It's easiest to figure out the right regex when you consider each case separately. If I understand your question correctly, there are 4 cases:
- cents, with the ¢ symbol before the price
- cents, with the ¢ symbol after the price
- dollars (and optional cents), with the $ symbol before the price
- dollars (and optional cents), with the $ symbol after the price
First, write a regex for each case separately:
¢(\d{1,2})\b
\b(\d{1,2})¢
\$(\d+(?:\.\d{2})?)\b
\b(\d+(?:\.\d{2})?)\$
Then, combine them into a single regex:
regex = %r{
¢(\d{1,2})\b | # case 1
\b(\d{1,2})¢ | # case 2
\$(\d+(?:\.\d{2})?)\b | # case 3
\b(\d+(?:\.\d{2})?)\$ # case 4
}x
Then, match to your heart's content:
string_with_prices.scan(regex) do |match|
# If there was a match in the first two groups, it's for cents
cents = $1 || $2
# ...and the last two groups are dollars.
dollars = $3 || $4
if cents
puts "found price (cents): #{cents}"
elsif dollars
puts "found price (dollars): #{dollars}"
else
puts 'unknown match!'
end
end
Note: To test this code, I had to use 'c' instead of '¢' because Ruby was telling me invalid multibyte char (US-ASCII)
. To avoid this issue, use a different character encoding, or else figure out the encoded value of the '¢' character and embed it directly in the regex, e.g. %r{\x42}
instead of %r{¢}
.