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I have the following strings that I want to run a regex (Java) against:

a#d3d,b#3jjf,c#44k
c#999,b#a1a,a#11a

I want to extract the value following the "c#" and before the next comma (,). I want to extract the value "44k" from the first line and the value "999" from the second line. I thought the following would work:

.*c#(.*),.*

but it doesn't. Oh, and an English explanation of the regular expression would help me to better understand your answer.

2
  • see this : rubular.com/r/ckRwasekcd
    – xkeshav
    Feb 10, 2012 at 6:48
  • what about c# in between, like b#a1a,c#999,a#11a, would you want to extract that too?
    – XepterX
    Feb 10, 2012 at 6:48

6 Answers 6

4

Here the advanced lookbehind version

(?<=c#)[^,\s]+

See it here on Regexr

(?<=c#) is a lookbehind assertion, it ensures that there is c# on the left of the pattern.

[^,\s]+ is a negated character class, together with the quantifier + it will match at least one character that is not a comma or a whitespace.

2
  • You pattern is not capturing, maybe add some ( ... )?
    – hochl
    Feb 10, 2012 at 8:32
  • I don't use a capturing group, because I am matching only the relevant part, so the result is the complete match, no need for a capturing group.
    – stema
    Feb 10, 2012 at 8:34
2
c#([^,\s]+)

That should do it. Find c# and then grab one or more characters that isn't a comma or a whitespace (means that end of line also ends the match).

4
  • if pattern is not multiline, \s won't match the enter.
    – shift66
    Feb 10, 2012 at 6:51
  • No, Multiline only affects the anchors ^ and $. The Pattern.DOTALL option affects the ., making it match also the newline characters. Methods of the Pattern Class
    – stema
    Feb 10, 2012 at 8:12
  • This almost works...If I issue: '.*c#(.+?)[,\$].*' then it returns the "44k" value but not the "999" value. I assume this is because of the leading ".*" since the c# delimiter is at the beginning of the line and has no leading characters.
    – GregH
    Feb 10, 2012 at 17:05
  • Why don't you try what I told you to put, and not some weird concoction you made up by taking pieces of everyone's answers. Nobody told you to put a $ inside []. Feb 10, 2012 at 17:08
1

c#(.+?)(,|$) use this regex
.+? is a lazy regex. It will match everything until it finds comma or end of the line.
And after that matcher.group(1) will return what you need.

1

I tried (?<=c#)[a-z0-9]+ and got what you wanted.

0

You need a non-greedy wildcard:

c#.*?(,|$)

The .*? means match any character zero or more times, but match as few as possible. (,|$) means match comma or end of string.

1
  • I think you should substitute the * with a +.
    – hochl
    Feb 10, 2012 at 8:31
0

you can use this regex

(c#(.{3}[^, ]+)|$)+

This regex will match c# that is in the beginning and the last c# at the end of the string. c# in between the string would not be taken into consideration, i hope this is what you wanted.

for you to get the substring of the c# such as the "44k" or the "999", you would have to use a substring api in String java to retrieve the values from the regex.

Hope this helps

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