I would like to ask for help regarding my problem when it comes to spoofing let say usernames and I want to catch them using regex.
for example the correct username is :
rolf
and here are the spoofed versions that I could think of:
roooolf
r123olf
123rolf123
rolf5623
123rolf
rollllf
rrrrrrolf
rolffff
So basically I have this regex expression ( that I know is not sufficient because I've tried it on regex101 website )
.+(?![rolf]).+
I'm using this as a baseline because it doesnt catch the correct username which is :
rolf
but it doesn't catch all the other "spoofed" versions of the username.
Any Ideas how can I make my regex more efficient?
Thanks in advance!
You may try this too
(?m)^(?![^\n]*?rolf[^\n]*$).*$
Demo
To match not exactly rolf You can use a negative lookahead (?! to assert that what follows from the beginning of the string is not 'rolf' until the end of the string.
^(?!rolf$).+$
That would match
^ Assert position at the begin of the string
(?! Negative lookahead that asserts that what follows is not
rolf Match literally
) Close negative lookahead
.+ Match any character one or more times
$Assert position at the end of the string
From your example regex you match .+ where #Ωmega has a fair point, matches spaces.
Instead of .+ you could specify what characters you might accept like \w+ for example to match one or more word characters or specify more using a character class.
You can use a regex pattern
\b(?!rolf\b)\S+\b
\b Word boundary - Matches a word boundary position between a
word character and non-word character or position (start / end of
string).
(?! Negative lookahead - Specifies a group that can not match
after the main expression (if it matches, the result is discarded).
\S Not whitespace - Matches any character that is not a
whitespace character (spaces, tabs, line breaks).
+ Quantifier - Match 1 or more of the preceding token.
Test your inputs with this pattern here.
Related
I am having a hard time coming up with a regex to match a specific case:
This can be matched:
any-dashed-strings
this-can-be-matched-even-though-its-big
This cannot be matched:
strings starting with elem- or asdf- or a single -
elem-this-cannot-be-matched
asdf-this-cannot-be-matched
-
So far what I came up with is:
/\b(?!elem-|asdf-)([\w\-]+)\b/
But I keep matching a single - and the whole -this-cannot-be-matched suffix. I cannot figure it out how to not only ignore a character present inside the matching character class conditionally, and not matching anything else if a suffix is found
I am currently working with the Oniguruma engine (Ruby 1.9+/PHP multi-byte string module).
If possible, please elaborate on the solution. Thanks a lot!
If a lookbehind is supported, you can assert a whitespace boundary to the left, and make the alternation for both words without the hyphen optional.
(?<!\S)(?!(?:elem|asdf)?-)[\w-]+\b
Explanation
(?<!\S) Assert a whitespace boundary to the left
(?! Negative lookahead, assert the directly to the right is not
(?:elem|asdf)?- Optionally match elem or asdf followed by -
) Close the lookahead
[\w-]+ Match 1+ word chars or -
\b A word boundary
See a regex demo.
Or a version with a capture group and without a lookbehind:
(?:\s|^)(?!(?:elem|asdf)?-)([\w-]+)\b
See another regex demo.
This is extended question from this ruby, using regex to find something in between two strings
So i'd like to catch multiple of this username
Text (1 line)
starting-middle+31313131313#mysite.com starting-middle+4141414141#mysite.com
Result
["31313131313", "4141414141"]
I tried this (?<=\+).*(?=#) but it will take the last look ahead character, so the result like 31313131313#mysite.com starting-middle+41414141
https://rubular.com/r/3mn5t1pYffCC7C
Instead of using a lookbehind, you could match the + and use \K to forget what is matched so far.
Then use a negated character class to match any character except # or a whitespace char and use the positive lookahead to assert an # on the right.
\+\K[^\s#]+(?=#)
Explanation
\+ Match +
\K Clear the match buffer
[^\s#]+ Match 1+ times any char except a whitespace char or # (Or use \d+ to match only digits)
(?=#) Positive lookahead, assert # directly to the right of the current position
Regex demo
I need to match only those words which doesn't have special characters like # and :.
For example:
git#github.com shouldn't match
list should return a valid match
show should also return a valid match
I tried it using a negative lookahead \w+(?![#:])
But it matches gi out of git#github.com but it shouldn't match that too.
You may add \w to the lookahead:
\w+(?![\w#:])
The equivalent is using a word boundary:
\w+\b(?![#:])
Besides, you may consider adding a left-hand boundary to avoid matching words inside non-word non-whitespace chunks of text:
^\w+(?![\w#:])
Or
(?<!\S)\w+(?![\w#:])
The ^ will match the word at the start of the string and (?<!S) will match only if the word is preceded with whitespace or start of string.
See the regex demo.
Why not (?<!\S)\w+(?!\S), the whitespace boundaries? Because since you are building a lexer, you most probably have to deal with natural language sentences where words are likely to be followed with punctuation, and the (?!\S) negative lookahead would make the \w+ match only when it is followed with whitespace or at the end of the string.
You can use negative lookbehind and negative lookahead patterns around a word pattern to make sure that the word is not preceded or followed by a non-space character, or in other words, to make sure that it is surrounded by either a space or a string boundary:
(?<!\S)\w+(?!\S)
Demo: https://regex101.com/r/cjhUUM/2
I want to match
abc_def_ghi,
abc_abc_ghi,
abc_a2a_ghi,
abc_999_ghi
but not abc_xxx_ghi (with xxx in center).
I came up to manually consuming look ahead (abc_(?!xxx)..._ghi), but I wonder is there any other way without manually specifying number of characters to skip.
Original qustion was with numbers, updated for strings case.
If you don't want to specify exactly how many characters to skip, perhaps you could use a quantifier like + in the negative lookahead and use a negated character class to match not an underscore.
\babc_(?!x+_)[^_]+_ghi\b
Explanation
\babc_ Word boundary, match abc_
(?! Negative lookahead, assert what is directly on the right is not
x+_ Match 1+ times x followed by an underscore
) Close lookahead
[^_]+_ Negated character class, match 1+ times any char except _
ghi\b Match ghi and word boundary
Regex demo
You can use this
123_(?:(?!000)\d){3}_789
Regex demo
If you don't wish to use look-arounds, this expression might be an option:
(?:abc_xxx_ghi)|(abc_.{3}_ghi)
Other than that I can't think of anything else.
DEMO
There are a thousand regular expression questions on SO, so I apologize if this is already covered. I did look first.
I have string:
Name Subname 11X22 88X620 AB33(20) YA5619 77,66
I need to capture this string: YA5619
What I am doing is just finding AB33(20) and after this I am capturing until first white space. But AB33(20) can be AB-33(20) or AB33(-20) or AB33(-1).
My preg_match regex is: (?<=\bAB\d{2}\(\d{2}\)\s).+?(?=\s)
Why I am getting error when I change from \d{2} to \d+?
For final result I was thinking this regix will work but no:
(?<=\bAB-?\d+\(-?\d+\)\s).+?(?=\s)
Any ideas what I am doing wrong?
With most regex flavors, lookbehind needs to evaluate to a fixed-length sequence, so you can't use variable quantifiers like * or + or even {1,2}.
Instead of using lookaround, you can simply match your marker pattern and then forget it with \K.
AB-?\d+(?:\(-?\d+\))? \K[^ ]+
demo: https://regex101.com/r/8XXngH/1
It depends on the language. If it is in .NET for example, it matches due to the various length in the lookbehind.
Another solution might be to use a character class and add the character you would allow to match. Then match a whitespace character and capture in a group matching \S+ which matches 1+ times not a whitespace character.
\bAB[()\d-]+\s\K\S+
Explanation
\bAB Match literally prepended with word boundary to prevent AB being part of a larger match.
[()\d-]+ Match 1+ times any of the listed character in the character class
\s Match a whitespace char (or \s+ to match 1 or more)
\K Reset the starting point of the reported match( Forget what was matched)
\S+ Match in a group 1+ times not a whitespace character
Regex demo | Php demo