I want regular expression for checking whether a word has . or / like abcd. or abcd/a or abcd.def or abcd/def. Any help will be gr8!
/[\/\.]/
Usage
if "some test. string" =~ /[\/\.]/
# ..
end
Both / and . are reserved characters in regex, so you would normally need to escape them. The exception to this is that . doesn't need to be escaped when it's in a character class, which is how you'd want to search in this case.
The escape chararacter in regex is \, so your / character becomes \/. Your . remains as it is.
Therfore, to check if a string contains either a / or a ., you would need a regex that looks something like this:
/[.\/]/
This will check any string and return true if it contains either of these characters anywhere within the string, regardless of what else is in the string.
/(\.|\/)/ matches the period or slash to a group.
/[\/\.]/ just matches for period, slash or both.
Related
I want to use this regex to match any block comment (c-style) in a string.
But why the below does not?
rblockcmt = Regexp.new "/\\*[.\s]*?\\*/" # match block comment
p rblockcmt=~"/* 22/Nov - add fee update */"
==> nil
And in addition to what Sir Swoveland posted, a . matches any character except a newline:
The following metacharacters also behave like character classes:
/./ - Any character except a newline.
https://ruby-doc.org/core-2.3.0/Regexp.html
If you need . to match a newline, you can specify the m flag, e.g. /.*?/m
Options
The end delimiter for a regexp can be followed by one or more
single-letter options which control how the pattern can match.
/pat/i - Ignore case
/pat/m - Treat a newline as a character matched by .
...
https://ruby-doc.org/core-2.3.0/Regexp.html
Because having exceptions/quirks like newline not matching a . can be painful, some people specify the m option for every regex they write.
It appears that you intend [.\s]*? to match any character or a whitespace, zero or more times, lazily. Firstly, whitespaces are characters, so you don't need \s. That simplifies your expression to [.]*?. Secondly, if your intent is to match any character there is no need for a character class, just write .. Thirdly, and most importantly, a period within a character class is simply the character ".".
You want .*? (or [^*]*).
I have an input file named test which looks like this
leonid sergeevich vinogradov
ilya alexandrovich svintsov
and when I use grep like this grep 'leonid*vinogradov' test it says nothing, but when I type grep 'leonid.*vinogradov' test it gives me the first string. What's the difference between * and .*? Because I see no difference between any number of any characters and any character followed by any number of any characters.
I use ubuntu 14.04.3.
* doesn't match any number of characters, like in a file glob. It is an operator, which indicates 0 or more matches of the previous character. The regular expression leonid*vinogradov would require a v to appear immediately after 0 or more ds. The . is the regular expression metacharcter representing any single character, so .* matches 0 or more arbitrary characters.
grep uses regex and .* matches 0 or more of any characters.
Where as 'leonid*vinogradov' is also evaluated as regex and it means leoni followed by 0 or more of letter d hence your match fails.
It's Regular Expression grep uses, short as regexp, not wildcards you thought. In this case, "." means any character, "" means any number of (include zero) the previous character, so "." means anything here.
Check the link, or google it, it's a powerful tool you'll find worth to knew.
I'm trying to make a regex that matches anything except an exact ending string, in this case, the extension '.exe'.
Examples for a file named:
'foo' (no extension) I want to get 'foo'
'foo.bar' I want to get 'foo.bar'
'foo.exe.bar' I want to get 'foo.exe.bar'
'foo.exe1' I want to get 'foo.exe1'
'foo.bar.exe' I want to get 'foo.bar'
'foo.exe' I want to get 'foo'
So far I created the regex /.*\.(?!exe$)[^.]*/
but it doesn't work for cases 1 and 6.
You can use a positive lookahead.
^.+?(?=\.exe$|$)
^ start of string
.+? non greedily match one or more characters...
(?=\.exe$|$) until literal .exe occurs at end. If not, match end.
See demo at Rubular.com
Wouldn't a simple replacement work?
string.sub(/\.exe\z/, "")
Do you mean regex matching or capturing?
There may be a regex only answer, but it currently eludes me. Based on your test data and what you want to match, doing something like the following would cover both what you want to match and capture:
name = 'foo.bar.exe'
match = /(.*).exe$/.match(name)
if match == nil
# then this filename matches your conditions
print name
else
# otherwise match[1] is the capture - filename without .exe extension
print match[1]
end
string pattern = #" (?x) (.* (?= \.exe$ )) | ((?=.*\.exe).*)";
First match is a positive look-ahead that checks if your string
ends with .exe. The condition is not included in the match.
Second match is a positive look-ahead with the condition included in the
match. It only checks if you have something followed by .exe.
(?x) is means that white spaces inside the pattern string are ignored.
Or don't use (?x) and just delete all white spaces.
It works for all the 6 scenarios provided.
I am trying to make a regular expression, that allow to create string with the small and big letters + numbers - a-zA-z0-9 and also with the chars: .-_
How do I make such a regex?
The following regex should be what you are looking for (explanation below):
\A[-\w.]*\z
The following character class should match only the characters that you want to allow:
[-a-zA-z0-9_.]
You could shorten this to the following since \w is equivalent to [a-zA-z0-9_]:
[-\w.]
Note that to include a literal - in your character class, it needs to be first character because otherwise it will be interpreted as a range (for example [a-d] is equivalent to [abcd]). The other option is to escape it with a backslash.
Normally . means any character except newlines, and you would need to escape it to match a literal period, but this isn't necessary inside of character classes.
The \A and \z are anchors to the beginning and end of the string, otherwise you would match strings that contain any of the allowed characters, instead of strings that contain only the allowed characters.
The * means zero or more characters, if you want it to require one or more characters change the * to a +.
/\A[\w\-\.]+\z/
\w means alphanumeric (case-insensitive) and "_"
\- means dash
\. means period
\A means beginning (even "stronger" than ^)
\z means end (even "stronger" than $)
for example:
>> 'a-zA-z0-9._' =~ /\A[\w\-\.]+\z/
=> 0 # this means a match
UPDATED thanks phrogz for improvement
I'm trying to learn RegEx in Ruby, based on what I'm reading in "The Rails Way". But, even this simple example has me stumped. I can't tell if it is a typo or not:
text.gsub(/\s/, "-").gsub([^\W-], '').downcase
It seems to me that this would replace all spaces with -, then anywhere a string starts with a non letter or number followed by a dash, replace that with ''. But, using irb, it fails first on ^:
syntax error, unexpected '^', expecting ']'
If I take out the ^, it fails again on the W.
>> text = "I love spaces"
=> "I love spaces"
>> text.gsub(/\s/, "-").gsub(/[^\W-]/, '').downcase
=> "--"
Missing //
Although this makes a little more sense :-)
>> text.gsub(/\s/, "-").gsub(/([^\W-])/, '\1').downcase
=> "i-love-spaces"
And this is probably what is meant
>> text.gsub(/\s/, "-").gsub(/[^\w-]/, '').downcase
=> "i-love-spaces"
\W means "not a word"
\w means "a word"
The // generate a regexp object
/[^\W-]/.class
=> Regexp
Step 1: Add this to your bookmarks. Whenever I need to look up regexes, it's my first stop
Step 2: Let's walk through your code
text.gsub(/\s/, "-")
You're calling the gsub function, and giving it 2 parameters.
The first parameter is /\s/, which is ruby for "create a new regexp containing \s (the // are like special "" for regexes).
The second parameter is the string "-".
This will therefore replace all whitespace characters with hyphens. So far, so good.
.gsub([^\W-], '').downcase
Next you call gsub again, passing it 2 parameters.
The first parameter is [^\W-]. Because we didn't quote it in forward-slashes, ruby will literally try run that code. [] creates an array, then it tries to put ^\W- into the array, which is not valid code, so it breaks.
Changing it to /[^\W-]/ gives us a valid regex.
Looking at the regex, the [] says 'match any character in this group. The group contains \W (which means non-word character) and -, so the regex should match any non-word character, or any hyphen.
As the second thing you pass to gsub is an empty string, it should end up replacing all the non-word characters and hyphens with empty string (thereby stripping them out )
.downcase
Which just converts the string to lower case.
Hope this helps :-)
You forgot the slashes. It should be /[^\W-]/
Well, .gsub(/[^\W-]/,'') says replace anything that's a not word nor a - for nothing.
You probably want
>> text.gsub(/\s/, "-").gsub(/[^\w-]/, '').downcase
=> "i-love-spaces"
Lower case \w (\W is just the opposite)
The slashes are to say that the thing between them is a regular expression, much like quotes say the thing between them is a string.