I am trying to extract email address from a txt file. I've thought about surrounding words that contain the '@' character. Does anybody know a expression to do that?
-
2What have you tried so far?– Alex ReynoldsAug 15, 2012 at 8:05
-
maybe you want regex? if yes, then see something like this (see inside this module)– gaussblurincAug 15, 2012 at 8:06
-
@loldop: I want a regex but thats is not what I am looking for. As you can see the description of that module: "This module determines whether an email address is well-formed, and optionally, whether a mail host exists for the domain." What I am looking for is not for check if any email es valid, what I am looking for is just for extracting email addressed from a txt file.– PeterstoneAug 15, 2012 at 8:12
-
2Just google "regex mail address"...– mpeAug 15, 2012 at 8:16
-
1mpe, don't send people off to a Web search engine. Link to a Stack Overflow question with good answers instead.– daximAug 15, 2012 at 12:52
Add a comment
|
2 Answers
Whenever you need some reasonably common matching problem resolve in Perl, you should always first check the Regexp::Common
family on CPAN. In this case: Regexp::Common::Email::Address
. From POD Synopsys:
use Regexp::Common qw[Email::Address];
use Email::Address;
while (<>) {
my (@found) = /($RE{Email}{Address})/g;
my (@addrs) = map $_->address, Email::Address->parse("@found");
print "X-Addresses: ", join(", ", @addrs), "\n";
}
-
Thank you for your post even is the typical question that generates more questions when you try to compilate. See my new question about that: stackoverflow.com/questions/11983041/… Aug 16, 2012 at 8:15
Here's a very quick and dirty regex which will match non-whitespace characters on either side of an @
:
/\S+@\S+/
This will match [email protected] in
some rubbish text [email protected] more rubbish text
Hope this helps.