How to match all first digits before # in this line
26909578#Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi#356028416#2012-10-24 09:06#0#http://bitshare.com/files/dvk9o1oz/Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi.html#[URL=http://bitshare.com/files/dvk9o1oz/Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi.html]http://bitshare.com/files/dvk9o1oz/Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi.html[/URL]#http://bitshare.com/files/dvk9o1oz/Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi.html#http://bitshare.com/?f=dvk9o1oz#http://bitshare.com/delete/dvk9o1oz/4511e6f3612961f961a761adcb7e40a0/Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi.html
Im trying to get this number 26909578
My try
string text = #"26909578#Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi#356028416#2012-10-24 09:06#0#http://bitshare.com/files/dvk9o1oz/Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi.html#[URL=http://bitshare.com/files/dvk9o1oz/Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi.html]http://bitshare.com/files/dvk9o1oz/Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi.html[/URL]#http://bitshare.com/files/dvk9o1oz/Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi.html#http://bitshare.com/?f=dvk9o1oz#http://bitshare.com/delete/dvk9o1oz/4511e6f3612961f961a761adcb7e40a0/Sbrntrl_7x06-lilla.avi.html";
MatchCollection m1 = Regex.Matches(text, #"(.+?)#", RegexOptions.Singleline);
but then its outputs all text
Make it explicit that it has to start at the beginning of the string:
#"^(.+?)#"
Alternatively, if you know that this will always be a number, restrict the possible characters to digits:
#"^\d+"
Alternatively use the function Match instead of Matches. Matches explicitly says, "give me all the matches", while Match will only return the first one.
Or, in a trivial case like this, you might also consider a non-RegEx approach. The IndexOf() method will locate the '#' and you could easily strip off what came before.
I even wrote a sscanf() replacement for C#, which you can see in my article A sscanf() Replacement for .NET.
If you dont want to/dont like to use regex, use a string builder and just loop until you hit the #.
so like this
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
string yourdata = "yourdata";
int i = 0;
while(yourdata[i]!='#')
{
sb.Append(yourdata[i]);
i++;
}
//when you get to that # your stringbuilder will have the number you want in it so return it with .toString();
string answer = sb.toString();
The entire string (except the final url) is composed of segments that can be matched by (.+?)#, so you will get several matches. Retrieve only the first match from the collection returned by matching .+?(?=#)
Related
I have string of the following format:
string test = "test.BO.ID";
My aim is string that part of the string whatever comes after first dot.
So ideally I am expecting output as "BO.ID".
Here is what I have tried:
// Checking for the first occurence and take whatever comes after dot
var output = Regex.Match(test, #"^(?=.).*?");
The output I am getting is empty.
What is the modification I need to make it for Regex?
You get an empty output because the pattern you have can match an empty string at the start of a string, and that is enough since .*? is a lazy subpattern and . matches any char.
Use (the value will be in Match.Groups[1].Value)
\.(.*)
or (with a lookahead, to get the string as a Match.Value)
(?<=\.).*
See the regex demo and a C# online demo.
A non-regex approach can be use String#Split with count argument (demo):
var s = "test.BO.ID";
var res = s.Split(new[] {"."}, 2, StringSplitOptions.None);
if (res.GetLength(0) > 1)
Console.WriteLine(res[1]);
If you only want the part after the first dot you don't need a regex at all:
x.Substring(x.IndexOf('.'))
I have a long string with random letters, numbers, and spaces.
I need a regex expression to pull out the part of the string after the sequence of characters and numbers --> AQ102.
For example :
string t = "kjdsjsk158dfdd 125.196.168.210helloAQ102Lab101 section2";
desired output:
Lab101 section2
Why not use
string s = t.Split("AQ102").Last();
Or, a regular expression as originally asked for:
Regex regEx = new Regex(#".*(AQ102.*)");
OR
Regex regEx = new Regex(#".*(AQ102)(.*)");
And you can get the matches doing the following:
Matches matches = regEx.Matches(t);
And you can get the match by referencing the first index:
matches[1]
OR, if you're really confident:
string val = regEx.Matches(t)[1].Value;
Don't need Regex for this. A simple split should suffice:
string output = input.Split(new string[] { "AQ102" }, StringSplitOptions.None)[1];
Depend on how sure you are of your input, you may want to check that AQ102 exist first, or even to count how many times... but as I said, depends on your scenario.
I am trying to replace a bunch of strings in files. The strings are stored in a datatable along with the new string value.
string contents = File.ReadAllText(file);
foreach (DataRow dr in FolderRenames.Rows)
{
contents = Regex.Replace(contents, dr["find"].ToString(), dr["replace"].ToString());
File.SetAttributes(file, FileAttributes.Normal);
File.WriteAllText(file, contents);
}
The strings look like this _-uUa, -_uU, _-Ha etc.
The problem that I am having is when for example this string "_uU" will also overwrite "_-uUa" so the replacement would look like "newvaluea"
Is there a way to tell regex to look at the next character after the found string and make sure it is not an alphanumeric character?
I hope it is clear what I am trying to do here.
Here is some sample data:
private function _-0iX(arg1:flash.events.Event):void
{
if (arg1.type == flash.events.Event.RESIZE)
{
if (this._-2GU)
{
this._-yu(this._-2GU);
}
}
return;
}
The next characters could be ;, (, ), dot, comma, space, :, etc.
First of all, you should use Regex.Escape.
You can use then
contents = Regex.Replace(
contents,
Regex.Escape(dr["find"].ToString()) + #"(?![a-zA-Z])",
Regex.Escape(dr["replace"].ToString()));
or even better
contents = Regex.Replace(
contents,
#"\b" + Regex.Escape(dr["find"].ToString()) + #"\b",
Regex.Escape(dr["replace"].ToString()));
I think this is what you're looking for:
contents = Regex.Replace(
contents,
string.Format(#"(?<!\w){0}(?!\w)", Regex.Escape(dr["find"].ToString())),
dr["replace"].ToString().Replace("$", "$$")
);
You can't use \b because your search strings don't always start and end with word characters. Instead, I used (?<!\w) and (?!\w) to make sure the matched substring is not immediately preceded or followed by a word character (i.e., a letter, a digit, or an underscore). I don't know the complete specs for your search strings, so this pattern might need some tweaking.
None of the sample patterns you provided contain regex metacharacters, but like the other responders, I used Regex.Escape() to render it safe anyway. In the replacement string the only character you have to watch out for is the dollar sign (ref), and the way to escape that is with another dollar sign. Notice that I used String.Replace() for that instead of Regex.Replace().
There are two tricks that can help you here:
Order all the search string by length, and replace the longest ones first, that way you won't accidentally replace the shorter ones.
Use a MatchEvaluator and instead of looping through all your rows, search fro all replacement patterns in the string and look them up in your dataset.
Option one is simple, option two would look like this:
Regex.Replace(contents", "_-\\w+", ReplaceIdentifier)
public string ReplaceIdentifier(Match m)
{
DataRow row = FolderRenames.Rows.FindRow("find"); // Requires a primary key on "find"
if (row != null) return row["replace"];
else return m.Value;
}
I am trying to substrings if they have certain format. Substring Regex query is [CENAOD(xyx)]. I have done following code but when running this in cycle it says all results match which is wrong. Where I've done something wrong?
string strRegex = #"(\[CENAOD\((\S|\W)*\)\])*";
string strCenaOd = sReader["intro"].ToString()
if (Regex.IsMatch(strCenaOd, strRegex, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase))
{
string = (want to read content of ( ) = xyz in example)
}
Remove the outer ( ... )*.
That says no match is a good match too.
Or use + instead of *.
Adding to #Kent's and #leppie's answers, the code surrounding the regex needs work, too. I think this is what you were trying for:
string strRegex = #"\[CENAOD\(([^)]*)\)\]";
string strCenaOd = sReader["intro"].ToString();
Match m = Regex.Match(strCenaOd, strRegex, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
if (m.Success)
{
string content = m.Groups[1];
// ...
}
IsMatch() is a simple yes-or-no check, it doesn't provide any way to retrieve the matched text.
I especially want to comment on (\S|\W)*, from your regex. First, \S|\W is a very inefficient way to match any character. . is usually all you need, but as Kent pointed out, [^)] (i.e., any character except )) is more appropriate in this case. Also, by placing the * outside the round brackets, you'll only ever capture the last character. ([^)]*) captures all of them. For more details, read this.
if you said "all strings", how about:
\[CENAOD\([^\)]*\)\]
I need to strip unknown characters from the end of a string returned from an SQL database. I also need to log when a special character occurs in the string.
What's the best way to do this?
You can use the Trim() method to trim blanks or specific characters from the end of a string. If you need to trim a certain number of characters you can use the Substring() method. You can use Regexs (System.Text.RegularExpressions namespace) to match patterns in a string and detect when they occur. See MSDN for more info.
If you need more help you'll need to provide a bit more info on what exactly you're trying to do.
First define what are unknown characters (chars other than 0-9, a to z and A to Z ?) and put them in an array
Loop trough the characters of a string and check if the char occurs, if so remove.
you can also to a String.Replace with as param the unknown char, and replaceparam ''.
Since you've specified that the legal characters are only alphanumeric, you could do something like this:
Match m = Regex.Match(original, "^([0-9A-Za-z]*)(.*)$");
string good = m.Groups[1].Value;
string bad = m.Groups[2].Value;
if (bad.Length > 0)
{
// log bad characters
}
Console.WriteLine(good);
Your definition of the problem is not precise yet this is a fast trick to do so:
string input;
...
var trimed = input.TrimEnd(new[] {'#','$',...} /* array of unwanted characters */);
if(trimed != input)
myLogger.Log(input.Replace(trimed, ""));
check out the Regex.Replace methods...there are lots of overloads. You can use the Match methods for the logging to identify all matches.
String badString = "HELLO WORLD!!!!";
Regex regex = new Regex("!{1,}$" );
String newString = regex.Replace(badString, String.Empty);