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Hannuka, Chanukah, Hanukkah...Due to transliteration from another language and character set, there are many ways to spell the name of this holiday. How many legitimate spellings can you come up with?

Now, write a regular expression that will recognise all of them.

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That's kind of interesting. :) – BobbyShaftoe Dec 23 '08 at 3:35

7 Answers

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According to http://www.holidays.net/chanukah/spelling.htm, it can be spelled any of the following ways:

Chanuka
Chanukah
Chanukkah
Channukah
Hanukah
Hannukah
Hanukkah
Hanuka
Hanukka
Hanaka
Haneka
Hanika
Khanukkah

Here is my regex that matches all of them:

/(Ch|H|Kh)ann?[aeiu]kk?ah?/

Edit: Or this, without branches:

/[CHK]h?ann?[aeiu]kk?ah?/
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Unfortunately it also matches strings like Khannekkah. – Michael Burr Dec 23 '08 at 3:09
A reg exp is probably not the best solution for a spell checker. – Ates Goral Dec 23 '08 at 3:12
Yes, but I think in most cases, any string it matches that isn't in the list is just a misspelling of the word (if this word can be misspelled) and should be matched anyways. – jeremy Ruten Dec 23 '08 at 3:12
That was @Michael – jeremy Ruten Dec 23 '08 at 3:13
I think a regex should only match what it's meant to match. – Triptych Dec 23 '08 at 3:13
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vote up 3 vote down

Call me a sucker for readability.

In Python:

def find_hanukkah(s):
   import re

   spellings = ['hannukah', 'channukah', 'hanukkah'] # etc...

   for m in re.finditer('|'.join(spellings), s, re.I):
      print m.group()



find_hanukkah("Hannukah Channukah, Hanukkah")
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I prefer regular expressions. This sort of thing won't scale. At some point you have to break down and just use regex! – BobbyShaftoe Dec 23 '08 at 3:36
Your regex will still have to encode all of the accepted spellings of channukah. My version makes it clear what is and isn't acceptable input. Also, adding one more spelling to my code is trivial, but a regex might be made completely invalid with a single additional spelling. – Triptych Dec 23 '08 at 5:28
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/^[ck]?hann?ukk?ah?$/i

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What about in the middle of a line? – Charlie Martin Dec 23 '08 at 2:54
/\b[ck]?hann?ukk?ah?\b/i :) – chaos Dec 23 '08 at 4:36
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I think the only approved spellings in English are Hanukkah and Chanukh, so it's something like

/(Ch|H)anuk?kah/

Or maybe even better

/(Chanukah|Hanukkah)/
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vote up 0 vote down

I like Triptych's answer, but i would take it one step forward... also in python:

def valid(spelling):
    import re

    regex_spelling = re.compile(r'^[cCkK]{0,1}han{1,2}uk{1,2}ah$')
    valid = regex_spelling.match(spelling)

    if valid:
        print 'Valid spelling'
    else:
        print spelling, " is not a spelling for the word"

to use it:

valid("hanukkah")
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Haha, you removed my credit? – Triptych Dec 23 '08 at 6:01
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Something like C?hann?uk?kah? matches most of the common cases. There also a bunch of weirder spellings C?hann?uk?kah?|Han[aei]ka|Khanukkah matches almost every spelling I could think of (that had at least half a million hits on google).

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vote up 0 vote down

luckily I understand Hebrew - חנוכה

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Looks convincing, but where are the vowels? (wink) – gbarry Dec 25 '08 at 9:11
Ha! got me there! :D – Orentet Jan 1 '09 at 9:12

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