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I am trying to extract some words from a string. The two cases look like this:

Case 1: "Group X - Ford Mondeo or similar"
Case 2: "Group X - Ford Mondeo"

I would like a single .NET regex that captures "Ford Mondeo" in both cases. The best I have so far is:

^Group [A-Z] - (?<VehicleModel>.+)(?: or similar)$

which returns: Case 1: "Ford Mondeo" Case 2: "" I have tried this:

^Group [A-Z] - (?<VehicleModel>.+)(?: or similar)?$

which returns:

Case 1: ""
Case 2: "Ford Mondeo"

I was trying to say zero or one occurrences of " or similar". I may need an expression that says "if endswith "or similar" do this else this. I've been using Expresso for a good while now and just cant put my finger on what I need. Can you help?

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  • What does ?: do at the start of the second capture group? Oct 14, 2009 at 14:03
  • It makes it not a capture group. It allows the ? after it to apply to everything in it, but it doesn't get stored as a capture group. Oct 14, 2009 at 14:05

5 Answers 5

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The problem is that .+ in the VehicleGroup captures too much. Append a question mark to make it non-greedy: .+?

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Depending on whether or not you want to accept any whitespace characters:

/^Group\s[A-Z]\s-\s(?<VehicleModel>.+?)(?:\sor\ssimilar)?$/

Will capture the text with whitespace characters including tabs, and

/^Group [A-Z] - (?<VehicleModel>.+?)(?: or similar)?$/

Will capture only if the text uses spaces. Like others said the key is in the .+? which makes the capturing group non-greedy. Without it the first group will swallow the or similar.

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^Group [A-Z] - (?<VehicleModel>.+?)(?:or similar)?$
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Try this:

^Group [A-Z] - (?<VehicleModel>.+?)(?: or similar)?$
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Remove the dot-plus:

^Group [A-Z] - (?<VehicleModel>)(?: or similar)?$

Or maybe try this:

^Group [A-Z] - (?<VehicleModel>.+?)(?: or similar)?$

I'm not familiar with this .net ?<xyz> syntax, maybe it requires the dot-plus? In that case, .+? makes it non-greedy, so that the .+ won't eat up the " or similar".

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