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Let's say I wanted to validate a string to make sure it was an indefinitely long list of single decimal digit integers, each separated by a comma and allowing for zero or more spaces.

I want to use a regular expression to make sure it is valid. I would use something like this:

^\d(?:\s*,\s*\d)*$

This string value will match:

"4,0 , 9  ,3, 6"

This string value will not match:

"4,0 , 9  ,3, 6,"

Indeed, this is the desired behavior. But is there a more elegant way to do this than to repeat the \d in the regular expression? (Imagine that \d is standing in for a much more complex real-life regular expression.)

I want to preempt certain suggestions. I'm well aware that I could do these sorts of things:

  • Use a split function, trim spaces, and validate each element against:

    ^\d$
    
  • Add a comma to the end of the string and validate against:

    ^(?:\d\s*,\s*)+$
    
  • Strip out commas and spaces and validate against:

    ^\d+$
    

I'm simply curious if there's a shorthand or more elegant way to code the regular expression to say, "...and handle the fencepost problem."

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You can match either the beginning of the string or the seperator like so

(?!,)((^|\s*,\s*)\d)+$

or with non-capturing groups...

(?!,)(?:(?:^|\s*,\s*)\d)+$

The negative lookahead is to make sure that the first character is not a ,.

It gets rid of the second \d. Is it more elegant though? I guess that's up to you. I don't think it is in this very situation because of the simplicity of \d, but if you have a really complex expression instead of \d it can clean up the regex quite a bit.

Another way to avoid having \d twice would be to do something like this (I'm using C# in my example):

string complexExpression = @"\d"; // Whatever your actual expression is
string regex = string.Format(@"^{0}(?:\s*,\s*{0})*$", complexExpression);

This is completely artificial and the resulting expression is of course the same, but one could argue that it's more readable/elegant like this rather than the 100% regex solution.

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  • @trw I edited my answer. Does your regex engine support negative lookaheads?
    – dee-see
    Sep 12, 2014 at 17:40
  • Yes, it does. I see that, because the engine is eager, a leading comma will still match ^|\s*,\s*. Thanks for the negative lookahead!
    – trw
    Sep 12, 2014 at 18:01

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