142

In a Flutter application, I need to check if a string matches a specific RegEx. However, the RegEx I copied from the JavaScript version of the app always returns false in the Flutter app. I verified on regexr that the RegEx is valid, and this very RegEx is already being used in the JavaScript application, so it should be correct.

Any help is appreciated!

RegEx : /^WS{1,2}:\/\/\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}:56789/i

Test Code :

RegExp regExp = new RegExp(
  r"/^WS{1,2}:\/\/\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}:56789/i",
  caseSensitive: false,
  multiLine: false,
);
print("allMatches : "+regExp.allMatches("WS://127.0.0.1:56789").toString());
print("firstMatch : "+regExp.firstMatch("WS://127.0.0.1:56789").toString());
print("hasMatch : "+regExp.hasMatch("WS://127.0.0.1:56789").toString());
print("stringMatch : "+regExp.stringMatch("WS://127.0.0.1:56789").toString());

Output :

allMatches : ()
firstMatch : null
hasMatch : false
stringMatch : null

2 Answers 2

174

This is a more general answer for future viewers.

Regex in Dart works much like other languages. You use the RegExp class to define a matching pattern. Then use hasMatch() to test the pattern on a string.

Examples

Alphanumeric

final alphanumeric = RegExp(r'^[a-zA-Z0-9]+$');
alphanumeric.hasMatch('abc123');  // true
alphanumeric.hasMatch('abc123%'); // false

Hex colors

RegExp hexColor = RegExp(r'^#?([0-9a-fA-F]{3}|[0-9a-fA-F]{6})$');
hexColor.hasMatch('#3b5');     // true
hexColor.hasMatch('#FF7723');  // true
hexColor.hasMatch('#000000z'); // false

Extracting text

final myString = '25F8..25FF    ; Common # Sm   [8] UPPER LEFT TRIANGLE';

// find a variable length hex value at the beginning of the line
final regexp = RegExp(r'^[0-9a-fA-F]+'); 

// find the first match though you could also do `allMatches`
final match = regexp.firstMatch(myString);

// group(0) is the full matched text
// if your regex had groups (using parentheses) then you could get the 
// text from them by using group(1), group(2), etc.
final matchedText = match?.group(0);  // 25F8

There are some more examples here.

See also:

3
  • 1
    @LeoK, It does work but it isn't very useful in this case. What you get is a list with two items: everything before 25F8 at the start of the string (which is an empty string) and everything after it.
    – Suragch
    Jun 15, 2021 at 3:10
  • The medium article in "see also" section is hidden behind a paywall medium.com/flutter-community/…
    – Kevo1ution
    Apr 13, 2023 at 19:13
  • @Kevo1ution, Thanks for telling me. I've updated the link with a non-paywalled version.
    – Suragch
    Apr 15, 2023 at 8:04
110

I think you tried to include options in the raw expression string while you already have it as parameters to RegEx ( /i for case insensitivity is declared as caseSensitive: false).

// Removed /i at the end
// Removed / in front - Thanks to Günter for warning
RegExp regExp = new RegExp(
  r"^WS{1,2}:\/\/\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}:56789",
  caseSensitive: false,
  multiLine: false,
);
print("allMatches : "+regExp.allMatches("WS://127.0.0.1:56789").toString());
print("firstMatch : "+regExp.firstMatch("WS://127.0.0.1:56789").toString());
print("hasMatch : "+regExp.hasMatch("WS://127.0.0.1:56789").toString());
print("stringMatch : "+regExp.stringMatch("WS://127.0.0.1:56789").toString());

Gives:

allMatches : (Instance of '_MatchImplementation')
firstMatch : Instance of '_MatchImplementation'
hasMatch : true
stringMatch : WS://127.0.0.1:56789
9
  • 6
    The / at the beginning also doesn't work in Dart AFAIK Apr 10, 2018 at 16:02
  • 3
    Thanks! It is a real shame that the documentation lacks this basic but crucial information. I can only hope that Dart will become as documented as Go one day.
    – Nato Boram
    Apr 10, 2018 at 17:33
  • 2
    @NatoBoram, I second on that (and I really wish Go was chosen for Flutter:) Apr 11, 2018 at 10:25
  • 1
    I can see that the RegExp constructor doesn't give a code example, you have to look at the class documentation to see that. We might want to have both, to easily catch users that are used to JavaScript regexp syntax.
    – lrn
    Apr 11, 2018 at 12:39
  • 1
    @lrn, I thought I also looked in class documentation and it is not there. If I am mistaken, can you give the link? Dart documentation feels like an automated doc created from class members with no additional explanations and\or examples (there are examples but few, it is more like a try and see yourself). Apr 11, 2018 at 13:07

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