3

I have problems splitting this Line. I want to get each String between "@VAR;" and "@ENDVAR;". So at the End, there should be a output of:

Variable=Speed;Value=Fast;
Variable=Fabricator;Value=Freescale;Op==;

Later I will separate each Substring, using ";" as a delimiter but that I guess wont be that hard. This is how a line looks like:

@VAR;Variable=Speed;Value=Fast;Op==;@ENDVAR;@VAR;Variable=Fabricator;Value=Freescale;Op==;@ENDVAR;

I tried some split-options, but most of the time I just get an empty string. I also tried a Regex. But either the Regex was wrong or it wasnt suitable to my String. Probably its wrong, at school we learnt Regex different then its used in C#, so I was confused while implementing.

Regex.Match(t, @"/@VAR([a-z=a-z]*)/@ENDVAR")

Edit:

One small question: I am iterating over many lines like the one in the question. I use NoIdeas code on the line to get it in shape. The next step would be to print it as a Text-File. To print an Array I would have to loop over it. But in every iteration, when I get a new line, I overwrite the Array with the current splitted string. I put the Rest of my code in the question, would be nice if someone could help me.

string[] w ;
foreach (EA.Element theObjects in myPackageObject.Elements)
{
   theObjects.Type = "Object";
   foreach (EA.Element theElements in PackageHW.Elements)
   {
       if (theObjects.ClassfierID == theElements.ElementID)
       {
          t = theObjects.RunState;
          w = t.Replace("@ENDVAR;", "@VAR;").Replace("@VAR;", ";").Split(new string[] { ";" }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries);

          foreach (string s in w)
          {
             tw2.WriteLine(s);
          }
       }
   }
}

The piece with the foreach-loop is wrong pretty sure. I need something to print each splitted t. Thanks in advance.

3
  • what's tw2? please add it's definition Sep 13, 2013 at 15:34
  • ah sorry, its a Textwriter.
    – Alika87
    Sep 13, 2013 at 18:57
  • And by Text-File I mean, I need the outout for further data processing. The optimal output would be Speed = Fast; Fabricator = Freescale. More general the Variable.Value = Value.Value. After the @VAR and stuff is gone, I have to cut out the field with op== and then I have the ";" as a Delimiter, so that split wont be that hard to realise. I am pretty new to C#, so I have problems realising the stuff I want to do.
    – Alika87
    Sep 13, 2013 at 19:07

7 Answers 7

4

you can do it without regex using

str.Replace("@ENDVAR;", "@VAR;")
  .Split(new string[] { "@VAR;" }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries);

and if you want to save time you can do:

str.Replace("@ENDVAR;", "@VAR;")
  .Replace("@VAR;", ";")
  .Split(new string[] { ";" }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries);
23
  • 3
    @Gusdor what? you can say you don't like it but that's only an opinion... to say it's never the answer you need to back it up with some facts... Sep 12, 2013 at 14:50
  • 1
    @gusdor Now you have two problems.
    – McKay
    Sep 12, 2013 at 14:54
  • 1
    @Gusdor String.Split [is] great for parsing CSV files. Hell, no. It's absolutely the wrong tool for that.
    – sloth
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:03
  • 2
    @Gusdor it's not a good solution for parsing CSV, because CSV has delimiters that need to be considered, e.g. Name,"Boston, MA",11111 how would you do that using string.split?
    – McKay
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:15
  • 1
    when you combine split with linq you get a lot of flexibility in what you can do.
    – tinstaafl
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:21
3

You can use a look ahead assertion here.

@VAR;(.*?)(?=@ENDVAR)

If your string never consists of whitespace between @VAR; and @ENDVAR; you could use the below line, this will not match empty instances of your lines.

@VAR;([^\s]+)(?=@ENDVAR)

See this demo

3
  • the asterisk use here is better than my answer. It will cover instances where there is no content in a line.
    – Gusdor
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:08
  • @VAR;([^\s]+)(?=@ENDVAR) for the \s my compiler tells my unknown escapesequenz??
    – Alika87
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:27
  • Try using @VAR;([^\\s]+)(?=@ENDVAR) or just use @VAR;([^ ]+)(?=@ENDVAR)
    – hwnd
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:29
2

Answer using raw string manipulation.

IEnumerable<string> StuffFoundInside(string biggerString)
{
    var closeDelimeterIndex = 0;
    do
    {
        int openDelimeterIndex = biggerString.IndexOf("@VAR;", startingIndex);
        if (openDelimeterIndex != -1)
        {
            closeDelimeterIndex = biggerString.IndexOf("@ENDVAR;", openDelimeterIndex);
            if (closeDelimiterIndex != -1)
            {
                yield return biggerString.Substring(openDelimeterIndex, closeDelimeterIndex - openDelimiterIndex);
            }
        }    
    } while (closeDelimeterIndex != -1);
}

Making a list and adding each item to the list then returning the list might be faster, depending on how the code using this code would work. This allows it to terminate early, but has the coroutine overhead.

3
  • 1
    Now you have 15 lines of problems :D
    – Gusdor
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:08
  • @Gusdor Oh, I wouldn't really use this in most code. I upvoted the string.split solution, though this one is going to run faster, and I'd use it if performance matters. It hasn't been tested. Pick your poison. I see 4 different kinds of poison that need to be considered: Break-early performance, list get all performance, ease of development, ease of maintenance. I think the string.split option is probably the best overall
    – McKay
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:10
  • This is my personal favorite. It has something for everyone and it will make junior engineers cry into their keyboards! It only creates one string per occurance as well. Kudos.
    – Gusdor
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:13
1

Use this regex:

(?i)@VAR;(.+?)@ENDVAR;

Group 1 in each match will be your line content.

1

(If you don't like regexs)

Code:

var s = "@VAR;Variable=Speed;Value=Fast;Op==;@ENDVAR;@VAR;Variable=Fabricator;Value=Freescale;Op==;@ENDVAR;";
var tokens = s.Split(new String [] {"@ENDVAR;@VAR;"}, StringSplitOptions.None);

foreach (var t in tokens)
{
  var st = t.Replace("@VAR;", "").Replace("@ENDVAR;", "");
  Console.WriteLine(st);
}

Output:

Variable=Speed;Value=Fast;Op==;
Variable=Fabricator;Value=Freescale;Op==;
4
  • But what if there was a character between the endvar and the next begin var?
    – McKay
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:29
  • @McKay It won't work :) I assumed OP will always have strings like the one he wrote in the question.
    – qwertoyo
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:59
  • Yeah, that might be a safe assumption.
    – McKay
    Sep 12, 2013 at 16:03
  • there wont be another char between the end and the begin. Its autogenerated and will have always the same format.
    – Alika87
    Sep 13, 2013 at 6:58
1

Regex.Split works well but yields empty entries that have to be removed as shown here:

string[] result = Regex.Split(input, @"@\w+;")
    .Where(s => s != "")
    .ToArray();
3
  • System.String[] thats the output I get when printing result.
    – Alika87
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:09
  • The answer by @NoIdeaForName fixes that issue.
    – Gusdor
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:09
  • @Alika87: foreach (string s in result) Console.WriteLine(s); Sep 12, 2013 at 15:11
1

I tried some split-options, but most of the time I just get an empty string.

In this case the requirements seem to be simpler than you're stating. Simply splitting and using linq will do your whole operation in one statement:

        string test = "@VAR;Variable=Speed;Value=Fast;Op==;@ENDVAR;@VAR;Variable=Fabricator;Value=Freescale;Op==;@ENDVAR;";

        List<List<string>> strings = (from s in test.Split(new string[]{"@VAR;",";@ENDVAR;"},StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries)
                                let s1 = s.Split(new char[]{';'},StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries).ToList<string>()
                                select (s1)).ToList<List<string>>();

the outpout is:

?strings[0]
Count = 3
    [0]: "Variable=Speed"
    [1]: "Value=Fast"
    [2]: "Op=="
?strings[1]
Count = 3
    [0]: "Variable=Fabricator"
    [1]: "Value=Freescale"
    [2]: "Op=="

To write the data to a file something like this will work:

        foreach (List<string> s in strings)
        {
            System.IO.File.AppendAllLines("textfile1.txt", s);
        }
1
  • You should probably use StartsWith over contains here.
    – Servy
    Sep 12, 2013 at 15:00

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