52

In R, is there a better/simpler way than the following of finding the location of the last dot in a string?

x <- "hello.world.123.456"
g <- gregexpr(".", x, fixed=TRUE)
loc <- g[[1]]
loc[length(loc)]  # returns 16

This finds all the dots in the string and then returns the last one, but it seems rather clumsy. I tried using regular expressions, but didn't get very far.

0

4 Answers 4

81

Does this work for you?

x <- "hello.world.123.456"
g <- regexpr("\\.[^\\.]*$", x)
g
  • \. matches a dot
  • [^\.] matches everything but a dot
  • * specifies that the previous expression (everything but a dot) may occur between 0 and unlimited times
  • $ marks the end of the string.

Taking everything together: find a dot that is followed by anything but a dot until the string ends. R requires \ to be escaped, hence \\ in the expression above. See regex101.com to experiment with regex.

2
  • 1
    a '.' matches every possible character, to match a literal '.' you need to escape it with a '\' and unfortunatly, you need to escape this '\' with another '\'. So finally your expression looks like '\\.' Apr 16, 2014 at 9:28
  • @Vincent, is it there a document or a package where all the symbols and text paterns are explained in detail?
    – R18
    Apr 18, 2023 at 10:10
31

How about a minor syntax improvement?

This will work for your literal example where the input vector is of length 1. Use escapes to get a literal "." search, and reverse the result to get the last index as the "first":

 rev(gregexpr("\\.", x)[[1]])[1]

A more proper vectorized version (in case x is longer than 1):

 sapply(gregexpr("\\.", x), function(x) rev(x)[1])

and another tidier option to use tail instead:

sapply(gregexpr("\\.", x), tail, 1)
1
  • 1
    9 more to go,but all i wanted to say is: slick. Mar 7, 2011 at 8:39
7

Someone posted the following answer which I really liked, but I notice that they've deleted it:

regexpr("\\.[^\\.]*$", x)

I like it because it directly produces the desired location, without having to search through the results. The regexp is also fairly clean, which is a bit of an exception where regexps are concerned :)

1
  • 1
    yeah, that was me. I thought the previous solution worked so I deleted it. Maybe I shouldn't have :)
    – Vincent
    Mar 7, 2011 at 2:11
2

There is a slick stri_locate_last function in the stringi package, that can accept both literal strings and regular expressions.

To just find a dot, no regex is required, and it is as easy as

stringi::stri_locate_last_fixed(x, ".")[,1]

If you need to use this function with a regex, to find the location of the last regex match in the string, you should replace _fixed with _regex:

stringi::stri_locate_last_regex(x, "\\.")[,1]

Note the . is a special regex metacharacter and should be escaped when used in a regex to match a literal dot char.

See an R demo online:

x <- "hello.world.123.456"
stringi::stri_locate_last_fixed(x, ".")[,1]
stringi::stri_locate_last_regex(x, "\\.")[,1]

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.