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I am looking for a single java regex for asserting that a String (password actually), of any length, has:

  • at least 2 lowercase letters
  • at least 2 uppercase letters
  • at least 2 number characters
  • at least 1 character not a letter or number

For use with matches, like:

password.matches("some regex");

The "important" part here is that there must be more than one of a character type. Other questions I've found talk about "at least one", not "at least two" of a character type.

It could be done with multiple matches() calls, but the regex will be externalised as a single String so it needs to be one call to matches().

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  • i think it has something to do with look aheads, which I'm not familiar with to get right
    – Bohemian
    Dec 28, 2012 at 23:34
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    I think this cannot be done by a regexp. But is easily done with a few lines of plain old java code.
    – MrSmith42
    Dec 28, 2012 at 23:34
  • I think it can be easily done by using 4 separate regex-es.
    – alex
    Dec 28, 2012 at 23:41
  • What happens to the regexp when the complexity rules change?
    – clstrfsck
    Dec 28, 2012 at 23:49
  • @msandiford see edit - it would be no problem
    – Bohemian
    Dec 29, 2012 at 0:27

1 Answer 1

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In theory, you could use a pattern along the lines of the following:

(?=.*[A-Z].*[A-Z])(?=.*[a-z].*[a-z])(?=.*\\d.*\\d)(?=.*[^A-Za-z\\d]).*

However, for practical uses, I would rather stick with proper programming instead of relying on regular expressions like this one.

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    +1 also to make it work with matches add .* at the end of regex since look-around is is zero-width.
    – Pshemo
    Dec 28, 2012 at 23:58
  • @Pshemo: Of course, you're right. I completely forgot about that behaviour. I've now edited my post. +1
    – Patrickdev
    Dec 28, 2012 at 23:59
  • Will it match password "Aa1Aa1!"?
    – alex
    Dec 29, 2012 at 0:02
  • @user1883592: Yes, it does match that.
    – Patrickdev
    Dec 29, 2012 at 0:03
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    @user1883592: You do when using the String.matcher() function. It checks for an exact match, meaning that (in terms of speaking) it adds the ^ to the beginning and $ to the end if not added in the string. For example, the expression foo (read: ^foo$) will not match the string "foobar". However, foo.* (read: ^foo.*$) will match "foobar".
    – Patrickdev
    Dec 29, 2012 at 1:03

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