15

I want a java regex expression that accepts only the numbers and dots.

for example,

             1.1.1 ----valid
             1.1   ----valid
             1.1.1.1---valid
             1.    ----not valid

The dots should not be at the starting position or at the ending position.

0

5 Answers 5

56

I guess this is what you want:

^\d+(\.\d+)*$

Explanation: It accepts numbers separated by dots; it starts and ends with number; a number can have multiple digits; one number without dots is also accepted.

Variant without multiple digits:

^\d(\.\d)*$

Variants where at least one dot is required:

^\d+(\.\d+)+$
^\d(\.\d)+$

Don't forget that in Java you have to escape the \ symbols, so the code will look like this:

Pattern NUMBERS_WITH_DOTS = Pattern.compile("^\\d+(\\.\\d+)*$");
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  • This was useful to me, I needed to take the index of a summary, so I modified to it: ^(\d+[\.\d+]*). Thanks! Jul 26, 2018 at 18:33
  • for a user input, I need to accept a string before they type the number after the dot, so I need to accept something like 1. before the digit after the .. Can anyone help?
    – conor909
    Apr 30, 2021 at 21:25
  • @conor909 assuming you also want to accept an empty string then ^(\d+\.)*\d*$ May 6, 2021 at 21:28
5

So you want a regex that wants numbers and periods but starts and ends with a number?

"[0-9][0-9.]*[0-9]"

But this isn't going to match things like 1. which doesn't have any periods, but does start and end with a number.

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  • This is working as per your condition. Here (\.\d+)+ is checking atleast one dot with a number. ^\d+(\.\d+)+$ \d+ ( \. \d+ ) + Atleast one number at starting one dot atleast one number atleast one
    – Afsar
    Aug 10, 2019 at 13:20
  • I tried to use this in android but it is still allowing dot at the start Oct 27, 2021 at 8:06
2

I guess this is what you want:

Pattern.compile("(([0-9](\\.[0-9]*))?){1,13}(\\.[0-9]*)?(\\.[0-9]*)?(\\.[0-9]*)?", Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE | Pattern.UNICODE_CASE | Pattern.DOTALL | Pattern.MULTILINE);

Explanation: It accepts numbers separated by dots; it starts and ends with number; a number can have multiple digits; one number without dots is not accepted.

The output like this--

  • 1.1
  • 1.12
  • 1.1.5
  • 1.15.1.4
1
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body>

<p>RegEx to allow digits and dot</p>
Number: <input type="text" id="fname" onkeyup="myFunction()">

<script>
function myFunction() {
    var x = document.getElementById("fname");
    x.value = x.value.replace(/[^0-9\.]/g,"");
}
</script>

</body>
</html>
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"^\\d(\\.\\d)*$"

1     ----valid (if it must be not valid, replace `*` => `+` )
1.1.1 ----valid
1.1   ----valid
1.1.1.1---valid
1.    ----not valid
11.1.1 ---not valid (if it must be valid, add `+` after each `d`) 

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