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I am using an application that allows the use of a regex to control the naming of entities.

I have a bunch of entities named like this (each line is the whole name):

Subsystem - CPU - Utilisation [1x]
Subsystem - CPU - Utilisation [2x]
Subsystem - CPU - Utilisation [4x]
Subsystem - CPU - Queue Length
Subsystem - Disk - Space
Subsystem - Disk - Capacity

And I need to use the regex to turn each one into this:

CPU \n Utilisation
CPU \n Queue Length
Disk \n Space
Disk \n Capacity

(the spaces around the \n are for clarity, and not in the real output)

The regex I'm using for that is:

Find:     ^Subsystem - (.*) - (.*)( \[.*\])$
Replace:  ${1}\n${2}

Which works for the ones with a [something] part, but not those without.

Essentially, I need to get part1 and part2, where part2 is terminated either by [ or the end of the line.

2
  • 1
    What I don't understand is what do you want to do with [1x] for example, because it shows nowhere on your expected output. If you're just going to ignore them, no need to add it in the regex.
    – m0skit0
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:10
  • 1
    I need to exclude them. If I leave it out entirely, then {2} will contain the [part].
    – Cylindric
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:19

5 Answers 5

3

This regex should get you the matches:

^Subsystem - ([^\s-]+) - ([^\s\[]+)(?=(?:\s\[)|$).*$

Tested at this Rubular link

Edit:
Updated to include "Queue Length"

^Subsystem - ([^\s-]+) - (.+?)(?=(?:\s+\[)|$).*$

Tested at this Rubular link

Breakdown:

  • ^Subsystem - :self explanatory, matching the first few constant chars
  • ([^\s-]+) :capturing group of a negative charset, basically that matches anything until it hits a space or a hyphen
  • (.+?)(?=(?:\s+\[)|$) :Positive lookahead to match anything (non-greedily) that is always followed by EITHER spaces and "[" OR end of line. The ?: is a non-capturing group so that it does not match it.
  • .*$ :match anything else until end of line
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  • Almost! It's missing the "Queue Length" item, seemingly because of the space in the phrase.
    – Cylindric
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:23
  • Legendary. Thank you. Might take me a while to work out what it's doing, but it works!
    – Cylindric
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:30
  • Such useless complications actually :)
    – m0skit0
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:33
  • @m0skit0 Do you have a less uselessly complicated solution?
    – Cylindric
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:34
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Try this (make the last part optional - zero or once):

^Subsystem - (.*) - (.*)( \[.*\])?$

That should work!

Also, I love using http://rubular.com/ to try out my regexps.

3
  • Good tip with Rubular, not seen that before. Your regex doesn't work with my input and output though.
    – Cylindric
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:21
  • this includes the [...] in the matches. Morever you need to make the last group a non-capturing one.
    – Kash
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:23
  • Thanks guys! I had just tested it quickly on rubular and it seemed to work, but @Kash, your answer is far superior, good Sir! :) Aug 30, 2012 at 16:23
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(Tested on Notepad++)

.+?- +([\w ]+) +- +([\w ]+) .*

Explanation:

.+?- non-greedy until first dash -

+([\w ]+) + - second word (only letters and spaces) match between 1 or more spaces

- +([\w ]+) - second word (only letters and spaces) match preceded by dash and one or more spaces

.* - the rest of the string

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  • this regex would exclude "Length" because \w does not include space.
    – Kash
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:38
  • That's excluding anything that doesn't have a [] element.
    – Cylindric
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:53
-1

Then you can just make the [...] part optional :

^Subsystem - (.*) - (.*?)(?: \[.*\])?$
2
  • I still get the [part] in my results.
    – Cylindric
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:22
  • this includes the [...] in the matches. Morever you need to make the last group a non-capturing one. Your * is greedy
    – Kash
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:24
-1

Just need another * before the $ sign.
Use as below:
^Subsystem - (.*) - (.*)( \[.*\])*$

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