matching character when preceded by specific string - javascript

I'm trying to find characters when preceded with exact string but not the preceding string. how to do that?
I have the string
+1545464454<+440545545454<+210544455454<+75455454545
the above string are phone numbers with international prefix, but some of them have 0 between prefix and number and I need to take it out.
I have /(\+4|\+44|\+7 ... allprefixes here...)0/g but this selects the prefix as well and I need to select only 0
I's in the javascript

You're almost close to that. Just use Capturing groups and replace function like below. Most languages support capturing groups.
/(\+(?:4|44|7 ... allprefixes here without `+`...))0/g
REplacement string:
$1
or \1
If you're on PHP, \K should work. \K discards previously matched characters from printing at the final.
'~\+(?:4|44|7)\K0~g'
In javascript.
> var str = "+1545464454<+440545545454<+210544455454<+75455454545"
> str.replace(/(\+(?:44|21|7|4))0/g, "$1")
'+1545464454<+44545545454<+21544455454<+75455454545'

If your language supports lookbehinds, you can use it as used in the following regex
/(?<=\+(4|44|7))0/g
Javascript doesn't support it. So you'll need to use something like this
str.replace(/(\+(4|44|7))0/, "$1");

Related

Regex JS no output in JS [duplicate]

https://regex101.com/r/sB9wW6/1
(?:(?<=\s)|^)#(\S+) <-- the problem in positive lookbehind
Working like this on prod: (?:\s|^)#(\S+), but I need a correct start index (without space).
Here is in JS:
var regex = new RegExp(/(?:(?<=\s)|^)#(\S+)/g);
Error parsing regular expression: Invalid regular expression:
/(?:(?<=\s)|^)#(\S+)/
What am I doing wrong?
UPDATE
Ok, no lookbehind in JS :(
But anyways, I need a regex to get the proper start and end index of my match. Without leading space.
Make sure you always select the right regex engine at regex101.com. See an issue that occurred due to using a JS-only compatible regex with [^] construct in Python.
JS regex - at the time of answering this question - did not support lookbehinds. Now, it becomes more and more adopted after its introduction in ECMAScript 2018. You do not really need it here since you can use capturing groups:
var re = /(?:\s|^)#(\S+)/g;
var str = 's #vln1\n#vln2\n';
var res = [];
while ((m = re.exec(str)) !== null) {
res.push(m[1]);
}
console.log(res);
The (?:\s|^)#(\S+) matches a whitespace or the start of string with (?:\s|^), then matches #, and then matches and captures into Group 1 one or more non-whitespace chars with (\S+).
To get the start/end indices, use
var re = /(\s|^)#\S+/g;
var str = 's #vln1\n#vln2\n';
var pos = [];
while ((m = re.exec(str)) !== null) {
pos.push([m.index+m[1].length, m.index+m[0].length]);
}
console.log(pos);
BONUS
My regex works at regex101.com, but not in...
First of all, have you checked the Code Generator link in the Tools pane on the left?
All languages - "Literal string" vs. "String literal" alert - Make sure you test against the same text used in code, literal string, at the regex tester. A common scenario is copy/pasting a string literal value directly into the test string field, with all string escape sequences like \n (line feed char), \r (carriage return), \t (tab char). See Regex_search c++, for example. Mind that they must be replaced with their literal counterparts. So, if you have in Python text = "Text\n\n abc", you must use Text, two line breaks, abc in the regex tester text field. Text.*?abc will never match it although you might think it "works". Yes, . does not always match line break chars, see How do I match any character across multiple lines in a regular expression?
All languages - Backslash alert - Make sure you correctly use a backslash in your string literal, in most languages, in regular string literals, use double backslash, i.e. \d used at regex101.com must written as \\d. In raw string literals, use a single backslash, same as at regex101. Escaping word boundary is very important, since, in many languages (C#, Python, Java, JavaScript, Ruby, etc.), "\b" is used to define a BACKSPACE char, i.e. it is a valid string escape sequence. PHP does not support \b string escape sequence, so "/\b/" = '/\b/' there.
All languages - Default flags - Global and Multiline - Note that by default m and g flags are enabled at regex101.com. So, if you use ^ and $, they will match at the start and end of lines correspondingly. If you need the same behavior in your code check how multiline mode is implemented and either use a specific flag, or - if supported - use an inline (?m) embedded (inline) modifier. The g flag enables multiple occurrence matching, it is often implemented using specific functions/methods. Check your language reference to find the appropriate one.
line-breaks - Line endings at regex101.com are LF only, you can't test strings with CRLF endings, see regex101.com VS myserver - different results. Solutions can be different for each regex library: either use \R (PCRE, Java, Ruby) or some kind of \v (Boost, PCRE), \r?\n, (?:\r\n?|\n)/(?>\r\n?|\n) (good for .NET) or [\r\n]+ in other libraries (see answers for C#, PHP). Another issue related to the fact that you test your regex against a multiline string (not a list of standalone strings/lines) is that your patterns may consume the end of line, \n, char with negated character classes, see an issue like that. \D matched the end of line char, and in order to avoid it, [^\d\n] could be used, or other alternatives.
php - You are dealing with Unicode strings, or want shorthand character classes to match Unicode characters, too (e.g. \w+ to match Стрибижев or Stribiżew, or \s+ to match hard spaces), then you need to use u modifier, see preg_match() returns 0 although regex testers work - To match all occurrences, use preg_match_all, not preg_match with /...pattern.../g, see PHP preg_match to find multiple occurrences and "Unknown modifier 'g' in..." when using preg_match in PHP?- Your regex with inline backreference like \1 refuses to work? Are you using a double quoted string literal? Use a single-quoted one, see Backreference does not work in PHP
phplaravel - Mind you need the regex delimiters around the pattern, see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22430529
python - Note that re.search, re.match, re.fullmatch, re.findall and re.finditer accept the regex as the first argument, and the input string as the second argument. Not re.findall("test 200 300", r"\d+"), but re.findall(r"\d+", "test 200 300"). If you test at regex101.com, please check the "Code Generator" page. - You used re.match that only searches for a match at the start of the string, use re.search: Regex works fine on Pythex, but not in Python - If the regex contains capturing group(s), re.findall returns a list of captures/capture tuples. Either use non-capturing groups, or re.finditer, or remove redundant capturing groups, see re.findall behaves weird - If you used ^ in the pattern to denote start of a line, not start of the whole string, or used $ to denote the end of a line and not a string, pass re.M or re.MULTILINE flag to re method, see Using ^ to match beginning of line in Python regex
- If you try to match some text across multiple lines, and use re.DOTALL or re.S, or [\s\S]* / [\s\S]*?, and still nothing works, check if you read the file line by line, say, with for line in file:. You must pass the whole file contents as the input to the regex method, see Getting Everything Between Two Characters Across New Lines. - Having trouble adding flags to regex and trying something like pattern = r"/abc/gi"? See How to add modifers to regex in python?
c#, .net - .NET regex does not support possessive quantifiers like ++, *+, ??, {1,10}?, see .NET regex matching digits between optional text with possessive quantifer is not working - When you match against a multiline string and use RegexOptions.Multiline option (or inline (?m) modifier) with an $ anchor in the pattern to match entire lines, and get no match in code, you need to add \r? before $, see .Net regex matching $ with the end of the string and not of line, even with multiline enabled - To get multiple matches, use Regex.Matches, not Regex.Match, see RegEx Match multiple times in string - Similar case as above: splitting a string into paragraphs, by a double line break sequence - C# / Regex Pattern works in online testing, but not at runtime - You should remove regex delimiters, i.e. #"/\d+/" must actually look like #"\d+", see Simple and tested online regex containing regex delimiters does not work in C# code - If you unnecessarily used Regex.Escape to escape all characters in a regular expression (like Regex.Escape(#"\d+\.\d+")) you need to remove Regex.Escape, see Regular Expression working in regex tester, but not in c#
dartflutter - Use raw string literal, RegExp(r"\d"), or double backslashes (RegExp("\\d")) - https://stackoverflow.com/questions/59085824
javascript - Double escape backslashes in a RegExp("\\d"): Why do regex constructors need to be double escaped?
- (Negative) lookbehinds unsupported by most browsers: Regex works on browser but not in Node.js - Strings are immutable, assign the .replace result to a var - The .replace() method does change the string in place - Retrieve all matches with str.match(/pat/g) - Regex101 and Js regex search showing different results or, with RegExp#exec, RegEx to extract all matches from string using RegExp.exec- Replace all pattern matches in string: Why does javascript replace only first instance when using replace?
javascriptangular - Double the backslashes if you define a regex with a string literal, or just use a regex literal notation, see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/56097782
java - Word boundary not working? Make sure you use double backslashes, "\\b", see Regex \b word boundary not works - Getting invalid escape sequence exception? Same thing, double backslashes - Java doesn't work with regex \s, says: invalid escape sequence - No match found is bugging you? Run Matcher.find() / Matcher.matches() - Why does my regex work on RegexPlanet and regex101 but not in my code? - .matches() requires a full string match, use .find(): Java Regex pattern that matches in any online tester but doesn't in Eclipse - Access groups using matcher.group(x): Regex not working in Java while working otherwise - Inside a character class, both [ and ] must be escaped - Using square brackets inside character class in Java regex - You should not run matcher.matches() and matcher.find() consecutively, use only if (matcher.matches()) {...} to check if the pattern matches the whole string and then act accordingly, or use if (matcher.find()) to check if there is a single match or while (matcher.find()) to find multiple matches (or Matcher#results()). See Why does my regex work on RegexPlanet and regex101 but not in my code?
scala - Your regex attempts to match several lines, but you read the file line by line (e.g. use for (line <- fSource.getLines))? Read it into a single variable (see matching new line in Scala regex, when reading from file)
kotlin - You have Regex("/^\\d+$/")? Remove the outer slashes, they are regex delimiter chars that are not part of a pattern. See Find one or more word in string using Regex in Kotlin - You expect a partial string match, but .matchEntire requires a full string match? Use .find, see Regex doesn't match in Kotlin
mongodb - Do not enclose /.../ with single/double quotation marks, see mongodb regex doesn't work
c++ - regex_match requires a full string match, use regex_search to find a partial match - Regex not working as expected with C++ regex_match - regex_search finds the first match only. Use sregex_token_iterator or sregex_iterator to get all matches: see What does std::match_results::size return? - When you read a user-defined string using std::string input; std::cin >> input;, note that cin will only get to the first whitespace, to read the whole line properly, use std::getline(std::cin, input); - C++ Regex to match '+' quantifier - "\d" does not work, you need to use "\\d" or R"(\d)" (a raw string literal) - This regex doesn't work in c++ - Make sure the regex is tested against a literal text, not a string literal, see Regex_search c++
go - Double backslashes or use a raw string literal: Regular expression doesn't work in Go - Go regex does not support lookarounds, select the right option (Go) at regex101.com before testing! Regex expression negated set not working golang
groovy - Return all matches: Regex that works on regex101 does not work in Groovy
r - Double escape backslashes in the string literal: "'\w' is an unrecognized escape" in grep - Use perl=TRUE to PCRE engine ((g)sub/(g)regexpr): Why is this regex using lookbehinds invalid in R?
oracle - Greediness of all quantifiers is set by the first quantifier in the regex, see Regex101 vs Oracle Regex (then, you need to make all the quantifiers as greedy as the first one)] - \b does not work? Oracle regex does not support word boundaries at all, use workarounds as shown in Regex matching works on regex tester but not in oracle
firebase - Double escape backslashes, make sure ^ only appears at the start of the pattern and $ is located only at the end (if any), and note you cannot use more than 9 inline backreferences: Firebase Rules Regex Birthday
firebasegoogle-cloud-firestore - In Firestore security rules, the regular expression needs to be passed as a string, which also means it shouldn't be wrapped in / symbols, i.e. use allow create: if docId.matches("^\\d+$").... See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/63243300
google-data-studio - /pattern/g in REGEXP_REPLACE must contain no / regex delimiters and flags (like g) - see How to use Regex to replace square brackets from date field in Google Data Studio?
google-sheets - If you think REGEXEXTRACT does not return full matches, truncates the results, you should check if you have redundant capturing groups in your regex and remove them, or convert the capturing groups to non-capturing by add ?: after the opening (, see Extract url domain root in Google Sheet
sed - Why does my regular expression work in X but not in Y?
word-boundarypcrephp - [[:<:]] and [[:>:]] do not work in the regex tester, although they are valid constructs in PCRE, see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48670105
snowflake-cloud-data-platform snowflake-sql - If you are writing a stored procedure, and \\d does not work, you need to double them again and use \\\\d, see REGEX conversion of VARCHAR value to DATE in Snowflake stored procedure using RLIKE not consistent.

In Regex How to find and replace characters when they are not within other alphabetic characters?

I'm formatting a datetime string in javascript by Regex, so I want:
Find and replace all d characters when d is not within other alphabetic characters. like this:
Find and replace all dd characters when dd is not within other alphabetic characters. like this:
I tested /\bd\b/mg pattern but its result is not which I want everytime.
How should I exclude unwanted cases in the following command:
str = str.replace(/\bd\b/mg, number);
The regular expression You posted does not consider _ as a word boundary, so it does not replace the character as expected.
In order to include this character as well, either before or after the d character to be replaced, You can use expressions similar to these:
To replace d:
/(\b|_)(d)(\b|_)/mg
To replace dd:
/(\b|_)(dd)(\b|_)/mg
Or to replace both in the same way (if it's acceptable):
/(\b|_)(d|dd)(\b|_)/mg
In comments under this answer in another thread on StackOverflow, it was also suggested to use a library that can format dates, instead of implementing it by Yourself.
UPDATE: As someone mentioned, the issue with this is also that including _ in the regular expression, removes it after the replacement. However, You can call replace and use capturing parentheses references, like this:
str.replace(/(\b|_)(d)(\b|_)/mg, "$1" + number + "$3")
I've updated earlier expressions posted in this answer to work with this method.
Please note that I'm not aware of all the cases You want to consider, so if You have any problems using the suggested solution or it does not work as expected in Your case, please let me know, so I can try to help.
I could use a lookahead and if you are not using JavaScript then a lookbehind as well.
example lookahead which checks if there is no following alpha character:
(?=[^a-zA-Z])
If you are using JavaScript it doesn't support lookbehind so you will need to use a capturing group and backreferencing.
For JS capture the part in the outermost parentheses and then use \1, \2... to target:
[^a-zA-Z](d(?=[^a-zA-Z]))
non-JS can use lookbehind:
(?<=[^a-zA-Z])d(?=[^a-zA-Z])

How to match all words starting with dollar sign but not slash dollar

I want to match all words which are starting with dollar sign but not slash and dollar sign.
I already try few regex.
(?:(?!\\)\$\w+)
\\(\\?\$\w+)\b
String
$10<i class="">$i01d</i>\$id
Expected result
*$10*
*$i01d*
but not this
*$id*
After find all expected matching word i want to replace this my object.
One option is to eliminate escape sequences first, and then match the cleaned-up string:
s = String.raw`$10<i class="">$i01d</i>\$id`
found = s.replace(/\\./g, '').match(/\$\w+/g)
console.log(found)
The big problem here is that you need a negative lookbehind, however, JavaScript does not support it. It's possible to emulate it crudely, but I will offer an alternative which, while not great, will work:
var input = '$10<i class="">$i01d</i>\\$id';
var regex = /\b\w+\b\$(?!\\)/g;
//sample implementation of a string reversal function. There are better implementations out there
function reverseString(string) {
return string.split("").reverse().join("");
}
var reverseInput = reverseString(input);
var matches = reverseInput
.match(regex)
.map(reverseString);
console.log(matches);
It is not elegant but it will do the job. Here is how it works:
JavaScript does support a lookahead expression ((?>)) and a negative lookahead ((?!)). Since this is the reverse of of a negative lookbehind, you can reverse the string and reverse the regex, which will match exactly what you want. Since all the matches are going to be in reverse, you need to also reverse them back to the original.
It is not elegant, as I said, since it does a lot of string manipulations but it does produce exactly what you want.
See this in action on Regex101
Regex explanation Normally, the "match x long as it's not preceded by y" will be expressed as (?<!y)x, so in your case, the regex will be
/(?<!\\)\$\b\w+\b/g
demonstration (not JavaScript)
where
(?<!\\) //do not match a preceding "\"
\$ //match literal "$"
\b //word boundary
\w+ //one or more word characters
\b //second word boundary, hence making the match a word
When the input is reversed, so do all the tokens in order to match. Furthermore, the negative lookbehind gets inverted into a negative lookahead of the form x(?!y) so the new regular expression is
/\b\w+\b\$(?!\\)/g;
This is more difficult than it appears at first blush. How like Regular Expressions!
If you have look-behind available, you can try:
/(?<!\\)\$\w+/g
This is NOT available in JS. Alternatively, you could specify a boundary that you know exists and use a capture group like:
/\s(\$\w+)/g
Unfortunately, you cannot rely on word boundaries via /b because there's no such boundary before '\'.
Also, this is a cool site for testing your regex expressions. And this explains the word boundary anchor.
If you're using a language that supports negative lookback assertions you can use something like this.
(?<!\\)\$\w+
I think this is the cleanest approach, but unfortunately it's not supported by all languages.
This is a hackier implementation that may work as well.
(?:(^\$\w+)|[^\\](\$\w+))
This matches either
A literal $ at the beginning of a line followed by multiple word characters. Or...
A literal $ this is preceded by any character except a backslash.
Here is a working example.

What is this "/\,$/"?

Tried to search for /\,$/ online, but coudnt find anything.
I have:
coords = coords.replace(/\,$/, "");
Im guessing it returns coords string index number. What I have to search online for this, so I can learn more?
/\,$/ finds the comma character (,) at the end of a string (denoted by the $) and replaces it with empty (""). You sometimes see this in regex code aiming to clean up excerpts of text.
It's a regular expression to remove a trailing comma.
That thing is a Regular Expression, also known as regex or regexp. It is a way to "match" strings using some rules. If you want to learn how to use it in JavaScript, read the Mozilla Developer Network page about RegExp.
By the way, regular expressions are also available on most languages and in some tools. It is a very useful thing to learn.
That's a regular expression that finds a comma at the end of a string. That code removes the comma.
// defines a JavaScript regular expression, used to match a pattern within a string.
\,$ is the pattern
In this case \, translates to ,. A backslash is used to escape special characters, but in this case, it's not necessary. An example where it would be necessary would be to remove trailing periods. If you tried to do that with /.$/ the period here has a different meaning; it is used as a wildcard to match [almost] any character (aside for some newlines). So in this case to match on "." (period character) you would have to escape the wildcard (/\.$/).
When $ is placed at the end of the pattern, it means only look at the end of the string. This means that you can't mistakingly find a comma anywhere in the middle of the string (e.g., not after help in help, me,), only at the end (trailing). It also speeds of the regular expression search considerably. If you wanted to match on characters only at the beginning of the string, you would start off the pattern with a carat (^), for instance /^,/ would find a comma at the start of a string if one existed.
It's also important to note that you're only removing one comma, whereas if you use the plus (+) after the comma, you'd be replacing one or more: /,+$/.
Without the +; trailing commas,, becomes trailing commas,
With the +; no trailing comma,, becomes no trailing comma

Writing a Javascript regex that includes special reserved characters

I'm writing a function that takes a prospective filename and validates it in order to ensure that no system disallowed characters are in the filename. These are the disallowed characters: / \ | * ? " < >
I could obviously just use string.indexOf() to search for each special char one by one, but that's a lot longer than it would be to just use string.search() using a regular expression to find any of those characters in the filename.
The problem is that most of these characters are considered to be part of describing a regular expression, so I'm unsure how to include those characters as actually being part of the regex itself. For example, the / character in a Javascript regex tells Javascript that it is the beginning or end of the regex. How would one write a JS regex that functionally behaves like so: filename.search(\ OR / OR | OR * OR ? OR " OR < OR >)
Put your stuff in a character class like so:
[/\\|*?"<>]
You're gonna have to escape the backslash, but the other characters lose their special meaning. Also, RegExp's test() method is more appropriate than String.search in this case.
filenameIsInvalid = /[/\\|*?"<>]/.test(filename);
Include a backslash before the special characters [\^$.|?*+(){}, for instance, like \$
You can also search for a character by specified ASCII/ANSI value. Use \xFF where FF are 2 hexadecimal digits. Here is a hex table reference. http://www.asciitable.com/ Here is a regex reference http://www.regular-expressions.info/reference.html
The correct syntax of the regex is:
/^[^\/\\|\*\?"<>]+$/
The [^ will match anything, but anything that is matched in the [^] group will return the match as null. So to check for validation is to match against null.
Demo: jsFiddle.
Demo #2: Comparing against null.
The first string is valid; the second is invalid, hence null.
But obviously, you need to escape regex characters that are used in the matching. To escape a character that is used for regex needs to have a backslash before the character, e.g. \*, \/, \$, \?.
You'll need to escape the special characters. In javascript this is done by using the \ (backslash) character.
I'd recommend however using something like xregexp which will handle the escaping for you if you wish to match a string literal (something that is lacking in javascript's native regex support).

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