25

I don't write many regular expressions so I'm going to need some help on the one.

I need a regular expression that can validate that a string is an alphanumeric comma delimited string.

Examples:

  • 123, 4A67, GGG, 767 would be valid.
  • 12333, 78787&*, GH778 would be invalid
  • fghkjhfdg8797< would be invalid

This is what I have so far, but isn't quite right: ^(?=.*[a-zA-Z0-9][,]).*$

Any suggestions?

2
  • Your regular expression means "match if the next bit matches, but don't consume, any one char, then one of a-z, A-Z, or 0-9, followed by one of: a comma. Then consume any one character before the end of the string." It is impossible for this to match anything, since the not consuming part must match three characters, including a trailing comma, before the consuming part comes and can only match one thing.
    – markets
    Jun 23, 2011 at 2:41
  • @markets: The OP didn't use code formatting, so the two * quantifiers weren't visible. The regex is still wrong, but it makes a little more sense now. ;) @JohnH: You'll get better results if you use SO's formatting tools; they're very good.
    – Alan Moore
    Jun 23, 2011 at 4:52

7 Answers 7

37

Sounds like you need an expression like this:

^[0-9a-zA-Z]+(,[0-9a-zA-Z]+)*$

Posix allows for the more self-descriptive version:

^[[:alnum:]]+(,[[:alnum:]]+)*$
^[[:alnum:]]+([[:space:]]*,[[:space:]]*[[:alnum:]]+)*$  // allow whitespace

If you're willing to admit underscores, too, search for entire words (\w+):

^\w+(,\w+)*$
^\w+(\s*,\s*\w+)*$  // allow whitespaces around the comma
3
  • 2
    A few problems with this answer: (1) A POSIX "character class" can't be used directly; it has to be enclosed in another set of square brackets, e.g. [[:alnum:]]+. But that's academic since .NET doesn't support them (not even in different form, like Java's \p{Alnum}). (2) \w, like all character-class shorthands (\s, \d, etc.), matches exactly one letter, so you should have used \w+. (3) You didn't allow for whitespace between tokens.
    – Alan Moore
    Jun 23, 2011 at 4:45
  • @Alan: Thank you, fixed! By the way, what's "whitespace" in Emacs? \s doesn't seem to work...
    – Kerrek SB
    Jun 23, 2011 at 10:26
  • 1
    I don't use Emacs, but according to this, it's \s-. The \s itself doesn't match anything; it just marks the following character as special.
    – Alan Moore
    Jun 23, 2011 at 12:12
8

Try this pattern: ^([a-zA-Z0-9]+,?\s*)+$

I tested it with your cases, as well as just a single number "123". I don't know if you will always have a comma or not.

The [a-zA-Z0-9]+ means match 1 or more of these symbols The ,? means match 0 or 1 commas (basically, the comma is optional) The \s* handles 1 or more spaces after the comma and finally the outer + says match 1 or more of the pattern.

This will also match 123 123 abc (no commas) which might be a problem This will also match 123, (ends with a comma) which might be a problem.

3

Try the following expression:

/^([a-z0-9\s]+,)*([a-z0-9\s]+){1}$/i

This will work for:

  1. test
  2. test, test
  3. test123,Test 123,test

I would strongly suggest trimming the whitespaces at the beginning and end of each item in the comma-separated list.

2

You seem to be lacking repetition. How about:

^(?:[a-zA-Z0-9 ]+,)*[a-zA-Z0-9 ]+$

I'm not sure how you'd express that in VB.Net, but in Python:

>>> import re
>>> x [ "123, $a67, GGG, 767", "12333, 78787&*, GH778" ]
>>> r = '^(?:[a-zA-Z0-9 ]+,)*[a-zA-Z0-9 ]+$'
>>> for s in x:
...    print re.match( r, s )
...
<_sre.SRE_Match object at 0xb75c8218>
None
>>>>

You can use shortcuts instead of listing the [a-zA-Z0-9 ] part, but this is probably easier to understand.

Analyzing the highlights:

  • [a-zA-Z0-9 ]+ : capture one or more (but not zero) of the listed ranges, and space.
  • (?:[...]+,)* : In non-capturing parenthesis, match one or more of the characters, plus a comma at the end. Match such sequences zero or more times. Capturing zero times allows for no comma.
  • [...]+ : capture at least one of these. This does not include a comma. This is to ensure that it does not accept a trailing comma. If a trailing comma is acceptable, then the expression is easier: ^[a-zA-Z0-9 ,]+
2
  • This allows spaces anywhere, so it would also match ' abc 123, fo o bar '. Maybe that's acceptable to the OP, but I would pull the spaces out of the character classes.
    – Alan Moore
    Jun 23, 2011 at 5:06
  • @Alan good point. OP didn't address spaces at all but permitted them in the examples. The regex could remove the existing spaces and add optional spaces (space-star) before and after the comma.
    – markets
    Jun 23, 2011 at 18:50
1

Yes, when you want to catch comma separated things where a comma at the end is not legal, and the things match to $LONGSTUFF, you have to repeat $LONGSTUFF:

$LONGSTUFF(,$LONGSTUFF)*

If $LONGSTUFF is really long and contains comma repeated items itself etc., it might be a good idea to not build the regexp by hand and instead rely on a computer for doing that for you, even if it's just through string concatenation. For example, I just wanted to build a regular expression to validate the CPUID parameter of a XEN configuration file, of the ['1:a=b,c=d','2:e=f,g=h'] type. I... believe this mostly fits the bill: (whitespace notwithstanding!)

xend_fudge_item_re = r"""
  e[a-d]x=          #register of the call return value to fudge
  (
    0x[0-9A-F]+ |   #either hardcode the reply
    [10xks]{32}     #or edit the bitfield directly
  )
"""
xend_string_item_re = r"""
  (0x)?[0-9A-F]+:   #leafnum (the contents of EAX before the call)
  %s                #one fudge
  (,%s)*            #repeated multiple times
""" % (xend_fudge_item_re, xend_fudge_item_re)
xend_syntax = re.compile(r"""
  \[                #a list of
   '%s'             #string elements
   (,'%s')*         #repeated multiple times
  \]
  $                 #and nothing else
""" % (xend_string_item_re, xend_string_item_re), re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE)
2
  • Please be aware that the above RE has a few issues, including but not limited to lack of whitespace support and case sensitivity, that make it not production-worthy. The fixed version is quite a lot longer and then you'd start missing the point of the answer. It's just an example of how to handle more complicated cases sanely.
    – badp
    Aug 23, 2013 at 10:45
  • I didn't end up using that regexp - so here's the full shebang
    – badp
    Aug 27, 2013 at 13:35
1

Try ^(?!,)((, *)?([a-zA-Z0-9])\b)*$

Step by step description:

  • Don't match a beginning comma (good for the upcoming "loop").
  • Match optional comma and spaces.
  • Match characters you like.
  • The match of a word boundary make sure that a comma is necessary if more arguments are stacked in string.
1
  • This is the only answer that doesn't repeat the pattern. Should get more upvotes. Aug 13, 2022 at 12:37
1

Please use - ^((([a-zA-Z0-9\s]){1,45},)+([a-zA-Z0-9\s]){1,45})$

Here, I have set max word size to 45, as longest word in english is 45 characters, can be changed as per requirement

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