Regex for a specific number or specific word - regex

For a security question on a form, I want the user to enter either 4 or four, or any variation of the latter.
Right now I have this regex /\b4|four\b/gi that is a variation of one I've found on this site. The problem is that the user can enter 458 or something. So, can somebody help me out?

So you should be using a case-insensitve comparison for this. Some (perhaps most) regex flavors will support the pattern (?i) to denote case insensitivity.
^(?i)(?:4|four)$
But if this is JavaScript then you can use a syntax more like what you started with...
/^(?:4|four)$/i
The /i is for case insensitivity in this case. But I removed /g since it's for global matching and wouldn't be needed here.
Notice that I also put 4|four inside a (?:non capturing) group. This is more efficient than using a traditional (capturing) group when you don't need to do anything with the captured value.
Then the ^ and $ anchors surrounding everything will ensure you have no extra leading or following characters.

Try:
^4|four$
which will match "4" and "four". Depending on the programming language that you use there might be a case insensitive option like C#'s RegexOptions.IngoreCase

I'm not sure what you mean by "any variation of the latter", but:
/^(4|four)$/i
will match the entire string being either 4 or four. The ^ matches only at the start and $ only at the end. /i means case insensitive (so FOUR would be accepted as well). Some languages don't take flags like that (in them, you'll have to check the docs on how to do an insensitive match). If you can't use a case-insensitive match, you can do this instead:
/^(4|[fF][oO][uU][rR])$/i
Of course, whatever language you're working in probably also has equality comparisons. So you could just do (for example)
if (str == "4" || str == "four")

Related

Regex: How to find a pattern on words of a certain length

I am certainly not very experienced with regex but I've spent quite a while on this and I usually figure it out by now. I'm guessing someone else will have the answer right away, as my goal is very simple:
I need a simple regex to brute-singularize words (i.e remove -es or -s from the ends). The syntax for this is easy. What gets complicated is restricting it to words that are longer than 3 characters so that "US" doesn't become "U".
Here is what I am testing with:
childrens
horses
horse
bobs
us
which should match like so:
childrens
horses
horse
bobs
us
This is being done in a POSIX environment (Postgres) so that is also a bit restrictive.
If I understood you correctly, this should work:
(?<=\w{3})(s|es)\b /i
Be advised that last /i is not part of regex, it's just case-insensitive flag. You also may want to add g and m flags to read entire string. Here is the breakdown:
(?<=\w{3}) - positive lookbehind, checking that there are 3 characters preceding the following pattern
(s|es) - a capture group, looking for characters s or es
\b - checking that end of a word follows right after the pattern.
Also be advised that this pattern does not differentiate words which ends with s in singular form (like proteus), and i'm very doubtful this task can be properly done by regular expression only.

Ignore the case in part of the search pattern in Vim

In the next search on Vim I would like to ignore the case of the first letter:
/[tlcp]omo
I'd like to know how the case can be ignored for only the first letter of the search pattern.
Vim has the following options to ignore the case in the search pattern:
:set ignorecase
:set smartcase [ignore case if no uppercase in search]
or use \c it at any position in the search pattern:
/hello\c => [find hello and HELLO]
But all of these options ignore the case in the entire pattern, not in part.
One option to ignore the case of a single letter in the search pattern is, using the [] collection of regular expression, to specifically capitalize each letter:
/[tTlLcCpP]omo
But, is there any way to ignore the case in a part of the search pattern without having to specify each and every upper and lower case character using regular expression?
In general, this isn't possible in Vim. The /\c and /\C regexp modifiers unfortunately turn the whole pattern into case (in-)sensitive matching, regardless of where they are placed. (Introducing a new set of modifiers that only work from that position onwards would in my opinion be the best solution.)
Most people usually get around this by using lower/uppercase collections for the insensitive parts, /like [tT][hH][iI][sS]/.
You could also go the opposite route and instead force certain characters to a case (using /\l for lowercase and /\u for uppercase), /\c\%(\l\l\l\l\&like\) this/.
My CmdlineSpecialEdits plugin has (among many others) a CTRL-G c mapping that converts a pattern in the search command-line in such a way that those alphabetic characters between \c...\C become case-insensive matches while the rest remains case-sensitive. In other words, it converts the pattern as if \c and \C would only apply to following atoms, and not the entire pattern.
Example
/My \cfoo\C is \cbad!/
becomes
/My [fF][oO][oO] is [bB][aA][dD]!/
or alternatively
/\c\%(\u\&M\)\%(\l\&y\) foo\%(\l\{2}\&is\) bad!/

Look behinds: all the rage in regex?

Many regex questions lately have some kind of look-around element in the query that appears to me is not necessary to the success of the match. Is there some teaching resource that is promoting them? I am trying to figure out what kinds of cases you would be better off using a positive look ahead/behind. The main application I can see is when trying to not match an element. But, for example, this query from a recent question has a simple solution to capturing the .*, but why would you use a look behind?
(?<=<td><a href="\/xxx\.html\?n=[0-9]{0, 5}">).*(?=<\/a><span
And this one from another question:
$url = "www.example.com/id/1234";
preg_match("/\d+(?<=id\/[\d])/",$url,$matches);
When is it truly better to use a positive look-around? Can you give some examples?
I realize this is bordering on an opinion-based question, but I think the answers would be really instructive. Regex is confusing enough without making things more complicated... I have read this page and am more interested in some simple guidelines for when to use them rather than how they work.
Thanks for all the replies. In addition to those below, I recommend checking out m.buettner's great answer here.
You can capture overlapping matches, and you can find matches which could lie in the lookarounds of other matches.
You can express complex logical assertions about your match (because many engines let you use multiple lookbehind/lookahead assertions which all must match in order for the match to succeed).
Lookaround is a natural way to express the common constraint "matches X, if it is followed by/preceded by Y". It is (arguably) less natural to add extra "matching" parts that have to be thrown out by postprocessing.
Negative lookaround assertions, of course, are even more useful. Combined with #2, they can allow you do some pretty wizard tricks, which may even be hard to express in usual program logic.
Examples, by popular request:
Overlapping matches: suppose you want to find all candidate genes in a given genetic sequence. Genes generally start with ATG, and end with TAG, TAA or TGA. But, candidates could overlap: false starts may exist. So, you can use a regex like this:
ATG(?=((?:...)*(?:TAG|TAA|TGA)))
This simple regex looks for the ATG start-codon, followed by some number of codons, followed by a stop codon. It pulls out everything that looks like a gene (sans start codon), and properly outputs genes even if they overlap.
Zero-width matching: suppose you want to find every tr with a specific class in a computer-generated HTML page. You might do something like this:
<tr class="TableRow">.*?</tr>(?=<tr class="TableRow">|</table>)
This deals with the case in which a bare </tr> appears inside the row. (Of course, in general, an HTML parser is a better choice, but sometimes you just need something quick and dirty).
Multiple constraints: suppose you have a file with data like id:tag1,tag2,tag3,tag4, with tags in any order, and you want to find all rows with tags "green" and "egg". This can be done easily with two lookaheads:
(.*):(?=.*\bgreen\b)(?=.*\begg\b)
There are two great things about lookaround expressions:
They are zero-width assertions. They require to be matched, but they consume nothing of the input string. This allows to describe parts of the string which will not be contained in a match result. By using capturing groups in lookaround expressions, they are the only way to capture parts of the input multiple times.
They simplify a lot of things. While they do not extend regular languages, they easily allow to combine (intersect) multiple expressions to match the same part of a string.
Well one simple case where they are handy is when you are anchoring the pattern to the start or finish of a line, and just want to make sure that something is either right ahead or behind the pattern you are matching.
I try to address your points:
some kind of look-around element in the query that appears to me is not necessary to the success of the match
Of course they are necessary for the match. As soon as a lookaround assertions fails, there is no match. They can be used to ensure conditions around the pattern, that have additionally to be true. The whole regex does only match, if:
The pattern does fit and
The lookaround assertions are true.
==> But the returned match is only the pattern.
When is it truly better to use a positive look-around?
Simple answer: when you want stuff to be there, but you don't want to match it!
As Bergi mentioned in his answer, they are zero width assertions, this means they don't match a character sequence, they just ensure it is there. So the characters inside a lookaround expression are not "consumed", the regex engine continues after the last "consumed" character.
Regarding your first example:
(?<=<td><a href="\/xxx\.html\?n=[0-9]{0, 5}">).*(?=<\/a><span
I think there is a misunderstanding on your side, when you write "has a simple solution to capturing the .*". The .* is not "captured", it is the only thing that the expression does match. But only those characters are matched that have a "<td><a href="\/xxx\.html\?n=[0-9]{0, 5}">" before and a "<\/a><span" after (those two are not part of the match!).
"Captured" is only something that has been matched by a capturing group.
The second example
\d+(?<=id\/[\d])
Is interesting. It is matching a sequence of digits (\d+) and after the sequence, the lookbehind assertion checks if there is one digit with "id/" before it. Means it will fail if there is more than one digit or if the text "id/" before the digit is missing. Means this regex is matching only one digit, when there is fitting text before.
teaching resources
www.regular-expressions.info
perlretut on Looking ahead and looking behind
I'm assuming you understand the good uses of lookarounds, and ask why they are used with no apparent reason.
I think there are four main categories of how people use regular expressions:
Validation
Validation is usually done on the whole text. Lookarounds like you describe are not possible.
Match
Extracting a part of the text. Lookarounds are used mainly due to developer laziness: avoiding captures.
For example, if we have in a settings file with the line Index=5, we can match /^Index=(\d+)/ and take the first group, or match /(?<=^Index=)\d+/ and take everything.
As other answers said, sometimes you need overlapping between matches, but these are relatively rare.
Replace
This is similar to match with one difference: the whole match is removed and is being replaced with a new string (and some captured groups).
Example: we want to highlight the name in "Hi, my name is Bob!".
We can replace /(name is )(\w+)/ with $1<b>$2</b>,
but it is neater to replace /(?<=name is )\w+/ with <b>$&</b> - and no captures at all.
Split
split takes the text and breaks it to an array of tokens, with your pattern being the delimiter. This is done by:
Find a match. Everything before this match is token.
The content of the match is discarded, but:
In most flavors, each captured group in the match is also a token (notably not in Java).
When there are no more matches, the rest of the text is the last token.
Here, lookarounds are crucial. Matching a character means removing it from the result, or at least separating it from its token.
Example: We have a comma separated list of quoted string: "Hello","Hi, I'm Jim."
Splitting by comma /,/ is wrong: {"Hello", "Hi, I'm Jim."}
We can't add the quote mark, /",/: {"Hello, "Hi, I'm Jim."}
The only good option is lookbehind, /(?<="),/: {"Hello", "Hi, I'm Jim."}
Personally, I prefer to match the tokens rather than split by the delimiter, whenever that is possible.
Conclusion
To answer the main question - these lookarounds are used because:
Sometimes you can't match text that need.
Developers are shiftless.
Lookaround assertions can also be used to reduce backtracking which can be the main cause for a bad performance in regexes.
For example: The regex ^[0-9A-Z]([-.\w]*[0-9A-Z])*#(1) can also be written ^[0-9A-Z][-.\w]*(?<=[0-9A-Z])#(2) using a positive look behind (simple validation of the user name in an e-mail address).
Regex (1) can cause a lot of backtracking essentially because [0-9A-Z] is a subset of [-.\w] and the nested quantifiers. Regex (2) reduces the excessive backtracking, more information here Backtracking, section Controlling Backtracking > Lookbehind Assertions.
For more information about backtracking
Best Practices for Regular Expressions in the .NET Framework
Optimizing Regular Expression Performance, Part II: Taking Charge of Backtracking
Runaway Regular Expressions: Catastrophic Backtracking
I typed this a while back but got busy (still am, so I might take a while to reply back) and didn't get around to post it. If you're still open to answers...
Is there some teaching resource that is promoting them?
I don't think so, it's just a coincidence I believe.
But, for example, this query from a recent question has a simple solution to capturing the .*, but why would you use a look behind?
(?<=<td><a href="\/xxx\.html\?n=[0-9]{0, 5}">).*(?=<\/a><span
This is most probably a C# regex, since variable width lookbehinds are not supported my many regex engines. Well, the lookarounds could be certainly avoided here, because for this, I believe it's really simpler to have capture groups (and make the .* lazy as we're at it):
(<td><a href="\/xxx\.html\?n=[0-9]{0,5}">).*?(<\/a><span)
If it's for a replace, or
<td><a href="\/xxx\.html\?n=[0-9]{0,5}">(.*?)<\/a><span
for a match. Though an html parser would definitely be more advisable here.
Lookarounds in this case I believe are slower. See regex101 demo where the match is 64 steps for capture groups but 94+19 = 1-3 steps for the lookarounds.
When is it truly better to use a positive look-around? Can you give some examples?
Well, lookarounds have the property of being zero-width assertions, which mean they don't really comtribute to matches while they contribute onto deciding what to match and also allows overlapping matches.
Thinking a bit about it, I think, too, that negative lookarounds get used much more often, but that doesn't make positive lookarounds less useful!
Some 'exploits' I can find browsing some old answers of mine (links below will be demos from regex101) follow. When/If you see something you're not familiar about, I probably won't be explaining it here, since the question's focused on positive lookarounds, but you can always look at the demo links I provided where there's a description of the regex, and if you still want some explanation, let me know and I'll try to explain as much as I can.
To get matches between certain characters:
In some matches, positive lookahead make things easier, where a lookahead could do as well, or when it's not so practical to use no lookarounds:
Dog sighed. "I'm no super dog, nor special dog," said Dog, "I'm an ordinary dog, now leave me alone!" Dog pushed him away and made his way to the other dog.
We want to get all the dog (regardless of case) outside quotes. With a positive lookahead, we can do this:
\bdog\b(?=(?:[^"]*"[^"]*")*[^"]*$)
to ensure that there are even number of quotes ahead. With a negative lookahead, it would look like this:
\bdog\b(?!(?:[^"]*"[^"]*")*[^"]*"[^"]*$)
to ensure that there are no odd number of quotes ahead. Or use something like this if you don't want a lookahead, but you'll have to extract the group 1 matches:
(?:"[^"]+"[^"]+?)?(\bdog\b)
Okay, now say we want the opposite; find 'dog' inside the quotes. The regex with the lookarounds just need to have the sign inversed, first and second:
\bdog\b(?!(?:[^"]*"[^"]*")*[^"]*$)
\bdog\b(?=(?:[^"]*"[^"]*")*[^"]*"[^"]*$)
But without the lookaheads, it's not possible. the closest you can get is maybe this:
"[^"]*(\bdog\b)[^"]*"
But this doesn't get all the matches, or you can maybe use this:
"[^"]*?(\bdog\b)[^"]*?(?:(\bdog\b)[^"]*?)?"
But it's just not practical for more occurrences of dog and you get the results in variables with increasing numbers... And this is indeed easier with lookarounds, because they are zero width assertions, you don't have to worry about the expression inside the lookaround to match dog or not, or the regex wouldn't have obtained all the occurrences of dog in the quotes.
Of course now, this logic can be extended to groups of characters, such as getting specific patterns between words such as start and end.
Overlapping matches
If you have a string like:
abcdefghijkl
And want to extract all the consecutive 3 characters possible inside, you can use this:
(?=(...))
If you have something like:
1A Line1 Detail1 Detail2 Detail3 2A Line2 Detail 3A Line3 Detail Detail
And want to extract these, knowing that each line starts with #A Line# (where # is a number):
1A Line1 Detail1 Detail2 Detail3
2A Line2 Detail
3A Line3 Detail Detail
You might try this, which fails because of greediness...
[0-9]+A Line[0-9]+(?: \w+)+
Or this, which when made lazy no more works...
[0-9]+A Line[0-9]+(?: \w+)+?
But with a positive lookahead, you get this:
[0-9]+A Line[0-9]+(?: \w+)+?(?= [0-9]+A Line[0-9]+|$)
And appropriately extracts what's needed.
Another possible situation is one where you have something like this:
#ff00fffirstword#445533secondword##008877thi#rdword#
Which you want to convert to three pairs of variables (first of the pair being a # and some hex values (6) and whatever characters after them):
#ff00ff and firstword
#445533 and secondword#
#008877 and thi#rdword#
If there were no hashes inside the 'words', it would have been enough to use (#[0-9a-f]{6})([^#]+), but unfortunately, that's not the case and you have to resort to .*? instead of [^#]+, which doesn't quite yet solve the issue of stray hashes. Positive lookaheads however make this possible:
(#[0-9a-f]{6})(.+?)(?=#[0-9a-f]{6}|$)
Validation & Formatting
Not recommended, but you can use positive lookaheads for quick validations. The following regex for instance allow the entry of a string containing at least 1 digit and 1 lowercase letter.
^(?=[^0-9]*[0-9])(?=[^a-z]*[a-z])
This can be useful when you're checking for character length but have patterns of varying length in the a string, for example, a 4 character long string with valid formats where # indicates a digit and the hyphen/dash/minus - must be in the middle:
##-#
#-##
A regex like this does the trick:
^(?=.{4}$)\d+-\d+
Where otherwise, you'd do ^(?:[0-9]{2}-[0-9]|[0-9]-[0-9]{2})$ and imagine now that the max length was 15; the number of alterations you'd need.
If you want a quick and dirty way to rearrange some dates in the 'messed up' format mmm-yyyy and yyyy-mm to a more uniform format mmm-yyyy, you can use this:
(?=.*(\b\w{3}\b))(?=.*(\b\d{4}\b)).*
Input:
Oct-2013
2013-Oct
Output:
Oct-2013
Oct-2013
An alternative might be to use a regex (normal match) and process separately all the non-conforming formats separately.
Something else I came across on SO was the indian currency format, which was ##,##,###.### (3 digits to the left of the decimal and all other digits groupped in pair). If you have an input of 122123123456.764244, you expect 1,22,12,31,23,456.764244 and if you want to use a regex, this one does this:
\G\d{1,2}\K\B(?=(?:\d{2})*\d{3}(?!\d))
(The (?:\G|^) in the link is only used because \G matches only at the start of the string and after a match) and I don't think this could work without the positive lookahead, since it looks forward without moving the point of replacement.)
Trimming
Suppose you have:
this is a sentence
And want to trim all the spaces with a single regex. You might be tempted to do a general replace on spaces:
\s+
But this yields thisisasentence. Well, maybe replace with a single space? It now yields " this is a sentence " (double quotes used because backticks eats spaces). Something you can however do is this:
^\s*|\s$|\s+(?=\s)
Which makes sure to leave one space behind so that you can replace with nothing and get "this is a sentence".
Splitting
Well, somewhere else where positive lookarounds might be useful is where, say you have a string ABC12DE3456FGHI789 and want to get the letters+digits apart, that is you want to get ABC12, DE3456 and FGHI789. You can easily do use the regex:
(?<=[0-9])(?=[A-Z])
While if you use ([A-Z]+[0-9]+) (i.e. the captured groups are put back in the resulting list/array/etc, you will be getting empty elements as well.
Note that this could be done with a match as well, with [A-Z]+[0-9]+
If I had to mention negative lookarounds, this post would have been even longer :)
Keep in mind that a positive/negative lookaround is the same for a regex engine. The goal of lookarounds is to perform a check somewhere in your "regular expression".
One of the main interest is to capture something without using capturing parenthesis (capturing the whole pattern), example:
string: aaabbbccc
regex: (?<=aaa)bbb(?=ccc)
(you obtain the result with the whole pattern)
instead of: aaa(bbb)ccc
(you obtain the result with the capturing group.)

Case sensitive and insensitive in the same pattern

Thanks to the help with my previous homework question Regex to match tags like <A>, <BB>, <CCC> but not <ABC>, but now I have another homework question.
I need to match tags like <LOL>, <LOLOLOL> (3 uppercase letters, with repeatable last two letters), but not <lol> (need to be uppercase).
Using the technique from the previous homework, I tried <[A-Z]([A-Z][A-Z])\1*>. This works, except there's an additional catch: the repeating part can be in mixed case!
So I need to also match <LOLolol>, <LOLOLOlol>, because it's 3 uppercase letters, with repeatable last two letters in mixed case. I know you can make a pattern case-insensitive with /i, and that will let me match <LOLolol> with the regex I have, but it will also now match <lololol>, because the check for the first 3 letters are also case-insensitive.
So how do I do this? How can I check the first 3 letters case sensitively, and then the rest of the letters case-insensitively? Is this possible with regex?
Yes! You can in fact do this in some flavors, using what is called embedded modifier. This puts the modifier in the pattern, and you can essentially select which parts of the pattern the modifiers apply to.
The embedded modifier for case insensitivity is (?i), so the pattern you want in this case is:
<[A-Z]([A-Z]{2})(?i:\1*)>
References
regular-expressions.info/Modifiers
Specifying Modes Inside The Regular Expression
Instead of /regex/i, you can also do /(?i)regex/
Turning Modes On and Off for Only Part of The Regular Expression
You can also do /first(?i)second(?-i)third/
Modifier Spans
You can also do /first(?i:second)third/

Regex: Matching against groups in different order without repeating the group

Let's say I have two strings like this:
XABY
XBAY
A simple regex that matches both would go like this:
X(AB|BA)Y
However, I have a case where A and B are complicated strings, and I'm looking for a way to avoid having to specify each of them twice (on each side of the |). Is there a way to do this (that presumably is simpler than having to specify them twice)?
Thanks
X(?:A()|B()){2}\1\2Y
Basically, you use an empty capturing group to check off each item when it's matched, then the back-references ensure that everything's been checked off.
Be aware that this relies on undocumented regex behavior, so there's no guarantee that it will work in your regex flavor--and if it does, there's no guarantee that it will continue to work as that flavor evolves. But as far as I know, it works in every flavor that supports back-references. (EDIT: It does not work in JavaScript.)
EDIT: You say you're using named groups to capture parts of the match, which adds a lot of visual clutter to the regex, if not real complexity. Well, if you happen to be using .NET regexes, you can still use simple numbered groups for the "check boxes". Here's a simplistic example that finds and picks apart a bunch of month-day strings without knowing their internal order:
Regex r = new Regex(
#"(?:
(?<MONTH>Jan|Feb|Mar|Apr|May|Jun|Jul|Sep|Oct|Nov|Dec)()
|
(?<DAY>\d+)()
){2}
\1\2",
RegexOptions.IgnorePatternWhitespace);
string input = #"30Jan Feb12 Mar23 4Apr May09 11Jun";
foreach (Match m in r.Matches(input))
{
Console.WriteLine("{0} {1}", m.Groups["MONTH"], m.Groups["DAY"]);
}
This works because in .NET, the presence of named groups has no effect on the ordering of the non-named groups. Named groups have numbers assigned to them, but those numbers start after the last of the non-named groups. (I know that seems gratuitously complicated, but there are good reasons for doing it that way.)
Normally you want to avoid using named and non-named capturing groups together, especially if you're using back-references, but I think this case could be a legitimate exception.
You can store regex pieces in variables, and do:
A=/* relevant regex pattern */
B=/* other regex pattern */
regex = X($A$B|$B$A)Y
This way you only have to specify each regex once, on its own line, which should make it easier to maintain.
Sidenote: You're trying to find permutations, which is ok since you're only looking at 2 subregexes. But if you wanted to add a third (or fourth), your regex permutations grow drastically - (abc|acb|bac|bca|cab|cba) - or worse. If you need to go down the road of permutations, there's some good discussion on that here on stackoverflow. It's for letter permutation, and the solutions use awk/bash/perl, but that at least gives you a starting point.
try this
X((A|B){2})Y
If there are several strings, with any kind of characters in there, you'll be better with:
X(.)+Y
Only numbers then
X([0-9])+Y
Only letters
X([a-zA-Z])+Y
Letters and numbers
X([a-zA-Z][0-9])+Y