Verifying address using regular expression - regex

I need to make an expression where there are no white spaces in the beginning, begins with street number that should be at least one digit and at most 4 digits and should end with a postal code of 6 digits. An example would be:
29 Younge Street M5E 1B2
I have this /^[^\s][a-zA-Z\s]+$/ but don't know how to add the extra conditions
Thanks

Your postal code look Canadian to me where the format is A1B 2C3 and if I recall correctly, Younge Street is a street in Montreal. Your requirements basically boils down to "start with 1 to 4 digits, end with the 6-character postal code". Use this:
^\d{1,4}\s+.*[A-Za-z]\d[A-Za-z]\s*\d[A-Za-z]\d$
Regex101

Related

Regex: Match only street name within address

I have a list of addresses and I would like to have a regular expression that is able to capture just the name of the street without the street type, address number, or cardinal direction. There are some errors in formatting but all characters are in capital letters. So,
2038 W MAIN AVE
2038QWEW S JEFFERSON AVENUE
33 NORTH CALIFORNIA STREET
53371 SOUTH WASHINGTON
53371 S WASHINGTON AVENUE
1600 E PENNSYLVANIA AVE
WEST9 67ST ST
E171 N 23RD STREET
G171 N121ST STREET
ought to return
MAIN
JEFFERSON
CALIFORNIA
WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON
PENNSYLVANIA
67ST
23RD
121ST
So far I've got
([^ W ]|[^ E ]|[^ S ]|[^ N ])([0-9])*([A-Z]+)[^ ]
But I can't seem to only capture the first match that occurs after the street number. I feel like I need the standard greedy operators (i.e. ?, *, or +) but I can't figure out how to incorporate them.
These two links have taken me close:
Matching on every second occurence
Simple regex for street address
For the output what you want from the given (address) input, this regex will surely help: [\pL\pN]+(?=\h+[\pL\pN]+$)
This regex will match the second last word in your line where a word is "1 or more any letter or digit in any language".
For reference you could https://superuser.com/questions/1361759/matching-second-last-word-in-sentence-through-regular-expression
Logic: we are looking for the second last word (set of characters) + possible border with the symbol N
^.*?\s[N]{0,1}([-a-zA-Z0-9]+)\s*\w*$
Res:
Match 1
Full match 0-15 `2038 W MAIN AVE`
Group 1. 7-11 `MAIN`
Match 2
Full match 16-43 `2038QWEW S JEFFERSON AVENUE`
Group 1. 27-36 `JEFFERSON`
Match 3
Full match 44-70 `33 NORTH CALIFORNIA STREET`
Group 1. 53-63 `CALIFORNIA`
Match 4
Full match 71-93 `53371 SOUTH WASHINGTON`
Group 1. 83-93 `WASHINGTON`
Match 5
Full match 94-119 `53371 S WASHINGTON AVENUE`
Group 1. 102-112 `WASHINGTON`
Match 6
Full match 120-143 `1600 E PENNSYLVANIA AVE`
Group 1. 127-139 `PENNSYLVANIA`
Match 7
Full match 144-157 `WEST9 67ST ST`
Group 1. 150-154 `67ST`
Match 8
Full match 158-176 `E171 N 23RD STREET`
Group 1. 165-169 `23RD`
Match 9
Full match 177-195 `G171 N121ST STREET`
Group 1. 183-188 `121ST`
https://regex101.com/r/m2rmUQ/4
I was able to figure this out in a slightly different way
[0-9A-Z]* [0-9A-Z]*$
and then I simply split the string it created by the space. Maybe one or two steps too many but it's transparent

Regex for UK phone number

I need to validate uk numbers
Below are sample type of number
01457 341235
0229 111111
+1213 3133143
Optional Plus should be allowed at first postion only
Using this regex but not working
^(?:\W*\d){11}\W*$
An actual UK phone number will start with 0 or +44 (the latter being the UK country code), or possibly just 44, followed by nine or ten digits. A regex to capture that would look something like:
^(?:0|\+?44)(?:\d\s?){9,10}$
In this regex, I have allowed the digits to be separated by spaces in any way, because there isn't a single standardized way of breaking down the numbers. You could further narrow this down to certain allowed groupings, if you like, but it would greatly increase the complexity of the regex.
Your question implies you might want something broader or different. As some of your examples aren't valid UK numbers (+1213 3133143, 12345 123456).
You could use something like this to simply match between 10 and 12 digits, with arbitrary spacing, possibly preceded by a +:
^\+?(?:\d\s?){10,12}$

Regular expression for address field validation

I am trying to write a regular expression that facilitates an address, example 21-big walk way or 21 St.Elizabeth's drive I came up with the following regular expression but I am not too keen to how to incorporate all the characters (alphanumeric, space dash, full stop, apostrophe)
"regexp=^[A-Za-z-0-99999999'
See the answer to this question on address validating with regex:
regex street address match
The problem is, street addresses vary so much in formatting that it's hard to code against them. If you are trying to validate addresses, finding if one isn't valid based on its format is mighty hard to do.
This would return the following address (253 N. Cherry St. ), anything with its same format:
\d{1,5}\s\w.\s(\b\w*\b\s){1,2}\w*\.
This allows 1-5 digits for the house number, a space, a character followed by a period (for N. or S.), 1-2 words for the street name, finished with an abbreviation (like st. or rd.).
Because regex is used to see if things meet a standard or protocol (which you define), you probably wouldn't want to allow for the addresses provided above, especially the first one with the dash, since they aren't very standard. you can modify my above code to allow for them if you wish--you could add
(-?)
to allow for a dash but not require one.
In addition, http://rubular.com/ is a quick and interactive way to learn regex. Try it out with the addresses above.
In case if you don't have a fixed format for the address as mentioned above, I would use regex expression just to eliminate the symbols which are not used in the address (like specialized sybmols - &(%#$^). Result would be:
[A-Za-z0-9'\.\-\s\,]
Just to add to Serzas' answer(since don't have enough reps. to comment).
alphabets and numbers can effectively be replaced by \w for words.
Additionally apostrophe,comma,period and hyphen doesn't necessarily need a backslash.
My requirement also involved front and back slashes so \/ and finally whitespaces with \s. The working regex for me ,as such was :
pattern: "[\w',-\\/.\s]"
Regular expression for simple address validation
^[#.0-9a-zA-Z\s,-]+$
E.g. for Address match case
#1, North Street, Chennai - 11
E.g. for Address not match case
$1, North Street, Chennai # 11
I have succesfully used ;
Dim regexString = New stringbuilder
With regexString
.Append("(?<h>^[\d]+[ ])(?<s>.+$)|") 'find the 2013 1st ambonstreet
.Append("(?<s>^.*?)(?<h>[ ][\d]+[ ])(?<e>[\D]+$)|") 'find the 1-7-4 Dual Ampstreet 130 A
.Append("(?<s>^[\D]+[ ])(?<h>[\d]+)(?<e>.*?$)|") 'find the Terheydenlaan 320 B3
.Append("(?<s>^.*?)(?<h>\d*?$)") 'find the 245e oosterkade 9
End With
Dim Address As Match = Regex.Match(DataRow("customerAddressLine1"), regexString.ToString(), RegexOptions.Multiline)
If Not String.IsNullOrEmpty(Address.Groups("s").Value) Then StreetName = Address.Groups("s").Value
If Not String.IsNullOrEmpty(Address.Groups("h").Value) Then HouseNumber = Address.Groups("h").Value
If Not String.IsNullOrEmpty(Address.Groups("e").Value) Then Extension = Address.Groups("e").Value
The regex will attempt to find a result, if there is none, it move to the next alternative. If no result is found, none of the 4 formats where present.
This one worked for me:
\d+[ ](?:[A-Za-z0-9.-]+[ ]?)+(?:Avenue|Lane|Road|Boulevard|Drive|Street|Ave|Dr|Rd|Blvd|Ln|St)\.?
The source: https://www.codeproject.com/Tips/989012/Validate-and-Find-Addresses-with-RegEx
Regex is a very bad choice for this kind of task. Try to find a web service or an address database or a product which can clean address data instead.
Related:
Address validation using Google Maps API
As a simple one line expression recommend this,
^([a-zA-z0-9/\\''(),-\s]{2,255})$
I needed
STREET # | STREET | CITY | STATE | ZIP
So I wrote the following regex
[0-9]{1,5}( [a-zA-Z.]*){1,4},?( [a-zA-Z]*){1,3},? [a-zA-Z]{2},? [0-9]{5}
This allows
1-5 Street #s
1-4 Street description words
1-3 City words
2 Char State
5 Char Zip code
I also added option , for separating street, city, state, zip
Here is the approach I have taken to finding addresses using regular expressions:
A set of patterns is useful to find many forms that we might expect from an address starting with simply a number followed by set of strings (ex. 1 Basic Road) and then getting more specific such as looking for "P.O. Box", "c/o", "attn:", etc.
Below is a simple test in python. The test will find all the addresses but not the last 4 items which are company names. This example is not comprehensive, but can be altered to suit your needs and catch examples you find in your data.
import re
strings = [
'701 FIFTH AVE',
'2157 Henderson Highway',
'Attn: Patent Docketing',
'HOLLYWOOD, FL 33022-2480',
'1940 DUKE STREET',
'111 MONUMENT CIRCLE, SUITE 3700',
'c/o Armstrong Teasdale LLP',
'1 Almaden Boulevard',
'999 Peachtree Street NE',
'P.O. BOX 2903',
'2040 MAIN STREET',
'300 North Meridian Street',
'465 Columbus Avenue',
'1441 SEAMIST DR.',
'2000 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, N.W.',
'465 Columbus Avenue',
'28 STATE STREET',
'P.O, Drawer 800889.',
'2200 CLARENDON BLVD.',
'840 NORTH PLANKINTON AVENUE',
'1025 Connecticut Avenue, NW',
'340 Commercial Street',
'799 Ninth Street, NW',
'11318 Lazarro Ln',
'P.O, Box 65745',
'c/o Ballard Spahr LLP',
'8210 SOUTHPARK TERRACE',
'1130 Connecticut Ave., NW, Suite 420',
'465 Columbus Avenue',
"BANNER & WITCOFF , LTD",
"CHIP LAW GROUP",
"HAMMER & ASSOCIATES, P.C.",
"MH2 TECHNOLOGY LAW GROUP, LLP",
]
patterns = [
"c\/o [\w ]{2,}",
"C\/O [\w ]{2,}",
"P.O\. [\w ]{2,}",
"P.O\, [\w ]{2,}",
"[\w\.]{2,5} BOX [\d]{2,8}",
"^[#\d]{1,7} [\w ]{2,}",
"[A-Z]{2,2} [\d]{5,5}",
"Attn: [\w]{2,}",
"ATTN: [\w]{2,}",
"Attention: [\w]{2,}",
"ATTENTION: [\w]{2,}"
]
contact_list = []
total_count = len(strings)
found_count = 0
for string in strings:
pat_no = 1
for pattern in patterns:
match = re.search(pattern, string.strip())
if match:
print("Item found: " + match.group(0) + " | Pattern no: " + str(pat_no))
found_count += 1
pat_no += 1
print("-- Total: " + str(total_count) + " Found: " + str(found_count))
UiPath Academy training video lists this RegEx for US addresses (and it works fine for me):
\b\d{1,8}(-)?[a-z]?\W[a-z|\W|\.]{1,}\W(road|drive|avenue|boulevard|circle|street|lane|waylrd\.|st\.|dr\.|ave\.|blvd\.|cir\.|In\.|rd|dr|ave|blvd|cir|ln)
I had a different use case - find any addresses in logs and scold application developers (favourite part of a devops job). I had the advantage of having the word "address" in the pattern but should work without that if you have specific field to scan
\baddress.[0-9\\\/# ,a-zA-Z]+[ ,]+[0-9\\\/#, a-zA-Z]{1,}
Look for the word "address" - skip this if not applicable
Look for first part numbers, letters, #, space - Unit Number / street number/suite number/door number
Separated by a space or comma
Look for one or more of rest of address numbers, letters, #, space
Tested against :
1 Sleepy Boulevard PO, Box 65745
Suite #100 /98,North St,Snoozepura
Ave., New Jersey,
Suite 420 1130 Connect Ave., NW,
Suite 420 19 / 21 Old Avenue,
Suite 12, Springfield, VIC 3001
Suite#100/98 North St Snoozepura
This worked for me when there were street addresses with unit/suite numbers, zip codes, only street. It also didn't match IP addresses or mac addresses. Worked with extra spaces.
This assumes users are normal people separate elements of a street address with a comma, hash sign, or space and not psychopaths who use characters like "|" or ":"!
For French address and some international address too, I use it.
[\\D+ || \\d]+\\d+[ ||,||[A-Za-z0-9.-]]+(?:[Rue|Avenue|Lane|... etcd|Ln|St]+[ ]?)+(?:[A-Za-z0-9.-](.*)]?)
I was inspired from the responses given here and came with those 2 solutions
support optional uppercase
support french also
regex structure
numbers (required)
letters, chars and spaces
at least one common address keyword (required)
as many chars you want before the line break
definitions:
accuracy
capacity of detecting addresses and not something that looks like an address which is not.
range
capacity to detect uncommon addresses.
Regex 1:
high accuracy
low range
/[0-9]+[ |[a-zà-ú.,-]* ((highway)|(autoroute)|(north)|(nord)|(south)|(sud)|(east)|(est)|(west)|(ouest)|(avenue)|(lane)|(voie)|(ruelle)|(road)|(rue)|(route)|(drive)|(boulevard)|(circle)|(cercle)|(street)|(cer\.)|(cir\.)|(blvd\.)|(hway\.)|(st\.)|(aut\.)|(ave\.)|(ln\.)|(rd\.)|(hw\.)|(dr\.)|(a\.))([ .,-]*[a-zà-ú0-9]*)*/i
regex 2:
low accuracy
high range
/[0-9]*[ |[a-zà-ú.,-]* ((highway)|(autoroute)|(north)|(nord)|(south)|(sud)|(east)|(est)|(west)|(ouest)|(avenue)|(lane)|(voie)|(ruelle)|(road)|(rue)|(route)|(drive)|(boulevard)|(circle)|(cercle)|(street)|(cer\.?)|(cir\.?)|(blvd\.?)|(hway\.?)|(st\.?)|(aut\.?)|(ave\.?)|(ln\.?)|(rd\.?)|(hw\.?)|(dr\.?)|(a\.))([ .,-]*[a-zà-ú0-9]*)*/i
This one works well for me
^(\d+) ?([A-Za-z](?= ))? (.*?) ([^ ]+?) ?((?<= )APT)? ?((?<= )\d*)?$
Source : https://community.alteryx.com/t5/Alteryx-Designer-Discussions/RegEx-Addresses-different-formats-and-headaches/td-p/360147
Here is my RegEx for address, city & postal validation rules
validation rules:
address -
1 - 40 characters length.
Letters, numbers, space and . , : ' #
city -
1 - 19 characters length
Only Alpha characters are allowed
Spaces are allowed
postalCode -
The USA zip must meet the following criteria and is required:
Minimum of 5 digits (9 digits if zip + 4 is provided)
Numeric only
A Canadian postal code is a six-character string.
in the format A1A 1A1, where A is a letter and 1 is a digit.
a space separates the third and fourth characters.
do not include the letters D, F, I, O, Q or U.
the first position does not make use of the letters W or Z.
address: ^[a-zA-Z0-9 .,#;:'-]{1,40}$
city: ^[a-zA-Z ]{1,19}$
usaPostal: ^([0-9]{5})(?:[-]?([0-9]{4}))?$
canadaPostal : ^(?!.*[DFIOQU])[A-VXY][0-9][A-Z] ?[0-9][A-Z][0-9]$
\b(\d{1,8}[a-z]?[0-9\/#- ,a-zA-Z]+[ ,]+[.0-9\/#, a-zA-Z]{1,})\n
A more dynamic approach to #micah would be the following:
(?'Address'(?'Street'[0-9][a-zA-Z\s]),?\s*(?'City'[A-Za-z\s]),?\s(?'Country'[A-Za-z])\s(?'Zipcode'[0-9]-?[0-9]))
It won't care about individual lengths of segments of code.
https://regex101.com/r/nuy7hB/1

Custom RegEx expression for validating different possibilities of phone number entries?

I'm looking for a custom RegEx expression (that works!) to will validate common phone number with area code entries (no country code) such as:
111-111-1111
(111) 111-1111
(111)111-1111
111 111 1111
111.111.1111
1111111111
And combinations of these / anything else I may have forgotton.
Also, is it possible to have the RegEx expression itself reformat the entry? So take the 1111111111 and put it in 111-111-1111 format. The regex will most likely be entered in a Joomla / some type of CMS module, so I can't really add code to it aside from the expression itself.
\(?(\d{3})\)?[ .-]?(\d{3})[ .-]?(\d{4})
will match all your examples; after a match, backreference 1 will contain the area code, backreference 2 and 3 will contain the phone number.
I hope you don't need to handle international phone numbers, too.
If the phone number is in a string by itself, you could also use
^\s*\(?(\d{3})\)?[ .-]?(\d{3})[ .-]?(\d{4})\s*$
allowing for leading/trailing whitespace and nothing else.
Why not just remove spaces, parenthesis, dashes, and periods, then check that it is a number of 10 digits?
Depending on the language in question, you might be better off using a replace-like statement to replace non-numeric characters: ()-/. with nothing, and then just check if what is left is a 10-digit number.

Extract a portion of text using RegEx

I would like to extract portion of a text using a regular expression. So for example, I have an address and want to return just the number and streets and exclude the rest:
2222 Main at King Edward Vancouver BC CA
But the addresses varies in format most of the time. I tried using Lookbehind Regex and came out with this expression:
.*?(?=\w* \w* \w{2}$)
The above expressions handles the above example nicely but then it gets way too messy as soon as commas come into the text, postal codes which can be a 6 character string or two 3 character strings with a space in the middle, etc...
Is there any more elegant way of extracting a portion of text other than a lookbehind regex?
Any suggestion or a point in another direction is greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
Regular expressions are for data that is REGULAR, that follows a pattern. So if your data is completely random, no, there's no elegant way to do this with regex.
On the other hand, if you know what values you want, you can probably write a few simple regexes, and then just test them all on each string.
Ex.
regex1= address # grabber, regex2 = street type grabber, regex3 = name grabber.
Attempt a match on string1 with regex1, regex2, and finally regex3. Move on to the next string.
well i thot i'd throw my hat into the ring:
.*(?=,? ([a-zA-Z]+,?\s){3}([\d-]*\s)?)
and you might want ^ or \d+ at the front for good measure
and i didn't bother specifying lengths for the postal codes... just any amount of characters hyphens in this one.
it works for these inputs so far and variations on comas within the City/state/country area:
2222 Main at King Edward Vancouver, BC, CA, 333-333
555 road and street place CA US 95000
2222 Main at King Edward Vancouver BC CA 333
555 road and street place CA US
it is counting at there being three words at the end for the city, state and country but other than that it's like ryansstack said, if it's random it won't work. if the city is two words like New York it won't work. yeah... regex isn't the tool for this one.
btw: tested on regexhero.net
i can think of 2 ways you can do this
1) if you know that "the rest" of your data after the address is exactly 2 fields, ie BC and CA, you can do split on your string using space as delimiter, remove the last 2 items.
2) do a split on delimiter /[A-Z][A-Z]/ and store the result in array. then print out the array ( this is provided that the address doesn't contain 2 or more capital letters)