656

Is there a quick way to find every match of a regular expression in Ruby? I've looked through the Regex object in the Ruby STL and searched on Google to no avail.

1
  • 4
    I read this is how can I search a string for all regex patterns and was horribly confused...
    – Hugoagogo
    Sep 23, 2016 at 6:54

6 Answers 6

899

Using scan should do the trick:

string.scan(/regex/)
17
  • 11
    But what abut this case? "match me!".scan(/.../) = [ "mat", "ch " "me!" ], but all occurrences of /.../ would be [ "mat", "atc", "tch", "ch ", ... ] Dec 25, 2011 at 23:22
  • 14
    Not it wouldn't be. /.../ is a normal greedy regexp. It won't backtrack on matched content. you could try to use a lazy regexp but even that probably won't be enough. have a look at the regexp doc ruby-doc.org/core-1.9.3/Regexp.html to correctly express your regexp :)
    – Jean
    Jan 3, 2012 at 15:31
  • 59
    this seems like a Ruby WTF... why is this on String instead of Regexp with the other regexp stuff? It isn't even mentioned anywhere on the docs for Regexp
    – Anentropic
    Mar 12, 2013 at 11:36
  • 11
    I guess it's because it's defined and called on String not on Regex ... But it does actually make sense. You can write a regular expression to capture all matches using Regex#match and iterate over captured groups. Here you write a partial match function and want it applied mutiple times on a given string, this is not the responsibility of Regexp. I suggest you check the implementation of scan for a better understanding: ruby-doc.org/core-1.9.3/String.html#method-i-scan
    – Jean
    Mar 12, 2013 at 12:29
  • 11
    @MichaelDickens: In this case, you can use /(?=(...))/.
    – 0..
    Oct 25, 2014 at 13:50
91

To find all the matching strings, use String's scan method.

str = "A 54mpl3 string w1th 7 numb3rs scatter36 ar0und"
str.scan(/\d+/)
#=> ["54", "3", "1", "7", "3", "36", "0"]

If you want, MatchData, which is the type of the object returned by the Regexp match method, use:

str.to_enum(:scan, /\d+/).map { Regexp.last_match }
#=> [#<MatchData "54">, #<MatchData "3">, #<MatchData "1">, #<MatchData "7">, #<MatchData "3">, #<MatchData "36">, #<MatchData "0">]

The benefit of using MatchData is that you can use methods like offset:

match_datas = str.to_enum(:scan, /\d+/).map { Regexp.last_match }
match_datas[0].offset(0)
#=> [2, 4]
match_datas[1].offset(0)
#=> [7, 8]

See these questions if you'd like to know more:

Reading about special variables $&, $', $1, $2 in Ruby will be helpful too.

0
15

if you have a regexp with groups:

str="A 54mpl3 string w1th 7 numbers scatter3r ar0und"
re=/(\d+)[m-t]/

you can use String's scan method to find matching groups:

str.scan re
#> [["54"], ["1"], ["3"]]

To find the matching pattern:

str.to_enum(:scan,re).map {$&}
#> ["54m", "1t", "3r"]

Or the solution to have the complete matchdata:

str.to_enum(:scan,re).map{Regexp.last_match}
#> [#<MatchData "54m" 1:"54">, #<MatchData "1t" 1:"1">, #<MatchData "3r" 1:"3">]

str.to_enum(:scan,re).map {$~}
#> [#<MatchData "54m" 1:"54">, #<MatchData "1t" 1:"1">, #<MatchData "3r" 1:"3">]
2
  • str.scan(/\d+[m-t]/) # => ["54m", "1t", "3r"] is more idiomatic than str.to_enum(:scan,re).map {$&} Apr 9, 2020 at 17:43
  • Maybe you misunderstood. The regular expression of the example of a user I replied was: /(\d+)[m-t]/ not /\d+[m-t]/ To write: re = /(\d+)[m-t]/; str.scan(re) is same str.scan(/(\d+)[mt]/) but I get #> [["" 54 "], [" 1 "], [" 3 "]] and not "54m", "1t", "3r"] The question was: if I have a regular expression with a group and want to capture all the patterns without changing the regular expression (leaving the group), how can I do it? In this sense, a possible solution, albeit a little cryptic and difficult to read, was: str.to_enum(:scan,re).map {$&}
    – MVP
    Apr 15, 2020 at 15:43
8

You can use string.scan(your_regex).flatten. If your regex contains groups, it will return in a single plain array.

string = "A 54mpl3 string w1th 7 numbers scatter3r ar0und"
your_regex = /(\d+)[m-t]/
string.scan(your_regex).flatten
=> ["54", "1", "3"]

Regex can be a named group as well.

string = 'group_photo.jpg'
regex = /\A(?<name>.*)\.(?<ext>.*)\z/
string.scan(regex).flatten

You can also use gsub, it's just one more way if you want MatchData.

str.gsub(/\d/).map{ Regexp.last_match }
1
  • Remove the grouping from your_regex = /(\d+)[m-t]/ and you won't need to use flatten. Your final example uses last_match which in this case is probably safe, but is a global and could possibly be overwritten if any regex was matched prior to calling last_match. Instead it's probably safer to use string.match(regex).captures # => ["group_photo", "jpg"] or string.scan(/\d+/) # => ["54", "3", "1", "7", "3", "0"] as shown in other answers, depending on the pattern and needs. Apr 9, 2020 at 17:23
1

If you have capture groups () inside the regex for other purposes, the proposed solutions with String#scan and String#match are problematic:

  1. String#scan only get what is inside the capture groups;
  2. String#match only get the first match, rejecting all the others;
  3. String#matches (proposed function) get all the matches.

On this case, we need a solution to match the regex without considering the capture groups.

String#matches

With the Refinements you can monkey patch the String class, implement the String#matches and this method will be available inside the scope of the class that is using the refinement. It is an incredible way to Monkey Patch classes on Ruby.

Setup

  • /lib/refinements/string_matches.rb
# This module add a String refinement to enable multiple String#match()s
# 1. `String#scan` only get what is inside the capture groups (inside the parens)
# 2. `String#match` only get the first match
# 3. `String#matches` (proposed function) get all the matches
module StringMatches
  refine String do
    def matches(regex)
      scan(/(?<matching>#{regex})/).flatten
    end
  end
end

Used: named capture groups

Usage

  • rails c
> require 'refinements/string_matches'

> using StringMatches

> 'function(1, 2, 3) + function(4, 5, 6)'.matches(/function\((\d), (\d), (\d)\)/)
=> ["function(1, 2, 3)", "function(4, 5, 6)"]

> 'function(1, 2, 3) + function(4, 5, 6)'.scan(/function\((\d), (\d), (\d)\)/)
=> [["1", "2", "3"], ["4", "5", "6"]]

> 'function(1, 2, 3) + function(4, 5, 6)'.match(/function\((\d), (\d), (\d)\)/)[0]
=> "function(1, 2, 3)"
1

Return an array of MatchData objects

#scan is very limited--only returns a simple array of strings!

Far more powerful/flexible for us to get an array of MatchData objects.

I'll provide two approaches (using same logic), one using a PORO and one using a monkey patch:

PORO:

class MatchAll
  def initialize(string, pattern)
    raise ArgumentError, 'must pass a String' unless string.is_a?(String)

    raise ArgumentError, 'must pass a Regexp pattern' unless pattern.is_a?(Regexp)

    @string = string
    @pattern = pattern
    @matches = []
  end

  def match_all
    recursive_match
  end

  private

  def recursive_match(prev_match = nil)
    index = prev_match.nil? ? 0 : prev_match.offset(0)[1]

    matching_item = @string.match(@pattern, index)
    return @matches unless matching_item.present?

    @matches << matching_item
    recursive_match(matching_item)
  end
end

USAGE:

test_string = 'a green frog jumped on a green lilypad'

MatchAll.new(test_string, /green/).match_all
=> [#<MatchData "green", #<MatchData "green"]

Monkey patch

I don't typically condone monkey-patching, but in this case:

  • we're doing it the right way by "quarantining" our patch into its own module
  • I prefer this approach because 'string'.match_all(/pattern/) is more intuitive (and looks a lot nicer) than MatchAll.new('string', /pattern/).match_all
module RubyCoreExtensions
  module String
    module MatchAll
      def match_all(pattern)
        raise ArgumentError, 'must pass a Regexp pattern' unless pattern.is_a?(Regexp)

        recursive_match(pattern)
      end

      private

      def recursive_match(pattern, matches = [], prev_match = nil)
        index = prev_match.nil? ? 0 : prev_match.offset(0)[1]

        matching_item = self.match(pattern, index)
        return matches unless matching_item.present?

        matches << matching_item
        recursive_match(pattern, matches, matching_item)
      end
    end
  end
end

I recommend creating a new file and putting the patch (assuming you're using Rails) there /lib/ruby_core_extensions/string/match_all.rb

To use our patch we need to make it available:

# within application.rb
require './lib/ruby_core_extensions/string/match_all.rb'

Then be sure to include it in the String class (you could put this wherever you want; but for example, right under the require statement we just wrote above. After you include it once, it will be available everywhere, even outside the class where you included it).

String.include RubyCoreExtensions::String::MatchAll

USAGE: And now when you use #match_all you get results like:

test_string = 'hello foo, what foo are you going to foo today?'

test_string.match_all /foo/
=> [#<MatchData "foo", #<MatchData "foo", #<MatchData "foo"]

test_string.match_all /hello/
=> [#<MatchData "hello"]

test_string.match_all /none/
=> []

I find this particularly useful when I want to match multiple occurrences, and then get useful information about each occurrence, such as which index the occurrence starts and ends (e.g. match.offset(0) => [first_index, last_index])

1
  • why this answer makes it so complicated? why not make it easy, just answer: String#scan ?
    – Siwei
    Feb 14, 2023 at 12:24

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