I'm looking for a way to use RegEx to capture groups from two separate expressions, and use them for a search and replace in a single string with the captures shared between the two replaces.
For example:
string input_a = "abc-def-ghi";
string input_b = "123-4567-89";
string pattern_a = "(?<first>def)"; // captures 'def' from input_a and
// names the capture as 'first'
string pattern_b = "(?<second>456)"; // captures '456' from input_b and
// names the capture as 'second'
string translation_a = "A=${first}${second}"; // replacement strings use the named
string translation_b = "B=${second}${first}"; // captures from both RegExs
// I want the results of the replace to give:
Console.Write("Result A: abc-A=def456-ghi"); // result of regex search and replace
// matches on 'def' and replaces this
// with 'A=' followed by 'def' from the
// first expression and '456' from the
// second expression
Console.Write("Result B: 123-B=456def-789"); // same thing again but the other way
// around
My inputs/patterns/translations are all not known at runtime as they are user configurable and stored in a database.
Can anyone suggest a neat elegant way to do this?
UPDATE
To give a little more context to my question, here is a real life example. I'm using this in a telecoms system that processes incoming calls. As calls come in, they have two pieces of information: the dialled number (known at the DDI) and the calling number (known as the CLI).
The system I'm creating needs to route numbers in a very dynamic configurable way using a list of 'rules' stored in a database, which are in fact a set of regular expressions. The rules need to be updated via a GUI, so nothing can be hard coded.
This part of the system does a kind of pre-routing translation on the incoming calls. Some examples include (this is all fictitious data):
DDI CLI
800123400 01373000001
4150800123401 01373000002
123402077000000 01373000003
I need the calls to 'come out the other side' with their DDI and CLI translated. My database holds: DDISearchPattern, DDITranslation, CLISearchPattern, CLITranslation.
My first simple rule is:
DDISearchPattern = "^0?(?<ddi>\d{9})$"
DDITranslation = "0${ddi}"
CLISearchPattern = "^0?(?<cli>\d{9})$"
CLITranslation = "0${cli}"
Sometimes calls hit the system missing the leading zero. This rule will add it back on.
The next rule is to strip of a 415 prefix.
DDISearchPattern = "^4150?(?<ddi>\d{9})$"
DDITranslation = "0${ddi}"
CLISearchPattern = "^0?(?<cli>\d{9})$"
CLITranslation = "0${cli}"
But here is my problem. The in the last example (DDI = 123402077000000) I want to append the CLI to the end of the DDI, so I want to end up with 12340207700000001373000001.
I would like to be able to do this:
DDISearchPattern = "^12340?(?<ddi?\d{9})$"
DDITranslation = "12340${ddi}${cli}"
CLISearchPattern = "^0?(?<cli>\d{9})$"
CLITranslation = "0${cli}"
But unfortunately, the ${cli}
capture group is part of the CLI regex, not the DDI regex. How can I 'load up' one regex with the captured groups from the other regex, so that I can do a replace using the captures from both?
I have found a way to do this, but it's a very messy way using a regex to replace on @'\$\{cli\}'
. I really want to find a simpler better way.
String.Format
to build the strings. The only thing you can combine is the regex to(?<first>def)|(?<second>456)
, but that is rather pointless. I don't think I quite understand your question...