I am validating url on my form through regex.
^(?:http(s)?://)?[\w.-]+(?:.[\w.-]+)+[\w-._~:/?#[]#!\$&'()*+,;=.]+$
It validates all URL for example:
https://www.example.com
http://www.example.com
www.example.com
example.com
http://blog.example.com
http://www.example.com/product
http://www.example.com/products?id=1&page=2
http://www.example.com#up
http://255.255.255.255
255.255.255.255
However it also validates URL like
www.google
www.example
www.example.
www.google.
which are not accepted URL's
I am not too efficient with regex. Please help what needs to be changed
When using a regex in HTML5 pattern attribute you should escape characters very carefully, as those browsers that have ES6+ standard implemented might throw an exception when they "see" [\w\.-] (no need to escape dot, and once the pattern is compiled with u flag, it becomes an error).
Now, to fix the issue, you may add a (?!www\.[^.]+\.?$) lookahead after ^ to fail all inputs that start with www. and then have any 0 or more chars other than . and then an optional . at the end of the string.
You may use
^(?!www\.[^.]+\.?$)(?:https?:\/\/)?[\w.-]+(?:\.[\w.-]+)+[\w._~:/?#[\\\]#!$&'()*+,;=.-]+$
See the regex demo. Note I escaped both \ and ] in your pattern, I think you meant to match both (your original regex does not match \ with [\w\-\._~:/?#[\]#!\$&'\(\)\*\+,;=.]).
Note that the HTML5 pattern regex is anchored by default, you need no ^ and $ at the start/end:
pattern="(?!www\.[^.]+\.?$)(?:https?:\/\/)?[\w.-]+(?:\.[\w.-]+)+[\w._~:/?#[\\\]#!$&'()*+,;=.-]+"
But you may still keep them if you want.
Related
I am learning regex and am having trouble getting google from email address
String
first.name#google.com
I just want to get google, not google.com
Regex:
[^#].+(?=\.)
Result: https://regex101.com/r/wA5eX5/1
From my understanding. It ignore # find a string after that until . (dot) using (?=\.)
What did I do wrong?
[^#] means "match one symbol that is not an # sign. That is not what you are looking for - use lookbehind (?<=#) for # and your (?=\.) lookahead for \. to extract server name in the middle:
(?<=#)[^.]+(?=\.)
The middle portion [^.]+ means "one or more non-dot characters".
Demo.
Updated answer:Use a capturing group and keep it simple :)
#(\w+)
Explanation by splitting it up
( capturing group for extraction )
\w stands for word character [A-Za-z0-9_]
+ is a quantifier for one or more occurances of \w
Regex explanation and demo on Regex101
I used the solution's regex for my task, but realized that some of the emails weren't that easy: foo#us.industries.com, foobar#tm.valves.net, andfoo#ge.test.com
To anyone who came here wanting the sub domain as well (or is being cut off by it), here's the regex:
(?<=#)[^.]*.[^.]*(?=\.)
This should be the regex:
(?<=#)[^.]+
(?<=#) - places the search right after the #
[^.]+ - take all the characters that are not dot (stops on dot)
So it extracts google from the email address.
As I was working to get the domain name of email addresses and none corresponded to what I needed:
To not catch subdomains
To match countries top domains (like .com.ar or co.jp)
For example, in test#ext.domain.com.mx I need to match domain.com.mx
So I made this one:
[^.#]*?\.\w{2,}$|[^.#]*?\.com?\.\w{2}$
Here is a link to regex101 to illustrate the regex: https://regex101.com/r/vE8rP9/59
You can get the sumdomain name (without the top-level domain ex: .com or .com.mx) by adding lookaround operators (but it will match twice in test#test.com.mx):
[^.#]*?(?=\.\w{2,}$)|[^.#]*?(?=\.com?\.\w{2}$)
Maybe not strictly a "full regex answer" but more flexible ( in case the part before the # is not "first.last") would be using cut:
cut -d # -f 2 | cut -d . -f 1
The first cut will isolate the part after # and the second one will get what you want.
This will work also for another kinds of email patterns : xxxx#server.com / xxx.yyy.zzz# server.com and so on...
Thanks everyone for your great responses, I took what you had and expanded it with labelled match-groups for easy extraction of separate parts.
Caveat : Regex.Speed = Slow
Another post mentioned how SLOW and nonperformant regexes are, and that is a fair point to remember. My particular need is targeting my own background/slow/reporting processes and therefore it doesn't matter how long it takes.
But it's good to remember whenever possible Regex should NOT be used in any sort of web page load or "needs-to-be-quick" kind of application. In that case you're much better off using substring to algorithmically strip down the inputs and throw away all the junk that I'm optionally matching/allowing/including here.
https://regex101.com/r/ZnU3OC/1
One Regex to rule them all...
Subdomain/Domain/TopLevelDomain/CountryCode extraction for Emails, domain lists, & URLs
Also handles ?Querystring=junk, Slashes/With/Paths, #anchors
Now with more broth, batteries not included
^(?<Email>.*#)?(?<Protocol>\w+:\/\/)?(?<SubDomain>(?:[\w-]{2,63}\.){0,127}?)?(?<DomainWithTLD>(?<Domain>[\w-]{2,63})\.(?<TopLevelDomain>[\w-]{2,63}?)(?:\.(?<CountryCode>[a-z]{2}))?)(?:[:](?<Port>\d+))?(?<Path>(?:[\/]\w*)+)?(?<QString>(?<QSParams>(?:[?&=][\w-]*)+)?(?:[#](?<Anchor>\w*))*)?$
not overly complicated at all... why would you even say that?
Substitution / Outputs
EXAMPLE INPUT: "https://www.stackoverflow.co.uk/path/2?q=mysearch&and=more#stuff"
EXAMPLE OUTPUT:
{
Protocol: "https://"
SubDomain: "www"
DomainWithTLD: "stackoverflow.co.uk"
Domain: "stackoverflow"
TopLevelDomain: "co"
CountryCode: "uk"
Path: "/path/2"
QString: "?q=mysearch&and=more#stuff"
}
Allowed/Compliant Domains : Should ALL MATCH
www.bankofamerica.com
bankofamerica.com.securersite.regexr.com
bankofamerica.co.uk.blahblahblah.secure.com.it
dashes-bad-for-seo.but-technically-still-allowed.not-in-front-or-end
bit.ly
is.gd
foo.biz.pl
google.com.cn
stackoverflow.co.uk
level_three.sub_domain.example.com
www.thelongestdomainnameintheworldandthensomeandthensomemoreandmore.com
https://www.stackoverflow.co.uk?q=mysearch&and=more
foo://5th.4th.3rd.example.com:8042/over/there
foo://subdomain.example.com:8042/over/there?name=ferret#nose
example.com
www.example.com
example.co.uk
trailing-slash.com/
trailing-pound.com#
trailing-question.com?
probably-not-valid.com.cn?&#
probably-not-valid.com.cn/?&#
example.com/page
example.com?key=value
* NOTE: PunyCodes (Unicode in urls) handled just fine with \w ,no extra sauce needed
xn--fsqu00a.xn--0zwm56d.com
xn--diseolatinoamericano-66b.com
Emails : Should ALL MATCH
first.name#google1.co.com
foo#us.industries.com,
foobar#tm.valves.net,
andfoo#ge.test.com
jane.doe#my-bank.no
john.doe#spam.com
jane.ann.doe#sandnes.district.gov
Non-Compliant Domains : Should NOT MATCH
either not long-enough (domain min length 2), or too long (64)
v.gd
thing.y
0123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567891234.com
its-sixty-four-instead-of-sixty-three!.com
symbols-not-allowed#.com
symbols-not-allowed#.com
symbols-not-allowed$.com
symbols-not-allowed%.com
symbols-not-allowed^.com
symbols-not-allowed&.com
symbols-not-allowed*.com
symbols-not-allowed(.com
symbols-not-allowed).com
symbols-not-allowed+.com
symbols-not-allowed=.com
TBD Not handled:
* dashes as start or ending is disallowed (dropped from Regex for readability)
-junk-.com
* is underscore allowed? i donno... (but it simplifies the regex using \w instead of [a-zA-Z0-9\-] everywhere)
symbols-not-allowed_.com
* special case localhost?
.localhost
also see:
Domain Name Rules :: Super handy ASCII Diagram of a URL
see: https://stackoverflow.com/a/66660651/738895 *
Side NOTE: lazy load '?' for subdomains{0,127}? currently needed for any of the cases with country codes... (example: stackoverflow.co.uk)
Matches these, but does NOT grab $NLevelSubdomains in a match group, can only grab 3rd level only.
This is a relatively simple regex, and it grabs everything between the # and the final domain extension (e.g. .com, .org). It allows domain names that are made up of non-word characters, which exist in real-world data.
>>> regex = re.compile(r"^.+#(.+)\.[\w]+$")
>>> regex.findall('jane.doe#my-bank.no')
['my-bank']
>>> regex.findall('john.doe#spam.com')
['spam']
>>> regex.findall('jane.ann.doe#sandnes.district.gov')
['sandnes.district']
I used this regular expression to get the complete domain name '.*#+(.*)' where .* will ignore all the character before # (by #+) and start extracting cpmlete domain name by mentioning paranthesis and complete string inside(except linebrake characters)
I'm struggling with forming a regex that would match:
Just domain in case of URL
Whole string in case of no URL
Acceptance test (regex should match bold text):
http://mozart.co.uk
https://avocado.si/hmm
http://www.qwe123qwe.com
Starbucks
Benchmark 123
So far I've come up with this:
([^\/\/]+)(?:,|$)
It works fine, but not for URLs with trailing slash on the end. How can I modify the expression to include full path (everything on the right side of http(s)://) as well? Thank you.
This regex will match them if it starts with http:// or https:// until the next slash. If it doesn't start with http:// nor https:// then it will match the whole string. Close enough?
(?:^https?:\/\/([^\/]+)(?:[\/,]|$)|^(.*)$)
I should note that most languages have functions built in to properly parse URLs and these are preferable.
You should note that I've got 2 sets of capturing parentheses, so depending on your language that may be significant.
Maybe that ^(http[s]?:\/\/)?(.*)$. Play here: https://regex101.com/r/iZ2vL4/1
This will have Matching groups, the domain you want will be in the 4th matching group.
/^((http[s]?|ftp):\/\/)?\/?([^\/\.]+\.)*?([^\/\.]+\.[^:\/\s\.]{1,3}(\.[^:\/\s\.]{1,2})?(:\d+)?)($|\/)([^#?\s]+)?(.*?)?(#[\w\-]+)?$/mg
Regex101.com workbench to check out your URLs just paste them in the "TEST STRING" Textbox to test it out.
Don't recall where I got this... so I don't know who to credit. But it's pretty slick!
I am looking for a regex-pattern that matches the domain path of an url (http or https)
example 1:
https://www.blabla.com/path/pic.jpg
should match
https://www.blabla.com
example 2:
http://my.domain.tld/directory/?something
should match
http://my.domain.tld
something along the lines:
#^(https?://[a-z0-9.-]+)(?=/|$).*#i
It depends of course which characters you'd like to allow in the domain name.
P.S. # are there to delimit the regex, i at the end indicates case-insensitivity.
I am trying to match a simple domain: example.com
But all combinations of it.
How would I do this to cover:
https://example.com
http://www.example.com
etc.
^https?://([\w\d]+\.)?example\.com$
using code:
var result = /^https?:\/\/([a-zA-Z\d-]+\.){0,}example\.com$/.test('https://example.com');
// result is either true of false
I improved it to match like "http://a.b.example.com"
You can probably use to just match the domain name part of a URL:
/^(?:https?:\/\/)?(?:[^.]+\.)?example\.com(\/.*)?$
It will match any of following strings:
https://example.com
http://www.example.com
http://example.com
https://example.com
www.example.com
example.com
RegEx Demo
RegEx Details:
^: Start
(?:https?:\/\/)?: Match http:// or https://
(?:[^.]+\.)?: Optionally Match text till immediately next dot and dot
example\.com: Match example.com
(\/.*)?: Optionally Match / followed by 0 or more of any characters
$: End
A more generic example I used:
/http(?:s)?:\/\/(?:[\w-]+\.)*([\w-]{1,63})(?:\.(?:\w{3}|\w{2}))(?:$|\/)/i
Note that this solution doesn't pick up the correct label for 5 character TLDs. Example:
http://mylabel.co.uk
Would be picked up as 'co' instead of 'mylabel', but
http://mylabel.co
would be matched correctly as 'mylabel'. The regex was good enough for me even with this limitation.
Note that the 63 character limit for the label is an RFC specification. Hope this helps anyone looking for the same answer in the future.
The following works in Java,
^(http:|https:|)[/][/]([^/]+[.])*example.com$
and matches your test cases, and doesn't match cases like
http://www.google.com/http://example.com
This will correctly match the URL for any variation of the below, plus anything after .com
https://example.com
https://www.example.com
http://www.example.com
http://example.com
https://example.com
www.example.com
example.com
Result will be either true or false
const result = /^(http(s)?(:\/\/))?(www\.)?example\.com(\/.*)?$/.test(value);
The below exp matches for http/htpps/ftp in the first part, though it can also match random 5 letter word like ahfzc but that rarely would be case and they would be ignored by later part of the exp
The second part matches for ww/www and the last part matches for any alphanumeric seperated by '.'. And the last part matches for any 3 character like .com,.in,.org etc.
try this
r'[a-z0-9]{0,5}[\:\/]+[w]{0,3}[\.]+[a-z0-9\-]+[\.]+[a-z0-9]{0,3}'
This regex:
^((https?|ftp)\:(\/\/)|(file\:\/{2,3}))?(((25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\.){3}
(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?))|(((([a-zA-Z0-9]+)(\.)?)+?)(\.)([a-z]{2}
|com|org|net|gov|mil|biz|info|mobi|name|aero|jobs|museum))([a-zA-Z0-9\?\=\&\%\/]*)?$
Formatted for readability:
^( # Begin regex / begin address clause
(https?|ftp)\:(\/\/)|(file\:\/{2,3}))? # protocol
( # container for two address formats, more to come later
((25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\.){3}
(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?) # match IP addresses
)|( # delimiter for address formats
((([a-zA-Z0-9]+)(\.)?)+?) # match domains and any number of subdomains
(\.) #dot for .com
([a-z]{2}|com|org|net|gov|mil|biz|info|mobi|name|aero|jobs|museum) #TLD clause
) # end address clause
([a-zA-Z0-9\?\=\&\%\/]*)? # querystring support, will pretty this up later
$
is matching:
www.google
and shouldn't be. This is one of my "fail" test cases. I have declared the TLD portion of the URL to be mandatory when matching on alpha instead of on IP, and "google" doesn't fit into the "[a-z]{2}" clause.
Keep in mind I will fix the following issues seperately - this question is about why it matches www.google and shouldn't.
Querystring needs to support proper formats only, currently accepts any combination of querystring characters
Several protocols not supported, though the scope of my requirements may not include them
uncommon TLDs with 3 characters not included
Probably matches http://www.google..com - will check for consecutive dots
Doesn't support decimal IP address formats
What's wrong with my regex?
edit: See also a previous problem with an earlier version of this regex on a different test case:
How can I make this regex match correctly?
edit2: Fixed - The corrected regex (as asked) is:
^((https?|ftp)\:(\/\/)|(file\:\/{2,3}))?(((25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\.){3}
(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?))|(((([a-zA-Z0-9]+)(\.)?)+?)(\.)([a-z]{2}|com|org|net|gov|mil|biz|info|mobi|name|aero|jobs|museum))([\/][\/a-zA-Z0-9\.]*)*?([\/]?[\?][a-zA-Z0-9\=\&\%\/]*)?$
"google" might not fit in [a-z]{2}, but it does fit in [a-z]{2}([a-zA-Z0-9\?\=\&\%\/]*)? - you forgot to require a / after the TLD if the URL extends beyond the domain. So it's interpreting it with "www.go" as the domain and then "ogle" following it, with no slash in between. You can fix it by adding a [?/] to the front of that last group to require one of those two symbols between the TLD and any further portion of the URL.
Your TLD clause matches "go" in google and the querystring support part matches "ogle" afterwards. Try changing the querystring part to this:
([?/][a-zA-Z0-9\?\=\&\%\/]*)?
google" doesn't fit into the "[a-z]{2}" clause.
But "go" does and then "ogle" matches "([a-zA-Z0-9\?\=\&\%/]*)?"