6

I need to validate serial numbers. For this we use regular expressions in C#, and a certain product, part of the serial number is the "seconds since midnight". There are 86400 seconds in a day, but how can I validate it as a 5-digit number in this string?:

654984051-86400-231324

I can't use this concept:

[0-8][0-6][0-4][0-0][0-0]

Because then 86399 wouldn't be valid. How can I overcome this? I want something like:

[00000-86400]

UPDATE
I want to make it clear that I'm aware of - and agree with - the "don't use regular expressions when there's a simpler way" school-of-thought. Jason's answer is exactly how I'd like to do it, however this serial number validation is for all serial numbers that pass through our system - there's currently no custom validation code for these specific ones. In this case I have a good reason for looking for a regex solution.

Of course, if there isn't one, then that makes the case for custom validation for these particular products undeniable, but I wanted to explore this avenue fully before going with a solution that requires code changes.

8
  • 3
    Some people, when confronted with a problem, think "I know, I'll use regular expressions." Now they have two problems. -- Jamie Zawinski Dec 15, 2009 at 19:14
  • Not really true, but i can't seem to remember the blog post i read about it. Still a good quote...
    – RCIX
    Dec 15, 2009 at 19:15
  • @benjamin I'm not one of those people, I actually made a sound and reasonable decision to pursure regexes in this case. I'd really rather not use them, but if there was one that worked, it would be a config change. If there isn't, and I need to write custom validation code, then that's higher impact to our system and carries much more overhead. Dec 15, 2009 at 19:20
  • If regular expressions are your only tool, you might consider not tagging your question with c# in that case. Dec 15, 2009 at 19:25
  • 1
    Just understood what you meant by "code changes", etc. I've worked on what some people call "legacy" systems before, so I think I know what you mean. It does make it a hard choice... I'm tempted to say that making such a regular expression would be a good compromise, but I'd hate to have to be the "next guy" who has to figure it out when there's a bug. Is it really a huge change to add this validation logic? Doing it regex-only seems like something that will be regretted later. Dec 15, 2009 at 19:33

7 Answers 7

10

Don't use regex? If you're struggling to come up with the regex to parse this that says that maybe it's too complex and you should find something simpler. I see absolutely no benefit to using regex here when a simple

int value;
if(!Int32.TryParse(s, out value)) {
    throw new ArgumentException();
}
if(value < 0 || value > 86400) {
    throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException();
}

will work just fine. It's just so clear and easily maintainable.

3
  • 6
    Regex is a great, powerful tool but I think people reach for it way too often and too quickly anytime a parsing/validation problem comes up.
    – jason
    Dec 15, 2009 at 18:55
  • Whoa, hold your horses - this serial number validation is for all serial numbers that pass through our system - there's no custom validation code for these specific ones. I know to avoid regex if possible, but there are good reasons for it in this case. Dec 15, 2009 at 19:11
  • 2
    That sounds like a great reason to add hooks to your system.
    – Ken
    Dec 15, 2009 at 19:25
7

You don't want to try to use regular expressions for this, you'll end up with something incomprehensible, unwieldy, and difficult to modify (somebody will probably suggest one :). What you want to do is match the string using a regex to make sure that it contains digits in the format you want, then pull out a matching group and check the range using an arithmetic comparison. For example, in pseudocode:

match regex /(\d+)-(\d+)-(\d+)/
serial = capture group 2
if serial >= 0 and serial <= 86400 then
    // serial is valid
end if
6

Generate a Regular Expression to Match an Arbitrary Numeric Range http://utilitymill.com/utility/Regex_For_Range

yields the following regex expression:

\b0*([0-9]{1,4}|[1-7][0-9]{4}|8[0-5][0-9]{3}|86[0-3][0-9]{2}|86400)\b

Description of output:

First, break into equal length ranges:
  0 - 9
  10 - 99
  100 - 999
  1000 - 9999
  10000 - 86400

Second, break into ranges that yield simple regexes:
  0 - 9
  10 - 99
  100 - 999
  1000 - 9999
  10000 - 79999
  80000 - 85999
  86000 - 86399
  86400 - 86400

Turn each range into a regex:
  [0-9]
  [1-9][0-9]
  [1-9][0-9]{2}
  [1-9][0-9]{3}
  [1-7][0-9]{4}
  8[0-5][0-9]{3}
  86[0-3][0-9]{2}
  86400

Collapse adjacent powers of 10:
  [0-9]{1,4}
  [1-7][0-9]{4}
  8[0-5][0-9]{3}
  86[0-3][0-9]{2}
  86400

Combining the regexes above yields:
  0*([0-9]{1,4}|[1-7][0-9]{4}|8[0-5][0-9]{3}|86[0-3][0-9]{2}|86400)

Tested here: http://osteele.com/tools/rework/

6

With the standard 'this-is-not-a-particularly-regexy-problem' caveat,

[0-7]\d{4}|8[0-5]\d{3}|86[0-3]\d{2}|86400 
1
  • Robert Harvey's version also handles numbers under 10000 that aren't 0-padded.
    – Jimmy
    Jan 6, 2010 at 1:11
0

If you really need a pure regex solution I believe this would work although the other posters make a good point about only validating they are digits and then using a matching group to validate the actual number.

([0-7][0-9]{4}) | (8[0-5][0-9]{3}) | (86[0-3][0-9]{2}) | (86400)
1
  • Third times a charm hopefully. Dec 15, 2009 at 19:26
0

I would use regex combined with some .NET code to accomplish this. A pure regex solution isn't going to be easy or efficient to handle large number ranges.

But this will:

Regex myRegex = new Regex(@"\d{9}-(\d{5})-\d{6}");
String value = myRegex.Replace(@"654984051-86400-231324", "$1");

This will grab the value 86400 in this case. And then you'd just check if the captured number is between 0 and 86400 as per Jason's answer.

-1

I don't believe this is possible in regular expressions since this isn't something that can be checked as part of a regular language. In other words, a finite state automata machine cannot recognize this string so a regular expression cannot either.

Edit: This can be recognized by a regex, but not in an elegant way. It would require a monster or chain (e.g.: 00000|00001|00002 or 0{1,5}|0{1,4}1|0{1,4}2). To me, having to enumerate such a large set of possibilities makes it clear that while it is technically possible, it is not feasible or manageable.

7
  • 1
    is this true? I don't really know much about FSA, but the hypothetical counterexample is "00000|00001|... .... |86400"
    – Jimmy
    Dec 15, 2009 at 18:56
  • 5
    It certainly can, because the string representations of every whole number between 0 and 86400 is a finite set. All finite sets can be accepted by a finite-state automaton.
    – Welbog
    Dec 15, 2009 at 18:56
  • You're both definitely right about my omission. I've edited my answer Dec 15, 2009 at 19:08
  • It is feasible in an "elegant" manner by generating the regex programatically... But that would be taking the problem statement upside down... Anyway, as per consensus, RegEx is definitely not appropriate got this type of use cases.
    – Romain
    Dec 15, 2009 at 19:10
  • Generating a 518399 character string is not exactly what I would call elegant and it seems to me that it would be very inefficient to parse and compare against. Dec 15, 2009 at 19:14

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