vote up 6 vote down star
4

I want an expression that will fail when it encounters words such as "boon.ini" and "http". The goal would be to take this expression and be able to construct for any set of keywords.

flag
can you post the regex you are using currently and explain what its purpose is? – JustinD Sep 22 '08 at 19:10
It might help if you provided some sample input and what your expected result is for the input. – Haacked Sep 22 '08 at 19:10

5 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check
^(?:(?!boon\.ini|http).)*$\r?\n?

(taken from RegexBuddy's library) will match any line that does not contain boon.ini and/or http. Is that what you wanted?

link|flag
Don’t forget to escape the .. – Gumbo May 9 at 10:29
vote up 8 vote down

Rather than negating the result within the expression, you should do it in your code. That way, the expression becomes pretty simple.

\b(boon\.ini|http)\b

Would return true if boon.ini or http was anywhere in your string. It won't match words like httpd or httpxyzzy because of the \b, or word boundaries. If you want, you could just remove them and it will match those too. To add more keywords, just add more pipes.

\b(boon\.ini|http|foo|bar)\b
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

you might be well served by writing a regex that will succeed when it encounters the words you're looking for, and then invert the condition.

For instance, in perl you'd use:

if (!/boon\.ini|http/) {
    # the string passed!
}
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Which language/regexp library? I thought you question was around ASP.NET in which case you can see the "negative lookhead" section of this article: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms972966.aspx

Strictly speaking negation of a regular expression, still defines a regular language but there are very few libraries/languages/tool that allow to express it.

Negative lookahed may serve you the same but the actual syntax depends on what you are using. Tim's answer is an example with (?...)

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

An alternative expression that could be used:

^(?!.*IgnoreMe.*).*$

^ = indicates start of line
$ = indicates the end of the line
(?! Expression) = indicates zero width look ahead negative match on the expression

The ^ at the front is needed, otherwise when evaluated the negative look ahead could start from somewhere within/beyond the 'IgnoreMe' text - and make a match where you don't want it too.

e.g. If you use the regex:

(?!.*IgnoreMe.*).*$

With the input "Hello IgnoreMe Please", this will will result in something like: "gnoreMe Please" as the negative look ahead finds that there is no complete string 'IgnoreMe' after the 'I'.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.