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I have all data being imported into one cell as:
"<blank space><email address><blank space><CustomerId><blank space><(email address)><line break for next entry>"
Example:
email1#provider.com 12345678 (email1#provider.com)
email224#provider.com 23902490 (email224#provider.com)
I need to extract only the customer ID's, while separating them with a comma, so I tried the following: regexreplace(A2,"([^[:digit:]])",","), however, this also extracts the numbers associated with the emails, so it returns me:
,,,,,1,,,,,,,,,,,,,,12345678,,,,,,,1,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
,,,,,224,,,,,,,,,,,,,,23902490,,,,,,,224,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Since the email address is set by the user, I don't have control how many digits or if only digits are used in it. I can't seem to understand how to isolate the CustomerIds alone.
Please help!
Edit1:
CustomerID: 64-bit int field, randomly assigned to a client, therefore checking by the length of the string would not work.
Edit2:
For now, I am using the formula below, but I would still be interested in a solution using Regex.
filter(transpose(split($B$4," ")),isnumber(transpose(split($B$4," "))))
If they are separated by a space you should be able to set the space to be your delimiter and extract from there.
https://zapier.com/blog/split-text-excel-zapier/
use:
=ARRAYFORMULA(TEXTJOIN(", ", 1, IFERROR(REGEXEXTRACT(A1:A2, "(?s)(\d{8})"))))
I have two 'phone numbers listed in different formats, but want just to extract the digits only:
17347545296
(734) 754-5296
Also using REGEXREPLACE but avoids errors where "A1" is Number format and a simpler expression:
=regexreplace(A1&"","\D","")
One approach would be to use REGEXREPLACE and remove all non numeric characters:
=REGEXREPLACE(A1, "[^0-9]+", "")
If a given cell could also have digits not belonging to the actual phone number, then we would have to do more work. But the above suggestion should work for your sample data shown.
I have a results list that looks like this:
1lemon_king9mumu (2-1), YearofHell (2-0), kriswithak (2-1)0.44440.75000.4444
2mumu6lemon_king (1-2), MogwaiAC (2-0), Dathanja (2-1)0.66670.62500.5655
3MogwaiAC6Dathanja (2-0), mumu (0-2), Jebnarf (2-1)0.55560.57140.5417
4Jebnarf6YearofHell (2-1), kriswithak (2-0), MogwaiAC (1-2)0.44440.62500.4266
5YearofHell3Jebnarf (1-2), lemon_king (0-2), Mig82 (2-1)0.66670.37500.6012
6Dathanja3MogwaiAC (0-2), Mig82 (2-1), mumu (1-2)0.55560.37500.5417
7Mig823Bye, Dathanja (1-2), YearofHell (1-2)0.33330.42860.3750
8kriswithak0Jebnarf (0-2), lemon_king (1-2)0.83330.20000.6875
I want to be able to pull the username of the person AFTER the rank (first number) but it is mashed together with points gained by the player, as well as their first opponent.
For example, the first persons name is "Lemon_king", and his opponents were "Mumu", "YearofHell" and "Kriswithak". The numbers on the right are irrelevant for me, but the major problem I have is that the number of points won by the player is there. Lemon_King wins 9 points for first place. I would normally just get the name by looking for the string between 1 and 9, but players usernames can have a 9 in it as well.
Can anyone think of a good solution to this problem to be able to grab the persons username?
Thanks
I think you'd need a list of the usernames to compare against; it doesn't look like the results list is "regular" enough for a regular expression.
For example the line
7Mig823Bye, Dathanja
Could be "Mig82" 3 points vs "Bye, Dathanja", but it could also be "Mig8", 23 points, "Bye, Dathanja" or "Mig8", 2 points, "3Bye, Dathanja".
Is that correct? Because if it is, you aren't going to get away with a simple solution.
Edit: Wilson commented that getting the list of usernames might be an option. In that case, something like the following might work:
/^\d+?(username1|username2|username3)\d+?(username1|username2|username3)/
It will probably take some fiddling to get right.
Here's a plnkr demonstrating it with the data you provided: http://plnkr.co/edit/nJeGfbfHgvh5zJcTWRXS?p=preview
That said, a regex might not be the right tool for this job.
As far as I can tell, you want something like
(?x) # allow whitespace and comments just like
# any real programming language
^ # beginning of line
( \d+ ) # starts with one or more digits: CAPTURE 1
(?= \D ) # must have a non-digit following
( \w+ ) # capture one or more "word" characters: CAPTURE 2
( \d ) # next is a single digit: CAPTURE 3
(?= \D ) # must have a non-digit following
( \w+ ) # capture one or more "word" characters: CAPTURE 4
# now add things for the rest of the line if you want
Your username should now be in the second capture. I’ve been a tad more careful than strictly necessary, but if you end up munging this, you may need that. I’ve alos put all the captures in case you want to move stuff around or pull more stuff out.
Please provide a bit more information, if you want the thing between the first number and second number:
[0-9]+([^0-9])
The first group will contain the first username.
Please comment on this (so I check) an edit your question with more detail though.
I wouldnt use regex. It will be a pain to debug it, and you'll never be 100% certain you've covered all the edge cases.
Try doing 'manual' parsing using your language of choice's built in string manipulation functions.
In a .csv file I have lines like the following :
10,"nikhil,khandare","sachin","rahul",viru
I want to split line using comma (,). However I don't want to split words between double quotes (" "). If I split using comma I will get array with the following items:
10
nikhil
khandare
sachin
rahul
viru
But I don't want the items between double-quotes to be split by comma. My desired result is:
10
nikhil,khandare
sachin
rahul
viru
Please help me to sort this out.
The character used for separating fields should not be present in the fields themselves. If possible, replace , with ; for separating fields in the csv file, it'll make your life easier. But if you're stuck with using , as separator, you can split each line using this regular expression:
/((?:[^,"]|"[^"]*")+)/
For example, in Python:
import re
s = '10,"nikhil,khandare","sachin","rahul",viru'
re.split(r'((?:[^,"]|"[^"]*")+)', s)[1::2]
=> ['10', '"nikhil,khandare"', '"sachin"', '"rahul"', 'viru']
Now to get the exact result shown in the question, we only need to remove those extra " characters:
[e.strip('" ') for e in re.split(r'((?:[^,"]|"[^"]*")+)', s)[1::2]]
=> ['10', 'nikhil,khandare', 'sachin', 'rahul', 'viru']
If you really have such a simple structure always, you can use splitting with "," (yes, with quotes) after discarding first number and comma
If no, you can use a very simple form of state machine parsing your input from left to right. You will have two states: insides quotes and outside. Regular expressions is a also a good (and simpler) way if you already know them (as they are basically an equivalent of state machine, just in another form)
So I want to match every string in this list, except the ones that contain the product SKU, which is /s7892632 <---- random string of numbers. I've been trying to do this for quite some time and have been unsuccessful. Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
/account/login?returnurl=/account/forgotpassword
/account/login?returnurl=/account/orders
/account/orders
/account/updateaddress
/account/updateemail
/account/updaterewardscard
/brands/havaianas
/careers
/Category List
/checkout
/checkout/addresses
/checkout/addresses/delivery
/checkout/addresses/deliverymethod
/checkout/affilinetbasket
/checkout/anonymous
/checkout/confirmation
/checkout/express
/checkout/login
/checkout/login?returnurl=/checkout/addresses
/checkout/null
/checkout/payment
/checkout/paypal
/checkout/quickshop/
/checkout/verify
/click-and-collect
/click-and-collect/click-and-collect-overview
/corporate/about-matalan
/corporate/careers
/corporate/cookies
/corporate/history
/customer-services/accessibility
/customer-services/contact
/customer-services/customer-services-home
/customer-services/delivery
/customer-services/faq
/customer-services/fitting-room
/customer-services/here-to-help
/customer-services/size-guides
/delivery
/events/mothers-day
/events/mothers-day/s2516241/tassle-detail-slouch-bag
/events/mothers-day/s2518752/waxed-jacket
/events/mothers-day/s2519237/fabric-buckle-tote-bag
/events/mothers-day/s2521182/heart-print-nightie
/events/mothers-day/s2521184/heart-print-dressing-gown
/events/mothers-day/s2521185/heart-print-pyjama-set
/events/mothers-day/s2521679/structured-tote-bag
/events/mothers-day/s2522143/chiffon-print-dress
/events/mothers-day/s2522347/butterfly-enamel-bowl-32cm-x-8cm
/events/mothers-day/s2526013/animal-print-jersey-blazer
/events/mothers-day/s2527624/croc-tote-bag
/events/mothers-day/s2529731/shift-dress
/events/mothers-day?page=1&size=120&cols=4&sort=&id=/events/mothers-day&priceRange[min]=2&priceRange[max]=59
/events/mothers-day?page=2&size=120&cols=4&sort=&id=/events/mothers-day&priceRange[min]=2&priceRange[max]=59
/events/mothers-day?page=2&size=36&cols=4&sort=&id=/events/mothers-day&priceRange[min]=2&priceRange[max]=59
/events/mothers-day?page=3&size=36&cols=4&sort=&id=/events/mothers-day&priceRange[min]=2&priceRange[max]=59
The following should work:
^(?!.*/s\d{7}/).*
Example: http://regexr.com?343nf
This assumes you have each string as a separate element in a list. If this is actually matching one big string with multiple lines you can use the same regex, but you may need to enable global and multiline options depending on the tool you are using (and make sure dotall/singleline is disabled).
Try this:
boolean noSku = !line.matches(".*/s\\d{5,}.*");
This uses {5,} which allows for any number of digits in the SKU greater than 4 (giving you flexibility with matching). You can change the number to whatever suits.
this matches lines that don't have the code....
^((?!s\d{7}).)*$