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Code:

https://aaa.bbb.net/ccc/211099_589944494365122_1446403980_n.jpg

How can I get 589944494365122 out of that string using regex?

The best I can do so far is _(.*) resulting 589944494365122_1446403980_n.jpg

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  • is that url static? or do the surrounding values change? Jan 16, 2013 at 21:03

4 Answers 4

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First, you should generalize your problem description, like that: How can I get the longest non-empty substring of digits after the first _ in string? The regexp you literally asked for is (589944494365122), but that's not what you expect.

According to my guess about what you want, the answer could be _(\d+).

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  • Description lacks the quality caused my language barrier and amount of experience with regex. Your answer did the job. Thanks a ton. Jan 16, 2013 at 21:10
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The rule of extraction I can see in your input is:

211099_589944494365122_1446403980
[0-9]+_ part we want  _[0-9]+

so a regex with look-behind and look-ahead will help:

'(?<=\d_)\d+(?=_\d)'

test with grep:

kent$  echo " https://aaa.bbb.net/ccc/211099_589944494365122_1446403980_n.jpg"|grep -Po '(?<=\d_)\d+(?=_\d)'
589944494365122
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This works;

var s = "https://aaa.bbb.net/ccc/211099_589944494365122_1446403980_n.jpg";
var m = /_([^_]*)/.exec(s);
console.log( m[1] ); // 589944494365122
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I would go with \d+_(\d+)_\d+_n\.jpg, but depending on the exact specification of the URL this may need a little bit of tweaking.

Also depending on the language, this may need to be altered a little bit. The solution I suggest will work for instance in Ruby (as well as many other regex implementations). Here \d matches any digit and \d+ means one or more digits. I assume the letter before .jpg is always n but you may change this by either replacing n with .(any character) or with \w (any word character).

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  • To avoid confusion, I find it's best to show regexes in their "canonical" form. In other words, don't double up the backslashes unless you're presenting the regex in the form of (for example) a Java string literal, like "\\d+".
    – Alan Moore
    Jan 17, 2013 at 2:03
  • I used to write regexes like so,but too often I got the question but your regex is not working on language X and it turns out that the reason is that the backlash is not escaped. So to save one more answer I now add the 'escaped' version. Jan 17, 2013 at 8:49

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