(?=\.docx$)
Flags used:
g global search
m multi-line search.
Explanation:
(?<=_) checks if there is an underscore before the file name.
(?=\.docx$) checks for extension at the end.
[A-Za-z]* checks the required match.
Regex101 Demo
Thanks to #Lucero #noob #JamesFaix I came up with ...
#"(?<=.*[0-9]{3})[A-Z]{8}(?=.docx$)"
So a look behind (in brackets, starting with ?<=) for anything (ie zero or more any char (denoted by "." ) followed by an underscore, followed by thee numerics, followed by underscore. Thats the end of the look behind. Now to match what I need (eight letters). Finally, the look ahead (in brackets, starting with ?=), which is the .docx
Nice work, fellas. Thunderbirds are go.

Regex lookbeaind only when contains colon

Today I use c# Regex.IsMatch function to matching key:value format.
I have some code that checking if string format is: key:value (like: H:15).
The Regex pattern that I am using today is: [D,H,M,S]:[1-9]+\d?
I what to add the option for default key, when the input is 15, I would like to consider it like: H:15
So, I need to improve my Regex to support key:value or only value (without colon), H:15 is good and 15 is also good
I tried to use the or regex condition (|) something like : ([D,H,M,S]:[1-9]+\d?)|([1-9]+\d?)
But now it match more thinks like :1 and H:01 that are bad input for me.
I try to use also lookbehind regex without success
Any help would be greatly appreciated,
Nadav.
This should do the trick:
\b(?:[DHMS]:|(?<!:))[1-9][0-9]*\b
Demo
So, either match [DHMS]: or a word boundary not preceded by :.
Also, [1-9]+\d? looks very suspicious to me, so I replaced it with [1-9][0-9]*. Note that in .NET \d is not equivalent to [0-9] because it includes Unicode digits as well.
Looks like Avinash just beat me to it, but I added word boundaries with this expression, which works well in tests.
\b(?<=[DHMS]:)?[1-9]\d*\b
Seems like you wants something like this,
#"^(?:[DHMS]:)?[1-9]\d*$"
[DHMS] matches a single character from the given list. ? after the non-capturing group will turn the key part to an optional one. \d* matches zero or more digit characters.

Why is this regex not allowing this text?

I have a username validator IsValidUsername, and I am testing "baconman" but it is failing, could someone please help me out with this regex?
if(!Regex.IsMatch(str, #"^[a-zA-Z]\\w+|[0-9][0-9_]*[a-zA-Z]+\\w*$")) {
isValid = false;
}
I want the restrictions to be: (It's very close)
Be between 5 & 17 characters long
contain at least one letter
no spaces
no special characters
You're escaping unnecessarily: if you write your regex as starting with # outside the string, you don't need both \ - just one is fine.
Either:
#"\w"
or
"\\w"
Edit: I didn't make this clear: right now due to the double escaping, you're looking for a \ in your regex and a w. So your match would need [some character]\w to match (example: "a\w" or "a\wwwwww" would match.
Your requirements are best taken care of in normal C#. They don't map well to a regular expression. Just code them up using LINQ which works on strings like it would on an IEnumerable<char>.
Also, understanding a query of a string is much easier than understanding a Regex with the requirements that you have.
It is possible to do everything as part of a Regex, however it is not pretty :-)
^(\w(?=\w*[a-zA-Z])|[a-zA-Z]|\w(?<=[a-zA-Z]\w*)){5,17}$
It does 3 checks that always results in 1 character being matched (so we can perform the length check in the end)
Either the character is any word character \w which is before [a-zA-Z]
Or it is [a-zA-Z]
Or it is any word character \w which is after [a-zA-Z]

Regex match everything but

I would like to create a regular expression to match every word, whitespace, punctuation and special characters in a string except for specific keywords or phrases. Because I only can modify regex, not server code I have to use match instead of replace.
I have something like this so far: (?!(quick|brown|fox|the lazy))\b\w+ but it ignores white spaces and special characters in this tool
Thanks.
Does this work for you (?!(quick|brown|fox|the lazy))(\b\w+|[^\w])?
Do you have any examples?

Regular Expression to reject special characters other than commas

I am working in asp.net. I am using Regular Expression Validator
Could you please help me in creating a regular expression for not allowing special characters other than comma. Comma has to be allowed.
I checked in regexlib, however I could not find a match. I treid with ^(a-z|A-Z|0-9)*[^#$%^&*()']*$ . When I add other characters as invalid, it does not work.
Also could you please suggest me a place where I can find a good resource of regular expressions? regexlib seems to be big; but any other place which lists very limited but most used examples?
Also, can I create expressions using C# code? Any articles for that?
[\w\s,]+
works fine, as you can see bellow.
RegExr is a great place to test your regular expressions with real time results, it also comes with a very complete list of common expressions.
[] character class \w Matches any word character (alphanumeric & underscore). \s
Matches any whitespace character (spaces, tabs, line breaks). , include comma + is greedy match; which will match the previous 1 or more times.
[\d\w\s,]*
Just a guess
To answer on any articles, I got started here, find it to be an excellent resource:
http://www.regular-expressions.info/
For your current problem, try something like this:
[\w\s,]*
Here's a breakdown:
Match a single character present in the list below «[\w\s,]*»
Between zero and unlimited times, as many times as possible, giving back as needed (greedy) «*»
A word character (letters, digits, etc.) «\w»
A whitespace character (spaces, tabs, line breaks, etc.) «\s»
The character “,” «,»
For a single character that is not a comma, [^,] should work perfectly fine.
You can try [\w\s,] regular expression. This regex will match only alpha-numeric characters and comma. If any other character appears within text, then this wont match.
For your second question regarding regular expression resource, you can goto
http://www.regular-expressions.info/
This website has lot of tutorials on regex, plus it has lot of usefult information.
Also, can I create expressions using
C# code? Any articles for that?
By this, do you mean to say you want to know which class and methods for regular expression execution? Or you want tool that will create regular expression for you?
You can create expressions with C#, something like this usually does the trick:
Regex regex = new Regex(#"^[a-z | 0-9 | /,]*$", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
System.Console.Write("Enter Text");
String s = System.Console.ReadLine();
Match match = regex.Match(s);
if (match.Success == true)
{
System.Console.WriteLine("True");
}
else
{
System.Console.WriteLine("False");
}
System.Console.ReadLine();
You need to import the System.Text.RegularExpressions;
The regular expression above, accepts only numbers, letters (both upper and lower case) and the comma.
For a small introduction to Regular Expressions, I think that the book for MCTS 70-536 can be of a big help, I am pretty sure that you can either download it from somewhere or obtain a copy.
I am assuming that you never messed around with regular expressions in C#, hence I provided the code above.
Hope this helps.
Thank you, all..
[\w\s,]* works
Let me go through regular-expressions.info and come back if I need further support.
Let me try the C# code approach and come back if I need further support.
[This forum is awesome. Quality replies so qucik..]
Thanks again
(…) is denoting a grouping and not a character set that’s denoted with […]. So try this:
^[a-zA-Z0-9,]*$
This will only allow alphanumeric characters and the comma.

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