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I am having difficulty matching string "79¢ /lb" with this regex: (\$|¢)\d+(.\d{1,2})?

It works fine when the cent symbol appears in the beginning, but I don't know what needs to be added near the end of the string.

Basically I'm planning to extract a float value from this price tag, that is, 0.79, thanks in advance, I'm using ruby.

3 Answers 3

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Well, that regex requires the $ or ¢ to be at the start of the string. To match 79¢ /lb, you'll need something like:

(\d+)¢

where the ¢ comes after the digits.

A single regex to match the many varied formats that you're likely to see will be a little more complex. I would suggest either doing it as multiple regexes (for simplicity), or asking another question here specifying the full range of strings you want to capture the prices from.

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  • Thanks paxdiablo. Actually, I wanted the regex to match strings like "$3.50 kg", or "¢69 /100g", etc. I am just looking for the numeric value accompagning $ or ¢, whether they appear at the beginning or end of the numeric value, ignoring the surrounding text. Jun 9, 2011 at 2:39
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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:

  1. cents, with the ¢ symbol before the price
  2. cents, with the ¢ symbol after the price
  3. dollars (and optional cents), with the $ symbol before the price
  4. dollars (and optional cents), with the $ symbol after the price

First, write a regex for each case separately:

  1. ¢(\d{1,2})\b
  2. \b(\d{1,2})¢
  3. \$(\d+(?:\.\d{2})?)\b
  4. \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{¢}.

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Maybe you don't need to do everything in your reg exp;

#price is the string that contains the price
if price =~ /\$|¢/
   value = string.match(/\d+/)
end

Or something along those lines.

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