RegEx for extracting number from a string - c#

I have a bunch of files in a directory, mostly labled something like...
PO1000000100.doc or .pdf or .txt
Some of them are PurchaseOrderPO1000000109.pdf
What i need to do is extract the PO1000000109 part of it. So basically PO with 10 numbers after it...
How can I do this with a regex?
(What i'll do is a foreach loop on the files in the directory, get the filename, and run it through the regex to get the PO number...)
I'm using C# - not sure if this is relevant.

Try this
String data =
Regex.Match(#"PO\d{10}", "PurchaseOrderPO1000000109.pdf",
RegexOptions.IgnoreCase).Value;
Could add a Regex.IsMatch with same vars above ofc :)

If the PO part is always the same, you can just get the number without needing to use a regex:
new string(theString.Where(c => char.IsDigit(c)).ToArray());
Later you can prepend the PO part manually.
NOTE: I'm assuming that you have only one single run of numbers in your strings. If you have for example "abc12345def678" you will get "12345678", which may not be what you want.

Regex.Replace(fileName, #"^.?PO(\d{10}).$", "$1");
Put stars after dots.

string data="PurchaseOrderPO1000000109.pdf\nPO1000000100.doc";
MatchCollection matches = Regex.Matches(data, #"PO[0-9]{10}");
foreach(Match m in matches){
print(m.Value);
}
Results
PO1000000109
PO1000000100

This RegEx will pick up all numbers from a string \d*.
As described here.

A possible regexp could be:
^.*(\d{10})\.\D{3}$

var re = new System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex("(?<=^PurchaseOrder)PO\\d{10}(?=\\.pdf$)");
Assert.IsTrue(re.IsMatch("PurchaseOrderPO1234567890.pdf"));
Assert.IsFalse(re.IsMatch("some PurchaseOrderPO1234567890.pdf"));
Assert.IsFalse(re.IsMatch("OrderPO1234567890.pdf"));
Assert.IsFalse(re.IsMatch("PurchaseOrderPO1234567890.pdf2"));

Related

C# regex to parse /simple1/1.2-SNAPSHOT/

I need to find the last two values at the end of such a string, "simple1" and "1.2-SNAPSHOT" in the sample url below. But my code below (try to get simple1/1.2-SNAPSHOT/) doesn't work, can anyone help?
http://localhost:8060/nexus/service/local/repositories/snapshots/content/org/sonatype/mavenbook/simple1/1.2-SNAPSHOT/
List<string> artifacts = new List<string>(); // this is already foler URL
// store all URLs to the artifacts be deleted
artifacts = nexusAPI.findArtifacts(repository, contents, days, pattern);
var regex = new Regex(".*\\/(.*\\/.*\\/)$");
foreach (string url in artifacts)
{
Console.WriteLine("group/artifact: {0}", regex.Matches(url));
}
I would just split the string on '/' and get the last two parts. The regex isn't going to do anything more then that.
If you must use RegEx, you're encountering an issue in that regexes are greedy - that means it puts as much in each .* as it possibly can. So your first step is to make the regex not greedy. Simply use this as your pattern:
(.*?)/
Here's a simple test showing how that this works.
This tells the regex to look for any character up to the slash, and then stop.
When you call Regex.Matches(url, "(.*?)/"), you will get returned an array of the matching data. From there, you can just look at the last two elements.
Of course, as SledgeHammer mentioned, this is one case where regex is unnecessary and even cumbersome. Simply working with url.Split(new char[] {'/'}) will give you the results you need.

Correction in this simple regular expression

I am new to regular expressions and the one that i have written might be a very simple one but donot know where I am wrong.
#"^([a-zA-Z._]+)#([\d]+)"
This RE is for the following string:
somename#somenumber
Now i am trying to retrieve the somename and somenumber. This is what i did:
ac.name = m.Groups[0].Value;
ac.number = m.Groups[1].Value;
Here ac.name reads the complete string, and ac.number reads somenumber. Where am I wrong in ac.name?
i guess the regex is correct, the problem is, you get the ac.name not from group 1 but group(0), which is the whole string. try this:
ac.name = m.Groups[1].Value;
ac.number = m.Groups[2].Value;
This regex is correct. I think your mistake is in somewhere else. You seem to use C#. So, you should think about the regex usage in the language.
Looking to the code sample in MSDN, you need to use 1-based indexes while accessing Groups instead of zero-based (as also Kent suggested). So, use this:
String name = m.Groups[1].Value;
String number = m.Groups[2].Value;
use this regex (\w+)#(\d+([.,]\d+)?)
Groups[1] will be contain name
Groups[2] will be contain number
I think you should move the + into the capture group:
#"^([a-zA-Z._]+)#([\d]+)"
If this is C#, try without the ^
([a-zA-Z\._]+)#([\d]+)
I just tried it out and it groups properly
Update: escaped the .
If you want only one match (and hence the ^ in original expression), use .Match instead of .Matches method. See MSDN documentation on Regular Expression Classes.

C# Regex Help replacing patterns

I'm not really good at regex (I only get to use it a few times a year) and want to see if someone can help with a C# regex statement which finds all instances of
<####-##-##> or </####-##-##>
and replaces it with
<date-####-##-##> or </date-####-##-##>
so that
<2012-01-01>stuff</2012-01-01><2012-05-01>stuff2</2012-05-01>
becomes
<date-2012-01-01>stuff</date-2012-01-01><date-2012-05-01>stuff2</date-2012-05-01>
string test = "<2012-01-01>stuff</2012-01-01><2012-05-01>stuff2</2012-05-01>";
var regex = new Regex(#"<(/?)(\d\d\d\d)-(\d\d)-(\d\d)>");
var result = regex.Replace(test, #"<$1date-$2-$3-$4>");
Console.WriteLine(result);
//output:
//<date-2012-01-01>stuff</date-2012-01-01><date-2012-05-01>stuff2</date-2012-05-01>
Note that the need for detail goes up depending on the other text in the strings your are processing. Are there lots of other tags? Numbers that aren't dates? etc..
If you examine the values inside tags this would be a solution.
if(Regex.IsMatch(input, #"^(19|20)\d\d[- /.](0[1-9]|1[012])[- /.](0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])$"))
{
input.Replace(input,"date-"+input);
}

How to Extract the Word Following a Symbol?

I have a string that could have any sentence in it but somewhere in that string will be the # symbol, followed by an attached word, sort of like #username you see on some sites.
so maybe the string is "hey how are you" or it's "#john hey how are you".
IF there's an "#" in the string i want to pull what comes immediately after it into its own new string.
in this instance how can i pull "john" into a different string so i could theoretically notify this person of his new message? i'm trying to play with string.contains or .replace but i'm pretty new and having a hard time.
this btw is in c# asp.net
You can use the Substring and IndexOf methods together to achieve this.
I hope this helps.
Thanks,
Damian
Here's how you do it without regex:
string s = "hi there #john how are you";
string getTag(string s)
{
int atSign = s.IndexOf("#");
if (atSign == -1) return "";
// start at #, stop at sentence or phrase end
// I'm assuming this is English, of course
// so we leave in ' and -
int wordEnd = s.IndexOfAny(" .,;:!?", atSign);
if (wordEnd > -1)
return s.Substring(atSign, wordEnd - atSign);
else
return s.Substring(atSign);
}
You should really learn regular expressions. This will work for you:
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
var res = Regex.Match("hey #john how are you", #"#(\S+)");
if (res.Success)
{
//john
var name = res.Groups[1].Value;
}
Finds the first occurrence. If you want to find all you can use Regex.Matches. \S means anything else than a whitespace. This means it also make hey #john, how are you => john, and #john123 => john123 which may be wrong. Maybe [a-zA-Z] or similar would suit you better (depends on which characters the usernames is made of). If you would give more examples, I could tune it :)
I can recommend this page:
http://www.regular-expressions.info/
and this tool where you can test your statements:
http://regexlib.com/RESilverlight.aspx
The best way to solve this is using Regular Expressions. You can find a great resource here.
Using RegEx, you can search for the pattern you are after. I always have to refer to some documentation to write one...
Here is a pattern to start with - "#(\w+)" - the # will get matched, and then the parentheses will indicate that you want what comes after. The "\w" means you want only word characters to match (a-z or A-Z), and the "+" indicates that there should be one or more word characters in a row.
You can try Regex...
I think will be something like this
string userName = Regex.Match(yourString, "#(.+)\\s").Groups[1].Value;
RegularExpressions. Dont know C#, but the RegEx would be
/(#[\w]+) / - Everything in the parans is captured in a special variable, or attached to RegEx object.
Use this:
var r = new Regex(#"#\w+");
foreach (Match m in r.Matches(stringToSearch))
DoSomething(m.Value);
DoSomething(string foundName) is a function that handles name (found after #).
This will find all #names in stringToSearch

C# Extracting a name from a string

I want to extract 'James\, Brown' from the string below but I don't always know what the name will be. The comma is causing me some difficuly so what would you suggest to extract James\, Brown?
OU=James\, Brown,OU=Test,DC=Internal,DC=Net
Thanks
A regex is likely your best approach
static string ParseName(string arg) {
var regex = new Regex(#"^OU=([a-zA-Z\\]+\,\s+[a-zA-Z\\]+)\,.*$");
var match = regex.Match(arg);
return match.Groups[1].Value;
}
You can use a regex:
string input = #"OU=James\, Brown,OU=Test,DC=Internal,DC=Net";
Match m = Regex.Match(input, "^OU=(.*?),OU=.*$");
Console.WriteLine(m.Groups[1].Value);
A quite brittle way to do this might be...
string name = #"OU=James\, Brown,OU=Test,DC=Internal,DC=Net";
string[] splitUp = name.Split("=".ToCharArray(),3);
string namePart = splitUp[1].Replace(",OU","");
Console.WriteLine(namePart);
I wouldn't necessarily advocate this method, but I've just come back from a departmental Christmas lyunch and my brain is not fully engaged yet.
I'd start off with a regex to split up the groups:
Regex rx = new Regex(#"(?<!\\),");
String test = "OU=James\\, Brown,OU=Test,DC=Internal,DC=Net";
String[] segments = rx.Split(test);
But from there I would split up the parameters in the array by splitting them up manually, so that you don't have to use a regex that depends on more than the separator character used. Since this looks like an LDAP query, it might not matter if you always look at params[0], but there is a chance that the name might be set as "CN=". You can cover both cases by just reading the query like this:
String name = segments[0].Split('=', 2)[1];
That looks suspiciously like an LDAP or Active Directory distinguished name formatted according to RFC 2253/4514.
Unless you're working with well known names and/or are okay with a fragile hackaround (like the regex solutions) - then you should start by reading the spec.
If you, like me, generally hate implementing code according to RFCs - then hope this guy did a better job following the spec than you would. At least he claims to be 2253 compliant.
If the slash is always there, I would look at potentially using RegEx to do the match, you can use a match group for the last and first names.
^OU=([a-zA-Z])\,\s([a-zA-Z])
That RegEx will match names that include characters only, you will need to refine it a bit for better matching for the non-standard names. Here is a RegEx tester to help you along the way if you go this route.
Replace \, with your own preferred magic string (perhaps & #44;), split on remaining commas or search til the first comma, then replace your magic string with a single comma.
i.e. Something like:
string originalStr = #"OU=James\, Brown,OU=Test,DC=Internal,DC=Net";
string replacedStr = originalStr.Replace("\,", ",");
string name = replacedStr.Substring(0, replacedStr.IndexOf(","));
Console.WriteLine(name.Replace(",", ","));
Assuming you're running in Windows, use PInvoke with DsUnquoteRdnValueW. For code, see my answer to another question: https://stackoverflow.com/a/11091804/628981
If the format is always the same:
string line = GetStringFromWherever();
int start = line.IndexOf("=") + 1;//+1 to get start of name
int end = line.IndexOf("OU=",start) -1; //-1 to remove comma
string name = line.Substring(start, end - start);
Forgive if syntax is not quite right - from memory. Obviously this is not very robust and fails if the format ever changes.

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