3

I have a string which I want to examine and search for a substring within it. If the substring is found, I want to do something on the original string.

The string looks like this:

"\r\radmin@Modem -- *<456> \radmin@Modem -- *<456> "  

Goal: Search the substring pattern " -- *<456> " if it exists in the string, and return success or fail (the digits number is between 1 to infinite: 1, 5, 36, 76, 478, 975 etc.).

What is the regular expression pattern which I need?

4
  • what about @"-- \*<\d+>" ?
    – Aserre
    Jul 24, 2014 at 9:11
  • yes, its OK and works, Thank you!
    – Orionlk
    Jul 24, 2014 at 9:42
  • Don't consider me as a hater, but this clearly is question "write a code for me" - it still gets upvotes and tons of responses, and even no comment "what have you tried?". It's kinda wrong, don't you think?
    – insomnium_
    Jul 24, 2014 at 13:05
  • @insomnium_ It's not wrong, and my tries was not relevant because nothing works for me (I'm still new with Regex), so I asked for help how to write the Regex that I needed to, and I don't see any problem with that.
    – Orionlk
    Jul 29, 2014 at 15:52

7 Answers 7

3

Use this:

var myRegex = new Regex("(?<=<)[0-9]+(?=>)");
string resultString = myRegex.Match(yourString).Value;
Console.WriteLine(resultString);
// matches 456

See the match in the Regex Demo.

Explanation

  • The lookbehind (?<=<) asserts that what precedes is <
  • [0-9]+ matches one or more digits
  • The lookahead (?=>) asserts that what follows is >
1
  • This is works fine, and its quite simple I need to admit :) Thank you!
    – Orionlk
    Jul 24, 2014 at 9:31
1

You can use this following piece of code to check if your pattern exist :

 string yourInput = "\r\radmin@Modem -- *<456> \radmin@Modem -- *<456> "  ; 
 string pattern = @"<(\d+)>"; 
 boolean success = Regex.Match(yourInput , pattern, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase).Success ; 

success will be true if a number is found.

1
  • Thank you, I will check that.
    – Orionlk
    Jul 24, 2014 at 9:32
1

With this pattern you can match the string: "--\s\*\<\d{3}\>" Note: If the number of digits can change, use this: "--\s\*\<\d{MIN,MAX}\>" where MIN and MAX are the number of digits that can appear in your string (within the part we are interested in matching).

using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

class Example
{
   static void Main()
   {
      string text = "One car red car blue car";
      // This regex will match the pattern you're looking for
      // Since youre new to regexes :) I'll explain it a little:
      // "--" matches "--" literally, "\s" matches the space in between but only once.
      // "\*" matches the "*" and "\<" and "\>" match "<" and ">" respectively
      // "\d" matches a digit 0-9 and "{3}" indicates that there are three digits 
      string pat = @"--\s\*\<\d{3}\>";

      // Instantiate the regular expression object.
      Regex r = new Regex(pat, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);

      // Match the regular expression pattern against a text string.
      Match m = r.Match(text);
      while (m.Success) 
      {
         // Do something ...
         // Find next match
         m = m.NextMatch();
      }
   }
}

This will allow you to make any changes on a per match basis. So every time you match the regex you can do something to your string and then look if there is another match and so on...

1

Perhaps the following can help you:

    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        string originalString= "\r\radmin@Modem -- *<456> \radmin@Modem -- *<456> ";
        Regex reg = new Regex(@"-- \*<[1-9][0-9]*>");
        bool isMatch = reg.IsMatch(originalString);

        Console.WriteLine(isMatch);
    }
1

You can use Regex.IsMatch using this regular expression --\\s\\*<\\d+> for matching strings like -- *<456>

bool MatchTheNumTag(string str)
{
    Regex reg = new Regex("--\\s\\*<\\d+>");
    return reg.IsMatch(str);
}
0
1

you can use this regex

<[1-9][0-9]*>

explanation:

[1-9]

this part is a range from 1-9 so your number is bigger than 0

[0-9]*

number range from 0-9 and the * gives you the possibility to have number as big as you want

other way: you can also use special characters for numbers, but then it really depends on the regex syntax

\d
0
0

welcome to Regexes!

You ave to know that certain characters in regexes are special characters and they need to be escaped, you can find them here: http://www.regular-expressions.info/characters.html

Which means that a regex for your pattern would be \s\-\-\s\*<456>

\s just means whitespace.

3
  • \s is not just whitespace. it is equivalent to [ \t\n]
    – Aserre
    Jul 24, 2014 at 9:14
  • Yeah, but I wanted to keep my answer simple.
    – Davio
    Jul 24, 2014 at 9:15
  • then why add wrong information in it ? in this case you are better off replacing the \s with simple spaces.
    – Aserre
    Jul 24, 2014 at 9:17

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