4

I need to match the numbers in the following strings. It is possible they may be part of longer strings with other numbers in them, so I specifically want to match the number(s) occuring directly after the space which follows the text 'Error Code':

Error Code 0  # Match = 0
Error Code 45 # Match = 45
Error Code 190 # Match = 190

Also possible:

Some Words 12 Error Code 67 Some Words 77 # Match = 67

I'm using someString.match(regEx)[0] but I can't get the regex right.

1
  • Which language are you using? And what is the regEx you are trying?
    – Rohit Jain
    Jan 15, 2013 at 18:23

4 Answers 4

18
/(?:Error Code )[0-9]+/

This uses a non-capturing group (not available in all regex implementations.) It will say, hey the String better have this phrase, but I don't want this phrase to be part of my match, just the numbers that follow.

If you only want between 1 and three digits matched:

/(?:Error Code )[0-9]{1,3}/

With Ruby you should run into very few limitations with your regex. Aside from conditionals, there isn't very much Ruby's regex cannot do.

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  • 1
    +1 - Rather than [0-9] I'd do \d, otherwise this should work fine. I tweaked it to show the regex delimiters -- some OPs can't figure out those are needed too. Jan 15, 2013 at 18:32
  • Thanks. But this seems to include the string in the match: s = 'This is an Error Code 45 and some 19s' puts s.match(/(?:Error Code )[0-9]{1,3}/)[0] gives a match of 'Error Code 45' Jan 15, 2013 at 18:36
  • 1
    When I answer many regex questions online, I tend to use 0-9 etc. as they are immediately obvious to the OPs. \d makes people need to know that it indicates the same thing. (Also, in small regex like this, I prefer to use 0-9 as it is more readable to me.) Jan 15, 2013 at 18:36
  • Hmm, I am not familiar enough with Ruby (read: not at all) to know why it wouldn't recognize the non-capturing group notation... Jan 15, 2013 at 18:38
9

Given the string "Error Code 190", this will return "190" and not "Error Code" like the other regex example provided here.

(?<=Error Code.*)[0-9]
0
4

I'd use the following regex:

/Error\sCode\s\d{1,3}/

Or, with named groups:

/Error\sCode\s(?<error_code>\d{1,3})/

The last one will capture the error code, the number, under a named group. Note that \s matchs whitespaces but it's unnecessary unless the x flag is specified. You can access match captures like this:

str = "Error Code 0\nError Code 45\nError Code 190"
error_codes = str.lines.map{|l|l.match(regex)[:error_code]}
#=> ["0", "45", "190"]
0

You can use this regexp: Only digits, count from 1 to 3:

regexp = "^\\d{1,3}$"

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