134

I want a regex that matches a square bracket [. I haven't found one yet. I think I tried all possibilities, but haven't found the right one. What is a valid regex for this?

10 Answers 10

149

How about using backslash \ in front of the square bracket. Normally square brackets match a character class.

3
  • 23
    In case you are trying to write this regex in C# you have have to use \\ in front of the square bracket.
    – Shrewdroid
    Jan 25, 2011 at 5:26
  • 7
    Actually I don't know where it works and why did the answer receive such a high rank.
    – Vitali Pom
    Dec 1, 2012 at 12:57
  • 2
    The question asks about regular expressions, not about how to encode them in a host language which hijacks the backslash for its own use. If you are in a place where a shell or language parser will parse or otherwise process backslashes, you probably need to double the backslash, but that's not what this specific question is asking about.
    – tripleee
    Mar 1, 2021 at 10:40
67

Try using \\[, or simply \[.

1
  • In a vanilla JS script, double backslash works for me.
    – kodliber
    Jul 30, 2022 at 17:43
40

If you want to match an expression starting with [ and ending with ], use \[[^\]]*\].

Here is the meaning of each part (as explained at www.regexr.com): enter image description here

2
  • can you tell us about it? The roof ^ means not in square bracket that is a character class.
    – Timo
    Mar 30, 2021 at 18:38
  • Thanks @Matt Roy, that's just what I wanted to do
    – Skyfish
    Jan 2 at 14:44
13

Are you escaping it with \?

/\[/

Here's a helpful resource to get started with Regular Expressions:

Regular-Expressions.info

0
10

If you're looking to find both variations of the square brackets at the same time, you can use the following pattern which defines a range of either the [ sign or the ] sign: /[\[\]]/

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  • 3
    You can omit the first backslash. [[\]] will match either bracket. In some regex dialects (e.g. grep) you can omit the backslash before the ] if you place it immediately after the [ (because an empty character class would never be useful): [][]. But that doesn't work in Java or JavaScript. Sep 14, 2017 at 16:24
  • I was trying sed -r 's|[\[\]]|!|g', but that was only matching the entire phrase once. I wanted to keep my expression explicit, but this was the only efficient combination that worked for me: s|[][]|!|g
    – Pysis
    Apr 27, 2022 at 19:00
7

In general, when you need a character that is "special" in regexes, just prefix it with a \. So a literal [ would be \[.

6

If you want to remove the [ or the ], use the expression: "\\[|\\]".

The two backslashes escape the square bracket and the pipe is an "or".

2
  • Thank you!! None of the other answers worked for me. I was trying to split a json array string into a Java array.. So I had to remove the quotes and square brackets, then split on the comma ["item1" , "item2"]
    – dko
    Jan 11, 2021 at 17:14
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    In the general case, the two backslashes are wrong here. In some languages (like Java, Python if not in a literal r"..." string, etc) you need to backslash the backslash to pass it through to the regex engine as a single backslash, but that's a (mis)feature of the host language, and not a correct answer for a question asking simply about regular expressions without a specific host language.
    – tripleee
    Mar 1, 2021 at 10:38
4

does it work with an antislash before the [ ?

\[ or \\[ ?

2

For a pure exgex, it's simple:

1 /[]abcde]/ - it's the way to include the ']' in the class.

2 /[abc[de]/ - freely put anything else inside the brackets, including the '['. (Most of the meta-characters lose their special meaning inside '[]').

3 Test(verify) your regex w/ 'grep' or 'vim' etc. first.(They are easy-going guys.)

4 It's not too late to try inserting '\' at this moment if your scripting environment doesn't agree.

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  • Really nice trick. I tried everything to include square brackets with find -regex and your solution was the only one that worked: -not -regex "[][a-zA-Z0-9/.() ßÄÖÜäöüàéèí_-]+" (this even uses the trick to include hyphen without escaping by placing it as last character in the class).
    – mgutt
    May 27, 2023 at 15:55
-1

The below expression is able to detect the timing 65

\[(?<timeElpsed>\d+)ms\]

from the below log:

[2022-12-16T04:51:55.993+0000] [ INFO] [scala-execution-context-global-75] [200 OK]: [100.107.99.132] [65ms] "content-length:

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