I'm trying to get the list of all digits preceding a hyphen in a given string (let's say in cell A1), using a Google Sheets regex formula :
=REGEXEXTRACT(A1, "\d-")
My problem is that it only returns the first match... how can I get all matches?
Example text:
"A1-Nutrition;A2-ActPhysiq;A2-BioMeta;A2-Patho-jour;A2-StgMrktg2;H2-Bioth2/EtudeCas;H2-Bioth2/Gemmo;H2-Bioth2/Oligo;H2-Bioth2/Opo;H2-Bioth2/Organo;H3-Endocrino;H3-Génétiq"
My formula returns 1-, whereas I want to get 1-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-3-3- (either as an array or concatenated text).
I know I could use a script or another function (like SPLIT) to achieve the desired result, but what I really want to know is how I could get a re2 regular expression to return such multiple matches in a "REGEX.*" Google Sheets formula.
Something like the "global - Don't return after first match" option on regex101.com
I've also tried removing the undesired text with REGEXREPLACE, with no success either (I couldn't get rid of other digits not preceding a hyphen).
Any help appreciated!
Thanks :)
You can actually do this in a single formula using regexreplace to surround all the values with a capture group instead of replacing the text:
=join("",REGEXEXTRACT(A1,REGEXREPLACE(A1,"(\d-)","($1)")))
basically what it does is surround all instances of the \d- with a "capture group" then using regex extract, it neatly returns all the captures. if you want to join it back into a single string you can just use join to pack it back into a single cell:
You may create your own custom function in the Script Editor:
function ExtractAllRegex(input, pattern,groupId) {
return [Array.from(input.matchAll(new RegExp(pattern,'g')), x=>x[groupId])];
}
Or, if you need to return all matches in a single cell joined with some separator:
function ExtractAllRegex(input, pattern,groupId,separator) {
return Array.from(input.matchAll(new RegExp(pattern,'g')), x=>x[groupId]).join(separator);
}
Then, just call it like =ExtractAllRegex(A1, "\d-", 0, ", ").
Description:
input - current cell value
pattern - regex pattern
groupId - Capturing group ID you want to extract
separator - text used to join the matched results.
Edit
I came up with more general solution:
=regexreplace(A1,"(.)?(\d-)|(.)","$2")
It replaces any text except the second group match (\d-) with just the second group $2.
"(.)?(\d-)|(.)"
1 2 3
Groups are in ()
---------------------------------------
"$2" -- means return the group number 2
Learn regular expressions: https://regexone.com
Try this formula:
=regexreplace(regexreplace(A1,"[^\-0-9]",""),"(\d-)|(.)","$1")
It will handle string like this:
"A1-Nutrition;A2-ActPhysiq;A2-BioM---eta;A2-PH3-Généti***566*9q"
with output:
1-2-2-2-3-
I wasn't able to get the accepted answer to work for my case. I'd like to do it that way, but needed a quick solution and went with the following:
Input:
1111 days, 123 hours 1234 minutes and 121 seconds
Expected output:
1111 123 1234 121
Formula:
=split(REGEXREPLACE(C26,"[a-z,]"," ")," ")
The shortest possible regex:
=regexreplace(A1,".?(\d-)|.", "$1")
Which returns 1-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-3-3- for "A1-Nutrition;A2-ActPhysiq;A2-BioMeta;A2-Patho-jour;A2-StgMrktg2;H2-Bioth2/EtudeCas;H2-Bioth2/Gemmo;H2-Bioth2/Oligo;H2-Bioth2/Opo;H2-Bioth2/Organo;H3-Endocrino;H3-Génétiq".
Explanation of regex:
.? -- optional character
(\d-) -- capture group 1 with a digit followed by a dash (specify (\d+-) multiple digits)
| -- logical or
. -- any character
the replacement "$1" uses just the capture group 1, and discards anything else
Learn more about regex: https://twiki.org/cgi-bin/view/Codev/TWikiPresentation2018x10x14Regex
This seems to work and I have tried to verify it.
The logic is
(1) Replace letter followed by hyphen with nothing
(2) Replace any digit not followed by a hyphen with nothing
(3) Replace everything which is not a digit or hyphen with nothing
=regexreplace(A1,"[a-zA-Z]-|[0-9][^-]|[a-zA-Z;/é]","")
Result
1-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-3-3-
Analysis
I had to step through these procedurally to convince myself that this was correct. According to this reference when there are alternatives separated by the pipe symbol, regex should match them in order left-to-right. The above formula doesn't work properly unless rule 1 comes first (otherwise it reduces all characters except a digit or hyphen to null before rule (1) can come into play and you get an extra hyphen from "Patho-jour").
Here are some examples of how I think it must deal with the text
The solution to capture groups with RegexReplace and then do the RegexExctract works here too, but there is a catch.
=join("",REGEXEXTRACT(A1,REGEXREPLACE(A1,"(\d-)","($1)")))
If the cell that you are trying to get the values has Special Characters like parentheses "(" or question mark "?" the solution provided won´t work.
In my case, I was trying to list all “variables text” contained in the cell. Those “variables text “ was wrote inside like that: “{example_name}”. But the full content of the cell had special characters making the regex formula do break. When I removed theses specials characters, then I could list all captured groups like the solution did.
There are two general ('Excel' / 'native' / non-Apps Script) solutions to return an array of regex matches in the style of REGEXEXTRACT:
Method 1)
insert a delimiter around matches, remove junk, and call SPLIT
Regexes work by iterating over the string from left to right, and 'consuming'. If we are careful to consume junk values, we can throw them away.
(This gets around the problem faced by the currently accepted solution, which is that as Carlos Eduardo Oliveira mentions, it will obviously fail if the corpus text contains special regex characters.)
First we pick a delimiter, which must not already exist in the text. The proper way to do this is to parse the text to temporarily replace our delimiter with a "temporary delimiter", like if we were going to use commas "," we'd first replace all existing commas with something like "<<QUOTED-COMMA>>" then un-replace them later. BUT, for simplicity's sake, we'll just grab a random character such as from the private-use unicode blocks and use it as our special delimiter (note that it is 2 bytes... google spreadsheets might not count bytes in graphemes in a consistent way, but we'll be careful later).
=SPLIT(
LAMBDA(temp,
MID(temp, 1, LEN(temp)-LEN(""))
)(
REGEXREPLACE(
"xyzSixSpaces:[ ]123ThreeSpaces:[ ]aaaa 12345",".*?( |$)",
"$1"
)
),
""
)
We just use a lambda to define temp="match1match2match3", then use that to remove the last delimiter into "match1match2match3", then SPLIT it.
Taking COLUMNS of the result will prove that the correct result is returned, i.e. {" ", " ", " "}.
This is a particularly good function to turn into a Named Function, and call it something like REGEXGLOBALEXTRACT(text,regex) or REGEXALLEXTRACT(text,regex), e.g.:
=SPLIT(
LAMBDA(temp,
MID(temp, 1, LEN(temp)-LEN(""))
)(
REGEXREPLACE(
text,
".*?("®ex&"|$)",
"$1"
)
),
""
)
Method 2)
use recursion
With LAMBDA (i.e. lets you define a function like any other programming language), you can use some tricks from the well-studied lambda calculus and function programming: you have access to recursion. Defining a recursive function is confusing because there's no easy way for it to refer to itself, so you have to use a trick/convention:
trick for recursive functions: to actually define a function f which needs to refer to itself, instead define a function that takes a parameter of itself and returns the function you actually want; pass in this 'convention' to the Y-combinator to turn it into an actual recursive function
The plumbing which takes such a function work is called the Y-combinator. Here is a good article to understand it if you have some programming background.
For example to get the result of 5! (5 factorial, i.e. implement our own FACT(5)), we could define:
Named Function Y(f)=LAMBDA(f, (LAMBDA(x,x(x)))( LAMBDA(x, f(LAMBDA(y, x(x)(y)))) ) ) (this is the Y-combinator and is magic; you don't have to understand it to use it)
Named Function MY_FACTORIAL(n)=
Y(LAMBDA(self,
LAMBDA(n,
IF(n=0, 1, n*self(n-1))
)
))
result of MY_FACTORIAL(5): 120
The Y-combinator makes writing recursive functions look relatively easy, like an introduction to programming class. I'm using Named Functions for clarity, but you could just dump it all together at the expense of sanity...
=LAMBDA(Y,
Y(LAMBDA(self, LAMBDA(n, IF(n=0,1,n*self(n-1))) ))(5)
)(
LAMBDA(f, (LAMBDA(x,x(x)))( LAMBDA(x, f(LAMBDA(y, x(x)(y)))) ) )
)
How does this apply to the problem at hand? Well a recursive solution is as follows:
in pseudocode below, I use 'function' instead of LAMBDA, but it's the same thing:
// code to get around the fact that you can't have 0-length arrays
function emptyList() {
return {"ignore this value"}
}
function listToArray(myList) {
return OFFSET(myList,0,1)
}
function allMatches(text, regex) {
allMatchesHelper(emptyList(), text, regex)
}
function allMatchesHelper(resultsToReturn, text, regex) {
currentMatch = REGEXEXTRACT(...)
if (currentMatch succeeds) {
textWithoutMatch = SUBSTITUTE(text, currentMatch, "", 1)
return allMatches(
{resultsToReturn,currentMatch},
textWithoutMatch,
regex
)
} else {
return listToArray(resultsToReturn)
}
}
Unfortunately, the recursive approach is quadratic order of growth (because it's appending the results over and over to itself, while recreating the giant search string with smaller and smaller bites taken out of it, so 1+2+3+4+5+... = big^2, which can add up to a lot of time), so may be slow if you have many many matches. It's better to stay inside the regex engine for speed, since it's probably highly optimized.
You could of course avoid using Named Functions by doing temporary bindings with LAMBDA(varName, expr)(varValue) if you want to use varName in an expression. (You can define this pattern as a Named Function =cont(varValue) to invert the order of the parameters to keep code cleaner, or not.)
Whenever I use varName = varValue, write that instead.
to see if a match succeeds, use ISNA(...)
It would look something like:
Named Function allMatches(resultsToReturn, text, regex):
UNTESTED:
LAMBDA(helper,
OFFSET(
helper({"ignore"}, text, regex),
0,1)
)(
Y(LAMBDA(helperItself,
LAMBDA(results, partialText,
LAMBDA(currentMatch,
IF(ISNA(currentMatch),
results,
LAMBDA(textWithoutMatch,
helperItself({results,currentMatch}, textWithoutMatch)
)(
SUBSTITUTE(partialText, currentMatch, "", 1)
)
)
)(
REGEXEXTRACT(partialText, regex)
)
)
))
)
I need to replace multiple words such as (dog|cat|bird) with nothing in a string where there may be multiple consecutive occurrences of a word. The actual code is to remove salutations and suffixes from a name. Unfortunately the garbage data I get sometimes contains "SNERD JR JR."
I was able to create a regular expression pattern that accomplishes my goal but only for the first occurrence. I implemented a stupid hack to get rid of the second occurrence, but I believe there has to be a better way. I just can't figure it out.
Here is my "hacked" code;
FUNCTION REMOVE_SALUTATIONS(IN_STRING VARCHAR2) RETURN VARCHAR2 DETERMINISTIC
AS
REGEX_SALUTATIONS VARCHAR2(4000) := '(^|\s)(MR|MS|MISS|MRS|DR|MD|M D|SR|SIR|PHD|P H D|II|III|IV|JR)(\.?)(\s|$)';
BEGIN
RETURN TRIM(REGEXP_REPLACE(REGEXP_REPLACE(IN_STRING,REGEX_SALUTATIONS,' '),REGEX_SALUTATIONS,''));
END REMOVE_SALUTATIONS;
I was actually proud that I was able to get this far, as regular expression are not very regular to me. All help is appreciated.
EDIT:
The default for regexp_replace based on my understanding is to do a global replace. But on the outside chance my DB is configured different I did try;
select REGEXP_REPLACE('SNERD JR JR','(^|\s)(MR|MS|MISS|MRS|DR|MD|M D|SR|SIR|PHD|P H D|II|III|IV|JR)(\.?)(\s|$)',' ',1,0) from dual;
and the results are;
SNERD JR
Use occurrence parameter of REGEXP_REPLACE function. The docs says:
occurrence is a nonnegative integer indicating the occurrence of the replace operation:
If you specify 0, then Oracle replaces all occurrences of the match.
If you specify a positive integer n, then Oracle replaces the nth occurrenc
https://docs.oracle.com/cd/B28359_01/server.111/b28286/functions137.htm#SQLRF06302
It should look like:
...
REGEXP_REPLACE(IN_STRING,REGEX_SALUTATIONS,' ', 1,0 )
...
I know that it should be something like this but definitely I am missing something in the syntax:
yy=sub(r'\b[aeiou][^aeiou]*',r'\b[^aeiou][aeiou]*',"abmmmm")
I expect to have "bammmm" as output
Error: unexpected string constant in "yy=sub(r'\b[aeiou][^aeiou]*'"
I am not sure how is the exact syntax.
Please run your code in RStudio or any R compiler. I am new to regex and you giving me Python code wouldn't help me to understand the situation. Thanks!
This is what you want
yy=sub("\\b([aeiou])([^aeiuos])","\\2\\1","abmm")
I'll explain how it works:
If you ask me to substitute any vowel-consonent with any consonent-vowel? It doesn't make much sense. Should I change ab to ba, ce, or da? It can be any one of them. You never specified any relationship between the vowel in vowel-consonent and the vowel in consonent-vowel. Therefore, it doesn't make sense to put a regular expression in the 2nd argument. As a result, you are not allowed to.
If you want to achieve what you asked for. You can add brackets to the regular expression in the 1st argument. The first ( marks group 1, second ( marks group 2, etc. (note, group 0 is the whole matched string.) You can use \1, \2, ... in the second argument to put the matched group there.
As an alternative to using a regular expression for this, there's a nice string reversal function in example(strsplit)
> strReverse <- function(x)
sapply(lapply(strsplit(x, NULL), rev), paste, collapse="")
> dd <- "abmmmm"
> paste(strReverse(substr(dd, 1, 2)), substr(dd, 3, nchar(dd)), sep = "")
[1] "bammmm"
I have a question related to an regular expression in oracle 10.
Assuming I have a value like 123456;12345;454545 stored in a clob field, is there a way via an regular expression to only filter on the second pattern (12345) knowing that the value can be more then 5 digits but always occurs after the first semicolon and always has a trailing semicolon at the end?
Thanks a lot for your support in that matter,
Have a nice day,
This query should give you your desired output.
SELECT REGEXP_REPLACE(REGEXP_SUBSTR('123456;12345;454545;45634',';[0-9]+;'),';')
FROM dual;
You can get filter any pattern using this query just change 2 to any value, but it should be less than or equal to the number of elements in the string
with tab(value) as
(select '123456;12345;454545' from dual)
select regexp_substr(value, '[^;]+', 1, 2) from tab;
easily by one call:
select regexp_replace('123456;12345;454545','^[0-9]+;([0-9]+);.*$','\1')
from dual;
perhaps, regexp expression can be modified in a way of more good-looking or your business logic, but the idea, I think, is clear.
select regexp_replace(regexp_substr(Col_name,';\d+;'),';','') from your_table;
I need to extract a text value from data in a VARCHAR2 column. Sample:
EDKES^Visit: ^PRIMARY INSURANCE COMMENTS: ^SECONDARY INSURANCE COMMENTS: ^TERTIARY INSURANCE COMMENTS: ^NO PRIMARY INSURANCE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NO SECONDARY INSURANCE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NONE^NO TERTIARY INS*
I need to get the text that proceeds the 6th occurrence of the '^' (excluding the '^'). In this example, the text would be NO PRIMARY INSURANCE.
([\w\s\:\*]+(\^?)) mostly works, but doesn't exclude the '^'.
When I try to use this expression REGEXP_SUBSTR(VARCHAR_COL, '([\w\s\:\*]+(\^?))', 1, 6), I get a single character ('s'), rather than the expected match NO PRIMARY INSURANCE^.
What am I missing?
This should work pretty well:
REPLACE(REGEXP_SUBSTR(VARCHAR_COL, '[^^]+\^?', 1, 6), '^', '')
You might be able to account for blank columns as well. And if the engine only returns
the capture groups, it will trim the delimiter.
([^^]*).?
This of course means that the last column found is always invalid.