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I'm trying to split the following (Delphi RTTI output) by the namespace delimiter .:

System.Generics.Collections.TEnumerator<Utils.TPair<System.string,System.string>>

The correct split should be [System, Generics, Collections, TEnumerator<Utils.TPair<System.string,System.string>>].

First I tried a negative lookahead \.(?!\<*[a-zA-Z0-9_.,]*\>), but that matched both the period in Utils.TPair and the leftmost System.string. I am a little surprised, I might add, that it (correctly) matched the period in Collections.TEnumerator. I guess this is a testament to my command of the regex language.

So I tried making it "greedier" by saying this: \.(?!\<*[a-zA-Z0-9_.,<>]*\>), but then no match was found. (I know this isn't what regexers usually mean when they say "greedy", but I couldn't come up with a more suitable description.)

So I decided to go back to scratch. As far as I understand, I should be able to use negative lookarounds to solve my case. In particular: any match following < can effectively be ignored. So I decided (?<!\<[a-zA-Z0-9_]*)\. should solve my problem. It doesn't. Which probably is due to the fact that (many) negative lookbehind implementations don't support variable length strings. (To be specific, PCRE - which is basically what Delphi uses, apparently support variable length alternates. Every alternate has to be fixed at execution, though.)

And thus I turn to you, the Community.

Can anyone please shed some light on this problem, which actually should be quite simple? Would be great!

1 Answer 1

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Try this regex:

\.(?![^.]*[\w_.,]*>)

It basically means: Match all . that are not followed by a . that is before a > und thus inside a <>. It is actually very limited to your example.

See on rubular

A negativ lookbehind can solve this task better:

(?<!<.{0,1000})\.

It means match any . that does not have a < before it.

I tried this in java and it works. Java does not allow to have unlimited lookbehinds, thats why I used a limit of 1000 {0,1000} instead of *. I don't know if PCRE supports it.

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  • You are kidding me - that was fast! Works perfectly. Thanks morja! If I may ask: why are you using the negated character class? I'm reading it like this: Match all periods. But not if the period is followed by anything but a period (an unspecified number of times) then open bracket an unspecified number of times, then a character class an unspecified number of times and finally a closing bracket. What's wrong with my reading? Sep 17, 2012 at 15:01
  • See my comment. I also updated the regex. Hope my explanation makes some sense and the regex fits your needs regardless of its limitation.
    – morja
    Sep 17, 2012 at 15:16
  • I added a second expression that should cover more cases.
    – morja
    Sep 17, 2012 at 15:37
  • Thanks morja, that makes sense. :) I checked the negative lookbehind as well, but got an exception regarding the non-fixed length. Sep 18, 2012 at 8:42

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