48

For example I have code below string txt="I have strings like West, and West; and west, and Western."

I would like to replace the word west or West with some other word. But I would like not to replace West in Western.

  1. Can I use regular expression in string.replace? I used inputText.Replace("(\\sWest.\\s)",temp); It dos not work.
0

8 Answers 8

71

No, but you can use the Regex class.

Code to replace the whole word (rather than part of the word):

string s = "Go west Life is peaceful there";
s = Regex.Replace(s, @"\bwest\b", "something");
5
  • Looks alright but this will ignore west, and west. And is it case insensitive? May 5, 2010 at 6:44
  • I think it does the same as I am already doing Using 's=s.Replace(" West ","something");' May 5, 2010 at 6:50
  • It works like string s = Regex.Replace(s, @"(\bwest\b)", "something");. And it works for west. and west, and west; as well. Dont really understand why :) May 5, 2010 at 7:06
  • 1
    The "\b" matches a "word boundary". This regex is case sensitive, but you can add a RegexOptions.IgnoreCase (4th param) to make it case insensitive. May 6, 2010 at 7:27
  • 2
    using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
    – John Meyer
    Oct 18, 2021 at 15:18
41

Answer to the question is NO - you cannot use regexp in string.Replace.

If you want to use a regular expression, you must use the Regex class, as everyone stated in their answers.

1
  • 10
    +1 only answer that directly answers the question if you can use String.Replace also for regex expressions
    – drkthng
    Oct 6, 2015 at 9:37
9

Have you looked at Regex.Replace? Also, be sure to catch the return value; Replace (via any string mechanism) returns a new string - it doesn't do an in-place replace.

4

Try using the System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex class. It has a static Replace method. I'm not good with regular expressions, but something like

string outputText = Regex.Replace(inputText, "(\\sWest.\\s)", temp);

should work, if your regular expression is correct.

4

Insert the regular expression in the code before class

using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

below is the code for string replace using regex

string input = "Dot > Not Perls";
// Use Regex.Replace to replace the pattern in the input.
string output = Regex.Replace(input, "some string", ">");

source : http://www.dotnetperls.com/regex-replace

3

USe this code if you want it to be case insensitive

string pattern = @"\bwest\b";
string modifiedString = Regex.Replace(input, pattern, strReplacement, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
3

In Java, String#replace accepts strings in regex format but C# can do this as well using extensions:

public static string ReplaceX(this string text, string regex, string replacement) {
    return Regex.Replace(text, regex, replacement);
}

And use it like:

var text = "      space          more spaces  ";
text.Trim().ReplaceX(@"\s+", " "); // "space more spaces"
1

I agree with Robert Harvey's solution except for one small modification:

s = Regex.Replace(s, @"\bwest\b", "something", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);

This will replace both "West" and "west" with your new word

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