I have created this regex to match dollar amounts more than $9,000.00.
\$(?=.{6,11}$)\d{1,3}(?:,\d{3})*
But it fails in cases like this,
$25,000.00. Text Goes here
$1,000,000.00
However it works in cases like this,
$25,000.0. T
$25,000.00
$999,000.00
How to fix this regex?
Some issues in your regex:
The look ahead assertion requires the that match can only start in the final 11 characters of the input string, since it has the $ anchor after at least 6 and at most 11 characters. So it is no surprise that "$25,000.00. Text Goes here" does not match. I suppose you don't want that $ anchor, and then the 11 is not useful anymore either.
The look ahead assertion requires that at least 6 characters follow after the currency symbol, however that could include non-digit characters, and so your regex will match the amount in `$300 oh" (6 characters follow after currency symbol).
There is no provision in your regex for decimals even though you say it works for examples that have decimals. But it will not include those decimals in the match. For instance, for input "$300,000.50" it will only match "$300,000" and not the 50 cents. You would need to accept an optional decimal point followed by one or two digits and then require there are no more decimal digits with a negative look-ahead.
The look-ahead assertion is not the right place to impose a maximum amount, because when you remove the $ (see first point) you must still require that there are no more digits after the 11th position. Instead, just remove the look-ahead assertion and match the patterns you want in more detail. There are just two options: either you have 2 or 3 digits followed by one digit group (for amounts between 10,000 and 999,999.99) or you have 1 to 3 digits followed by two digit groups (for amounts between 1,000,000 and 999,999,999.99). To avoid that more digits follow when no decimal part exists, use a negative look-ahead assertion: (?![,.]?\d).
All this is taken into account in this correction:
\$(?:\d{2,3}(?:,\d{3})|\d{1,3}(?:,\d{3}){2})((?![,.]?\d)|\.\d\d?(?!\d))
On regex101
To allow the same numbers without commas, add \d{5,9} as an option:
\$(?:\d{2,3}(?:,\d{3})|\d{1,3}(?:,\d{3}){2}|\d{5,9})(?:(?![,.]?\d)|\.\d\d?(?!\d))
On regex101
Totally new answer. After closer inspection I see that they have revised
the specifications on this question.
I am submitting this solution based on a $10,000.00 - $999,999,999.00 range
of unacceptable cash amounts. The comma's and decimal are optional.
There cannot be more than 3 consecutive decimal numbers after the period.
Ah, other specifications are dubious.
Note that a text representation of leading zero's is not allowed, which is a
distinction worth investigating as digits \d class is covers characters 0-9.
It is hard, if not impossible to match to infinity.
For example, the OP requested to match cash greater than $9,000 (Ah $10,000).
Regex has no representation of quantifiers representing infinity therefore
#Trincot tried to talk him into a max cash amount number to cap it.
In reality, you can only match the infinite with a negative of the finite.
So it is in the cosmos as it is in regex.
The only real way to match a number greater than another number is to
state that it is not in a finite range. In this case not in the range $0 - $9,999.
In this case they have established a range that the cash cannot be in.
That apparently is this $10,000.00 - $999,999,999.00 range, which
absolutely does not represent all values greater than $10,000.00
My original answer was to match $0 - $9,000 (original minimum) then post that regex in a negative assertion, thereby matching the infinite set of values
greater than $9,000 which was and is the only answer to matching cash values greater than
a fixed amount.
In the end, parsing values is only a preamble to getting it into a float
and there is no way to glean the final value ahead of that conversion.
Therefore, this is really an exercise in futility.
To that end :
$10,000.00 - $999,999,999.00
\$[1-9](?:\d{1,2}(?:,?\d{3}){1,2}|(?:,?\d{3}){2})(?:\.\d{0,2})?(?![,.]?\d)
https://regex101.com/r/1h4XW9/1
\$ [1-9]
(?:
\d{1,2}
(?: ,? \d{3} ){1,2}
| (?: ,? \d{3} ){2}
)
(?: \. \d{0,2} )?
(?! [,.]? \d )
Related
I need a regex that allows UP TO 4 digit number AND/OR 4 decimal places.
ONLY allowed format examples (I'm just using only 1s to make the format looks simple, it all should be [0-9])
1
1.1
1.11
1.111
1.1111
11
11.1
11.11
11.111
11.1111
111
111.1
111.11
111.111
111.1111
1111
1111.1
1111.11
1111.111
1111.1111
So far the closest one I've gotten --
"^[0-9]{0,4}(?:.[0-9]{0,4}$)"
It works pretty good when I enter numbers + decimals.
However, if I just enter numbers without decimals, I can enter 4+ number digits, which it should not.
The ^[0-9]{0,4}(?:.[0-9]{0,4}$) only seems to be almost working for you. As . is unescaped, it matches any char including digits, and you have an impression it works.
Once you properly escape . with a literal \, it will stop "working", because this will require a dot.
You need to use
/^\d{0,4}(?:\.\d{0,4})?$/
"^[0-9]{0,4}(?:[.][0-9]{0,4})?$"
Details:
^ - start of string
[0-9]{0,4} / \d{4} - zero to four digits
(?:\.[0-9]{0,4})? - an optional occurrence of a . and then zero to four digits
$ - end of string.
so I'm making this regular expression to verify some text boxes on a website that I'm designing for an internship.
The problem is that I'm not so keen on regular expressions, and I'm close to having a working one that matches a number between 0-24 and no more than two decimal places.
This is what I have so far. The pattern is also matching any string; such as, "a" or "az".
var pattern = "^([0-9]{0,2}?.?[0-9]{0,2}|1[0-9].?[0-9]{0,2}|2[0-4].?[0-9]{0,2})$";
To get a number between 0 and 24 (24 excluded) with optional up to two decimal places:
^(\d|1\d|2[0-3])(\.\d{1,2})?$
The decimal part:
\. - match the decimal dot
\d{1,2} - one or two digits
()? - makes it optional
The whole part:
\d - numbers 0-9
1\d - numbers 10-19
2[0-3] - numbers 20-23
(x|y|z) - one of x, y or z
As for the "why is my version matching things like "a" and "az" part" - it's a little complex, but it basically boils down to you using dots (like .?). In regex, a dot means "any one character". To make it match a literal dot, you need to escape it with a slash just like I did.
Minor remark: If you want optional leading zero for single digit numbers, replace 1\d with [01]\d. If you want mandatory leading zero for single digit numbers, replace \d|1\d with [01]\d. If you don't want leading zeroes, leave it as it is.
Assuming you do not want 05 or 5.50
^((?:[0-9]|1[0-9]|2[0-3])(?:\.(?:[1-9]|[0-9][1-9]))?)$
You can try it here
The following is a quick attempt to match a floating point number from 0 to 24.99 with up to two non-zero digits
^(([0-9])|([01][0-9])|(2[0-4]))(\.[0-9]{1,2})?$
I think it might be easier to use math to do this though...
You can see the explanation of the entire regex as well as test it out here. I have also added a few test cases.
^(\d|[01]\d|2[0-3])(\.\d{1,2})?$
Test cases:
Valid:
22
1.29
2.99
9.99
13.24
17.38
20.01
02.15
15.35
23.56
1.1
Invalid:
24.29
235.215
21.256
To get a integer number between 1 and 23: ^([1-9]|1[0-9]|2[0-3])$
Ok, so I have a weird requirement for form validation using regex,
the range of values can be integers between -168 and 10688,
with the minus sign for negative values ranging from -168 to 10688.
The tricky part here is that for all the positive values, users always have to use leading
zeros with 4 char requirement for negative values and 5 chars for positive values
so for example: -023 is valid and 00000 and 00345 is valid. 0, 000, -000 is not valid.
How can this be implemented in regex? would this be too complicated?
please help! ;(
This should do it for you
^(\d{5}|\-(?!000)\d{3})$
Akxe is correct about the max and min values acceptable. RegEx is only for string validation, hence it doesn't allow for math functions. You would have to validate that either client side with JavaScript or server side.
This pattern should match your description:
(-[1-9]\d\d|-\d[1-9]\d|-\d\d[1-9]|\d{5})
Excluding -000 is what makes this tricky, so you end up with 4 cases:
-[1-9]\d\d # negative numbers that have a non-zero digit in the first place
-\d[1-9]\d # negative numbers that have a non-zero digit in the second place
-\d\d[1-9] # negative numbers that have a non-zero digit in the third place
\d{5} # all positive numbers with exactly 5 digits
This pattern will not check for upper / lower bounds though, as that would be trivial with any programming language and isn't really the goal for a regular expression.
S.B.' answer ((-[1-9]\d\d|-\d[1-9]\d|-\d\d[1-9]|\d{5})) is correct, but you might still look at the fact that you have to add the min and max attributes to the input.
And for user ease while using your app you might want to add the leading zeros yourself, just a note.
PS.: What have this to do with angular?
I think this should work:
(-|[0-9]{2})[0-9]{3}
Details:
NODE EXPLANATION
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
( group and capture to \1:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- '-'
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| OR
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[0-9]{2} any character of: '0' to '9' (2 times)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
) end of \1
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[0-9]{3} any character of: '0' to '9' (3 times)
I have a field for which can have:
Up to potentially 2 decimals places
Up to potentially 6 non-decimal places
No more than 8 digits altogether (the max 2 decimals plus max 6 non-decimals)
Be a positive number
So correct inputs would be range from 0.01 to 999999.99, and trailing zeroes isn't an issue, so 4.00 is just as fine as 4.
Try this pattern:
^[0-9]{1,6}(?:\.[0-9]{1,2}0*)?$
If you want to allow leading and trailing whitespace, add \s* to the beginning and the end of the pattern, right after ^ and right before $.
That said, this task is something you might want to accomplish without regex. Why don't you just read the value of the input, parse it and then simply perform a numeric validation? You could even round the input to two decimal places.
You could try something like so:
Up to potentially 2 decimals places: (\.\d{1,2})? - This will match a decimal point followed by a minimum of 1, and a maximum of 2 digits. This is optional.
Up to potentially 6 non-decimal places: \d{1,6} - This will match a minimum of 1 digit and a maximum of 6 digits.
No more than 8 digits altogether (the max 2 decimals plus max 6 non-decimals): You can combing the two above to get this: \d{1,6}(\.\d{1,2})?.
Be a positive number: Change the above to this: ^\d{1,6}(\.\d{1,2})?$. This should make sure that any number you pass to it, does not start with a negative sign. The ^ and $ anchors instruct the regex engine to start matching at the beginning of the string and complete the matching at the end. This should allow you to be sure that the string you are matching is indeed a number.
That being said, you should really be doing numerical range checks using the appropriate mathematical operations which your language (in this case JavaScript) provides. A small change in the numerical range you are after will most likely bring a large change in your regular expression.
This might validate it
# /^(?=.*[1-9].*$)(?=[.]?(?:\d[.]?){1,8}$)(?=\d{0,6}(?:[.]\d{0,2})?$)/
^
(?= # must be a positive number
.* [1-9] .* $
)
(?=
[.]?
(?: # 1 to 8 digits
\d
[.]?
){1,8}
$
)
(?=
\d{0,6} # 0 to 6 non-decimal places
(?:
[.] # 0 to 2 decimal places
\d{0,2}
)?
$
)
I need regex to validate a number that could contain thousand separators or decimals using javascript.
Max value being 9,999,999.99
Min value 0.01
Other valid values:
11,111
11.1
1,111.11
INVALID values:
1111
1111,11
,111
111,
I've searched all over with no joy.
/^\d{1,3}(,\d{3})*(\.\d+)?$/
About the minimum and maximum values... Well, I wouldn't do it with a regex, but you can add lookaheads at the beginning:
/^(?!0+\.00)(?=.{1,9}(\.|$))\d{1,3}(,\d{3})*(\.\d+)?$/
Note: this allows 0,999.00, so you may want to change it to:
/^(?!0+\.00)(?=.{1,9}(\.|$))(?!0(?!\.))\d{1,3}(,\d{3})*(\.\d+)?$/
which would not allow a leading 0.
Edit:
Tests: http://jsfiddle.net/pKsYq/2/
((\d){1,3})+([,][\d]{3})*([.](\d)*)?
It worked on a few, but I'm still learning regex as well.
The logic should be 1-3 digits 0-1 times, 1 comma followed by 3 digits any number of times, and a single . followed by any number of digits 0-1 times
First, I want to point out that if you own the form the data is coming from, the best way to restrict the input is to use the proper form elements (aka, number field)
<input type="number" name="size" min="0.01" max="9,999,999.99" step="0.01">
Whether "," can be entered will be based on the browser, but the browser will always give you the value as an actual number. (Remember that all form data must be validated/sanitized server side as well. Never trust the client)
Second, I'd like to expand on the other answers to a more robust (platform independent)/modifiable regex.
You should surround the regex with ^ and $ to make sure you are matching against the whole number, not just a subset of it. ex ^<my_regex>$
The right side of the decimal is optional, so we can put it in an optional group (<regex>)?
Matching a literal period and than any chain of numbers is simply \.\d+
If you want to insist the last number after the decimal isn't a 0, you can use [1-9] for "a non-zero number" so \.\d+[1-9]
For the left side of the decimal, the leading number will be non-zero, or the number is zero. So ([1-9]<rest-of-number-regex>|0)
The first group of numbers will be 1-3 digits so [1-9]\d{0,2}
After that, we have to add digits in 3s so (,\d{3})*
Remember ? means optional, so to make the , optional is just (,?\d{3})*
Putting it all together
^([1-9]\d{0,2}(,?\d{3})*|0)(\.\d+[1-9])?$
Tezra's formula fails for '1.' or '1.0'. For my purposes, I allow leading and trailing zeros, as well as a leading + or - sign, like so:
^[-+]?((\d{1,3}(,\d{3})*)|(\d*))(\.|\.\d*)?$
In a recent project we needed to alter this version in order to meet international requirements.
This is what we used: ^-?(\d{1,3}(?<tt>\.|\,| ))((\d{3}\k<tt>)*(\d{3}(?!\k<tt>)[\.|\,]))?\d*$
Creating a named group (?<tt>\.|\,| ) allowed us to use the negative look ahead (?!\k<tt>)[\.|\,]) later to ensure the thousands separator and the decimal point are in fact different.
I have used below regrex for following retrictions -
^(?!0|\.00)[0-9]+(,\d{3})*(.[0-9]{0,2})$
Not allow 0 and .00.
','(thousand seperator) after 3 digits.
'.' (decimal upto 2 decimal places).