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Hi,

Suppose I had the string "1 AND 2 AND 3 OR 4", and want to create an array of strings that contains all substrings "AND" or "OR", in order, found within the string.

So the above string would return a string array of {"AND", "AND", "OR"}.

What would be a smart way of writing that?

EDIT: Using C# 2.0+,

string rule = "1 AND 2 AND 3 OR 4";
string pattern = "(AND|OR)";
string[] conditions = Regex.Split(rule, pattern);

gives me {"1", "AND", "2", "AND", "3", "OR", "4"}, which isn't quite what I'm after. How can I reduce that to the ANDs and ORs only?

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I can see what you're trying to do but i dont think the Split approach is most appropriate for what you want. See the Split is separating the input at the ANDs and ORs thus resulting in the numbers (and only the AND/ORs coz of the parenthesis) - which is not what you want. You want the ANDs and ORs. I think a crafted regex pattern could return multiple matches thus capturing only the AND and ORs. – cottsak May 11 at 7:55
Could you explain the purpose if this requirement? It might assist in designing a more appropriate regex. – cottsak May 11 at 7:56

5 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

This regex (.NET) seems to do what you want. You're looking for the matches (multiple) in the group at index=1:

.*?((AND)|(OR))*.*?

EDIT I've tested the following and it seems to do what you want. It's more lines than i would like but it approaches the task in a purely regex fashion (which IMHO is what you should be doing):

        string text = "1 AND 2 AND 3 OR 4";
        string pattern = @"AND|OR";

        Regex r = new Regex(pattern, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);

        Match m = r.Match(text);
        ArrayList results = new ArrayList();
        while (m.Success)
        {
            results.Add(m.Groups[0].Value);

            m = m.NextMatch();
        }

        string[] matchesStringArray = (string[])results.ToArray(typeof(string));
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Why not just "(AND|OR)" ? – cdmckay May 11 at 5:20
shrugs Maybe I've over complicated it. – cottsak May 11 at 5:27
In C# 2.0+, using "AND|OR" as the pattern gives me more than just the ANDs and ORs - how can I get limit the pattern to give me only the ANDs and ORs? I've edited the question above. – David Hodgson May 11 at 6:13
It seems the only way to get the regex engine to move onto the next match (of "AND|OR") is to invoke the .NextMatch() method. This sux coz now u have to iterate. But it seems you were never going to escape using a loop of some kind. Hope this is ok. – cottsak May 11 at 8:32
You may use Regex.Matches to get all the results in one call... but as you said, you'll have to iterate on the result collection... or use Linq to get what you want ! – Cédric May 11 at 9:00
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vote up 1 vote down

Your probably looking for a tokeniser or Lexer, have a look at the following article:

C# Regular Expression Recipes—A Better Tokenizer

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vote up 1 vote down

Since you know the exact substring you're looking for... why not just use IndexOf(substr, iOffset) to know the number of occurances (loop till it returns -1) ??

Depending on the complexity of your task, it could be simpler/faster than using regular expressions (since you're not matching patterns).

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vote up 0 vote down

Here's a goofy way that I came up with:

string rule = "1 AND 2 AND 3 OR 4";
List<string> andsOrs = new List<string>();
string[] split = rule.Split();
for (int i = 0; i < split.Length; i++)
{
   if (split[i] == "AND" || split[i] == "OR")
   {
       andsOrs.Add(split[i]);
   }
}
string[] conditions = andsOrs.ToArray();
return conditions;
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vote up 1 vote down
string rule = "1 AND 2 AND 3 OR 4";
string pattern = "(AND|OR)";
MatchCollection conditions = Regex.Matches(rule, pattern);

Use Match.Value to get the string.

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