I have a set of age data, like below;
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1,1
1,2
1,3
2,12
11,13,15
7,8,12
12,15
14,16,17
15,6
13,11,10,2
And so on... I am trying to use Regex in to target a 'mixed' range of childrens ages. The logic requires at least a combination of 2 childen (so requires one of the lines with a comma), with at least one aged under 10 (min is 1), and at least one aged equal or greater to 10 (max 17).
My expected results from the above would be to return these lines below, and nothing else;
2,12
7,8,12
15,6
13,11,10,2
Any advice would be appreciated on how to resolve? Thanks in advance, I am continuing to try to correct.
You can use this regex to meet your requirements:
^(?=.*\b[1-9]\b)(?=.*\b1[0-7]\b)[0-9]+(?:,[0-9]+)+$
RegEx Demo
There are 2 lookaheads to assert 2 numbers one between 1-9 and another between 10-17
([1-9]) matches a number that should be between 1 and 9
1[0-7] matches a number that should be between 10 and 17
[0-9]+(?:,[0-9]+)+ in the regex is for matching 1 or more comma separated numbers in the middle.
You can do it with
\b\d,1[0-7]\b
provided the ages always are sorted (youngest to oldest).
If the age of 0 isn't allowed, change to
\b[1-9],1[0-7]\b
It checks for a single digit followed by a comma and one followed by a single digit in the range 0-7.
See it here at regex101.
Related
I'm trying to create a regex that enforces:
whole numbers only, no decimals/fractions
thousands separated by commas
sets a maximum value allowed. Acceptable range of 1-25,000,000,000 (25 billion)
I created the following regex that already accomplishes the first 2 requirements, only allowing acceptable values like:
1
1,000
25,000
250,000,000 etc.
but it's the 3rd requirement of setting a maximum value of 25 billion that I'm struggling with.
Does anyone know a way to enhance this current pattern to only allow values between the range of 1 - 25,000,000,000 ?
^[1-9]\d?\d?$|^(?!0,)(?!0\d,)(?!0\d\d,)(\d\d?\d?,)+\d{3}$
I did a lot of searching, and I found a regex that could impose a maximum value, but I can't quite figure out how to modify it to what I need to meet all 3 requirements. This is the one I found:
^((25000000000)|(2[0-4][0-9]{9})|(1[0-9]{10})|([1-9][0-9]{9})|([1-9][0-9]{8})|([1-9][0-9]{7})|([1-9][0-9]{6})|([1-9][0-9]{5})|([1-9][0-9]{4})|([1-9][0-9]{3})|([1-9][0-9]{2})|([1-9][0-9]{1})|([1-9]))$
I think this should do the trick:
^([1-9]\d{0,2}(,\d{3}){0,2})$|^(([1-9]|1\d|2[1-4])(,\d{3}){3})$|^25(,000){3}$
This regex consist of 3 main blocks or conditions:
[1-9]\d{0,2}(,\d{3}){0,2}: Any 1-9 followed by up to 2 digits, followed by up to 2 optional blocks of 3 digits preceded with a comma (supports up to 999,999,999).
([1-9]|1\d|2[1-4])(,\d{3}){3}: Three possible billion values: 1-9, or a 1 followed by any digit (to support 10-19), or a 2 followed by a 1-4 digit (to support 20-24). Then followed by 3 blocks of comma and 3 digits (supports up to 24,999,999,999).
25(,000){3}: Finally, special case, support for 25,000,000,000.
It matches:
1
12
123
1,000
25,000
250,000
2,500,000
24,999,999
25,000,000
250,000,000
1,500,000,000
2,500,000,000
15,000,000,000
24,999,999,999
25,000,000,000
And does not match:
0
1234
0,000
0,000,999
0,999,999,999
25,000,000,001
99,999,999,999
250,000,000,000
25,000,000,000,000
99,99,999
9,9,9,9,999
24999999999
25000000000
25000000001
26000000000
35000000000
I want to check if a number is 50 or more using a regular expression. This in itself is no problem but the number field has another regex checking the format of the entered number.
The number will be in the continental format: 123.456,78 (a dot between groups of three digits and always a comma with 2 digits at the end)
Examples:
100.000,00
50.000,00
50,00
34,34
etc.
I want to capture numbers which are 50 or more. So from the four examples above the first three should be matched.
I've come up with this rather complicated one and am wondering if there is an easier way to do this.
^(\d{1,3}[.]|[5-9][0-9]|\d{3}|[.]\d{1,3})*[,]\d{2}$
EDIT
I want to match continental numbers here. The numbers have this format due to internal regulations and specify a price.
Example: 1000 EUR would be written as 1.000,00 EUR
50000 as 50.000,00 and so on.
It's a matter of taste, obviously, but using a negative lookahead gives a simple solution.
^(?!([1-4]?\d),)[1-9](\d{1,2})?(\.\d{3})*,\d{2}\b
In words: starting from a boundary ignore all numbers that start with 1 digit OR 2 digits (the first being a 1,2,3 or 4), followed by a comma.
Check on regex101.com
Try:
EDIT ^(.{3,}|[5-9]\d),\d{2}$
It checks if:
there 3 chars or more before the ,
there are 2 numbers before the , and the first is between 5 and 9
and then a , and 2 numbers
Donno if it answer your question as it'll return true for:
aa50,00
1sdf,54
But this assumes that your original string is a number in the format you expect (as it was not a requirement in your question).
EDIT 3
The regex below tests if the number is valid referring to the continental format and if it's equal or greater than 50. See tests here.
Regex: ^((([1-9]\d{0,2}\.)(\d{3}\.){0,}\d{3})|([1-9]\d{2})|([5-9]\d)),\d{2}$
Explanation (d is a number):
([1-9]\d{0,2}\.): either d., dd. or ddd. one time with the first d between 1 and 9.
(\d{3}\.){0,}: ddd. zero or x time
\d{3}: ddd 3 digit
These 3 parts combined match any numbers equals or greater than 1000 like: 1.000, 22.002 or 100.000.000.
([1-9]\d{2}): any number between 100 and 999.
([5-9]\d)): a number between 5 and 9 followed by a number. Matches anything between 50 and 99.
So it's either the one of the parts above or this one.
Then ,\d{2}$ matches the comma and the two last digits.
I have named all inner groups, for better understanding what part of number is matched by each group. After you understand how it works, change all ?P<..> to ?:.
This one is for any dec number in the continental format.
^(?P<common_int>(?P<int>(?P<int_start>[1-9]\d{1,2}|[1-9]\d|[1-9])(?P<int_end>\.\d{3})*|0)(?!,)|(?P<dec_int_having_frac>(?P<dec_int>(?P<dec_int_start>[1-9]\d{1,2}|[1-9]\d|[1-9])(?P<dec_int_end>\.\d{3})*,)|0,|,)(?=\d))(?P<frac_from_comma>(?<=,)(?P<frac>(?P<frac_start>\d{3}\.)*(?P<frac_end>\d{1,3})))?$
test
This one is for the same with the limit number>=50
^(?P<common_int>(?P<int>(?P<int_start>[1-9]\d{1,2}|[1-9]\d|[1-9])(?P<int_end>\.\d{3})+|(?P<int_short>[1-9]\d{2}|[5-9]\d))(?!,)|(?P<dec_int_having_frac>(?P<dec_int>(?P<dec_int_start>[1-9]\d{1,2}|[1-9]\d|[1-9])(?P<dec_int_end>\.\d{3})+,)|(?P<dec_short_int>[1-9]\d{2}|[5-9]\d),)(?=\d))(?P<frac_from_comma>(?<=,)(?P<frac>(?P<frac_start>\d{3}\.)*(?P<frac_end>\d{1,3})))?$
tests
If you always have the integer part under 999.999 and fractal part always 2 digits, it will be a bit more simple:
^(?P<dec_int_having_frac>(?P<dec_int>(?P<dec_int_start>[1-9]\d{1,2}|[1-9]\d|[1-9])(?P<dec_int_end>\.\d{3})?,)|(?P<dec_short_int>[1-9]\d{2}|[5-9]\d),)(?=\d)(?P<frac_from_comma>(?<=,)(?P<frac>(?P<frac_end>\d{1,2})))?$
test
If you can guarantee that the number is correctly formed -- that is, that the regex isn't expected to detect that 5,0.1 is invalid, then there are a limited number of passing cases:
ends with \d{3}
ends with [5-9]\d
contains \d{3},
contains [5-9]\d,
It's not actually necessary to do anything with \.
The easiest regex is to code for each of these individually:
(\d{3}$|[5-9]\d$|\d{3},|[5-9]\d)
You could make it more compact and efficient by merging some of the cases:
(\d{3}[$,]|[5-9]\d[$,])
If you need to also validate the format, you will need extra complexity. I would advise against attempting to do both in a single regex.
However unless you have a very good reason for having to do this with a regex, I recommend against it. Parse the string into an integer, and compare it with 50.
Regex to categorize phone numbers. Numbers with 2 of the same digit in the last 4 not adjacent to each other are easier to remember and therefore more valuable. So given 10 digit number how can I match if 2 of the last 4 digits are the same non consecutively? Ex. 2155553747, 2158558284, 7034651215. Thanks in advance for the help.
If you want to use a regular expression for that, and you are okay with the condition, that at least 2 digits of the last 4 digits are the same, you could use the following regular expression:
^\d{6}(?:(\d)\d\d\1|(\d)\d\2\d|(\d)\3\d\d|\d(\d)\d\4|\d(\d)\5\d|\d\d(\d)\6)$
Here is a live example: https://regex101.com/r/t6n1uP/1
Masochistic approach:
/^\d{6}(\d?0[^0]{1,2}0|\d?1[^1]{1,2}1|\d?2[^2]{1,2}2|\d?3[^3]{1,2}3|\d?4[^4]{1,2}4|\d?5[^5]{1,2}5|\d?6[^6]{1,2}6|\d?7[^7]{1,2}7|\d?8[^8]{1,2}8|\d?9[^9]{1,2}9)/m
A test
Far from ideal, but something to start from
I have a set of data, like below;
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1,1
1,2
1,3
2,12
11,13,15
7,8,12
And so on... I am trying to use Regex in to target a certain set of ages between 1-7, but I am getting matches on any double digit which contains any of these characters too. My regex is currently as below;
/^(1)|(2)|(3)|(4)|(5)|(6)|(7)|$/g
My current matches include 1,2,3,4,5,6,7 - perfect. However, it matches the line with 11,13,15 and 7,8,12 - not what I wanted.
Any advice would be appreciated on how to resolve? Thanks in advance, I am continuing to try to correct.
You can use word boundaries:
\b[1-7]\b
See a demo on regex101.com.
As pointed out by #Quantic, this matches numbers from 1-7 regardless where they are.
If you only want to have lines where there is a number between 1-7, you'll need to use anchors:
^[0-7]$
Or if you want to capture the number:
^([0-7])$
With this, you'll need the multiline flag, see a demo on regex101.com as well.
(?<!\d)[1-7](?!\d)
This looks for any digit 1-7 that does not have another digit on either side of it. (using negative lookbehind/lookahead)
regex101 test
Well I tried to sum it up in the title.
I need a reg ex to match numbers and commas, but not numbers starting with 0 unless it's 0,number
My users enter hours in a field, so they have to be able to enter 0,3 hours, but they are not allowed to write 002 or 09.
I have this reg ex
^[0-9]*\,?[0-9]+$
How can I extend it to not allow start with 0 unless the 0 is followed by a comma
Another one :)
^(0|[1-9]\d*(|,\d+)|0,\d+)$
This one should suit your needs:
^0,\d*[1-9]|[1-9]\d*$
either 0,\d*[1-9]: a 0, followed by a comma, followed by 0 or more digit, followed by one digit between 1 and 9
or [1-9]\d*: a digit between 1 and 9, followed by zero or more digit
Matches:
0,3
0,03
3
30
Doesn't match:
0
0,0
0,30
03
You don't need to force everything into a single regex to do this.
It will be far clearer if you use multiple regexes, each one making a specific check.
if ( /^[0-9]+,[0-9]+$/ || /^[1-9][0-9]*$/ )
Here we are making two different checks. "Either this one matches, or the other one matches", and then you don't have to jam both conditions into one regex.
Let the expressive form of your host language be used, rather than trying to cram logic into a regex.