I've printed the code, wit ruby
string = "hahahah"
pring string.gsub("a","b")
How do I add more letter replacements into gsub?
string.gsub("a","b")("h","l") and string.gsub("a","b";"h","l")
didnt work...
*update I have tried this too but without any success .
letters = {
"a" => "l"
"b" => "n"
...
"z" => "f"
}
string = "hahahah"
print string.gsub(\/w\,letters)
You're overcomplicating. As with most method calls in Ruby, you can simply chain #gsub calls together, one after the other:
str = 'adfh'
print str.gsub("a","b").gsub("h","l") #=> 'bdfl'
What you're doing here is applying the second #gsub to the result of the first one.
Of course, that gets a bit long-winded if you do too many of them. So, when you find yourself stringing too many together, you'll want to look for a regex solution. Rubular is a great place to tinker with them.
The way to use your hash trick with #gsub and a regex expression is to provide a hash for all possible matches. This has the same result as the two #gsub calls:
print str.gsub(/[ah]/, {'a'=>'b', 'h'=>'l'}) #=> 'bdfl'
The regex matches either a or h (/[ah]/), and the hash is saying what to substitute for each of them.
All that said, str.tr('ah', 'bl') is the simplest way to solve your problem as specified, as some commenters have mentioned, so long as you are working with single letters. If you need to work with two or more characters per substitution, you'll need to use #gsub.
I have a string "990822". I want to know if the string starts with "99".
I could achieve this by getting the first two characters of the string, then check if this is equal to "99". How do I get the first two characters from a string?
You can use String#start_with?:
"990822".start_with?("99") #=> true
Consider using the method start_with?.
s = "990822"
=> "990822"
s.start_with? "99"
=> true
You can use a range to access string:
"990822"[0...2]
# => "99"
See the String docs
To get the first two characters, the most straightforward way is:
"990822"[0, 2] # => "99"
Using a range inside the method [] is both not straightforward and also creates a range object that is immediately thrown out, which is a waste.
However, the whole question is actually an XY-question.
I have a string https://stackverflow.com. I want a new string that contains the domain from the given string using regular expressions.
Example:
x = "https://stackverflow.com"
newstring = "stackoverflow.com"
Example 2:
x = "https://www.stackverflow.com"
newstring = "www.stackoverflow.com"
"https://stackverflow.com"[/(?<=:\/\/).*/]
#⇒ "stackverflow.com"
(?<=..) is a positive lookbehind.
If string = "http://stackoverflow.com",
a really easy way is string.split("http://")[1]. But this isn't regex.
A regex solution would be as follows:
string.scan(/^http:\/\/(.+)$/).flatten.first
To explain:
String#scan returns the first match of the regex.
The regex:
^ matches beginning of line
http: matches those characters
\/\/ matches //
(.+) sets a "match group" containing any number of any characters. This is the value returned by the scan.
$ matches end of line
.flatten.first extracts the results from String#scan, which in this case returns a nested array.
You might want to try this:
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
str = "https://stackoverflow.com"
if mtch = str.match(/(?::\/\/)(/S)/)
f1 = mtch.captures
end
There are two capturing groups in the match method: the first one is a non-capturing group referring to your search pattern and the second one referring to everything else afterwards. After that, the captures method will assign the desired result to f1.
I hope this solves your problem.
http://something.com/bOhxBeD,SyhyTGi,TMDDSIB,U72gx2J,kQTIRy9,7VXgGDw,eSxIcK6,S5oNlnn,WBHHsLk,BdMGd2d,U9kNlsF,cHVyc7Y,D83kaJ5,cLWgdSO,iWtCIF3,ount8L6
I have tried to get the value: bOhxBeD, SyhyTGi and so on. This is what I come up with ( yes fairly simple ) /([a-zA-Z0-9]{7})/, it seems to work with PCRE:
([a-zA-Z0-9]{7})
Debuggex Demo
But when it comes to Ruby, I use it like this :
str.match(/([a-zA-Z0-9]{7})/)
#<MatchData "bOhxBeD" 1:"bOhxBeD">
it doesn't seem to work. Can anyone point out what's wrong with this regex ? Thanks
You need to add word boundary \b inorder to match an exact 7 alphanumeric characters.
\b[a-zA-Z0-9]{7}\b
DEMO
irb(main):006:0> "http://something.com/bOhxBeD,SyhyTGi,TMDDSIB,U72gx2J,kQTIRy9,7VXgGDw,eSxIcK6,S5oNlnn,WBHHsLk,BdMGd2d,U9kNlsF,cHVyc7Y,D83kaJ5,cLWgdSO,iWtCIF3,ount8L6".scan(/\b([a-zA-Z0-9]{7})\b/)
=> [["bOhxBeD"], ["SyhyTGi"], ["TMDDSIB"], ["U72gx2J"], ["kQTIRy9"], ["7VXgGDw"], ["eSxIcK6"], ["S5oNlnn"], ["WBHHsLk"], ["BdMGd2d"], ["U9kNlsF"], ["cHVyc7Y"], ["D83kaJ5"], ["cLWgdSO"], ["iWtCIF3"], ["ount8L6"]]
(?!.*?\/)[a-zA-Z0-9]{7}
Is should be this.Or else it will pick 7 letter words from link as well."somethi" will be in ans.But i guess that is not required.
match only picks up the first match.
You can try the global version of match which is scan.
You can use scan to search string not containing specific characters using [^...]:
str.scan(/[^\/\.\,]+/)[3..-1]
#=> ["bOhxBeD", "SyhyTGi", "TMDDSIB", "U72gx2J", "kQTIRy9", "7VXgGDw", "eSxIcK6", "S5oNlnn", "WBHHsLk", "BdMGd2d", "U9kNlsF", "cHVyc7Y", "D83kaJ5", "cLWgdSO", "iWtCIF3", "ount8L6"]
Update:
If you know that the strings between the comma are always 7 characters, you can use this instead:
str.scan(/[^\/\.\,]{7}/)[1..-1]
it happens because your regexp match just one element which contain 7 chars, nothing more,
as simple solution could be:
str.match(/\/(.*)\z/)[1].split(',')
You could use String#[] and String#split:
str[/.*\/(.*)/,1].split(',')
#=> ["bOhxBeD", "SyhyTGi", "TMDDSIB", "U72gx2J", "kQTIRy9", "7VXgGDw",
# "eSxIcK6", "S5oNlnn", "WBHHsLk", "BdMGd2d", "U9kNlsF", "cHVyc7Y",
# "D83kaJ5", "cLWgdSO", "iWtCIF3", "ount8L6"]
.*\/ in the regex, "greedy" as it is, will consume characters up to and including the last forward slash in the string. Capture group #1 (.*) sucks up the remainder of the string and, due to the presence of ,1, returns it. split(',') then breaks up the string to give you the desired array.
Another way:
str[str[/.*\//].size..-1].split(',')
In Ruby, what regex will strip out all but a desired string if present in the containing string? I know about /[^abc]/ for characters, but what about strings?
Say I have the string "group=4&type_ids[]=2&type_ids[]=7&saved=1" and want to retain the pattern group=\d, if it is present in the string using only a regex?
Currently, I am splitting on & and then doing a select with matching condition =~ /group=\d/ on the resulting enumerable collection. It works fine, but I'd like to know the regex to do this more directly.
Simply:
part = str[/group=\d+/]
If you want only the numbers, then:
group_str = str[/group=(\d+)/,1]
If you want only the numbers as an integer, then:
group_num = str[/group=(\d+)/,1].to_i
Warning: String#[] will return nil if no match occurs, and blindly calling nil.to_i always returns 0.
You can try:
$str =~ s/.*(group=\d+).*/\1/;
Typically I wouldn't really worry too much about a complex regex. Simply break the string down into smaller parts and it becomes easier:
asdf = "group=4&type_ids[]=2&type_ids[]=7&saved=1"
asdf.split('&').select{ |q| q['group'] } # => ["group=4"]
Otherwise, you can use regex a bunch of different ways. Here's two ways I tend to use:
asdf.scan(/group=\d+/) # => ["group=4"]
asdf[/(group=\d+)/, 1] # => "group=4"
Try:
str.match(/group=\d+/)[0]