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I was wondering if there was any way or a pattern to use in the .Split() method so that when I split a sentence by a period, it doesnt split a decimal number (suppose there exists a decimal value in a sentence).

For instance: "Windows Phone 8.1 now has 'Cortana', a Siri-like feature for the platform."

When I Split by period, it will split at the 8.1 number. I would like to SKIP that decimal number as its still part of the the sentence so that when I do split by period, the decimal inside the sentence will still be there.

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    Change your split argument to ". " instead of using ".", that way it'll split only on sentences end. May need to split on ".\n" too however. Apr 6, 2014 at 5:47

2 Answers 2

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I do not have a C# compiler handy, but the following regex should do the trick. I tested it in Java, which is relatively similar in regex handling. It will split on any . that does not have both a digit before and a digit after.

Regex reg = new Regex("(?<!\\d)\\.(?!\\d)|(?<=\\d)\\.(?!\\d)|(?<!\\d)\\.(?=\\d)");

string[] output = reg.split(input);

I am not sure whether you need to do \\. in C#, so you may have to play with removing \\ from in front.

The following code:

using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
using System.IO;
using System;

public class Program {
    public static void Main(string[] args) {
        string input = "Windows Phone 8.1 now has 'Cortana', a Siri-like feature for the platform.";
        Regex reg = new Regex("(?<!\\d)\\.(?!\\d)|(?<=\\d)\\.(?!\\d)|(?<!\\d)\\.(?=\\d)");

        string[] output = reg.Split(input);
        Console.WriteLine(output[0]);
    }
}

Outputs:

Windows Phone 8.1 now has 'Cortana', a Siri-like feature for the platform
7
  • @KarimO., Good to know I haven't completely forgotten my C# syntax. :)
    – merlin2011
    Apr 6, 2014 at 6:02
  • My mistake, although the pattern does work, it still doesn't skip the decimal number, rather it splits on it. So I'm getting something like this: "Windows Phone" "now has Cortana...". I want to keep the number.
    – Karim O.
    Apr 6, 2014 at 7:04
  • @KarimO., The pattern is intended to not split on the period inside. That implies that the regex does not work in C#. I just got a mono compiler, I will test it and updated.
    – merlin2011
    Apr 6, 2014 at 7:08
  • @KarimO., See the update. I have tested with the full code I provided, and it skips the 8.1 for this test case. Can you provide a test case that breaks?
    – merlin2011
    Apr 6, 2014 at 7:27
  • @merlin2011 The following will break: Hello 8.Hi., Hello.9 rabbits.. I.e. if there is missed space after the period. But if there is always a space, then it is easier to split by period with whitespace following. Apr 6, 2014 at 7:33
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I think you can do:

var output =  Regex.Split(input,@"(?!.*\w)\.");

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