42

I want regex to validate for only letters and spaces. Basically this is to validate full name. Ex: Mr Steve Collins or Steve Collins I tried this regex. "[a-zA-Z]+\.?" But didnt work. Can someone assist me please p.s. I use Java.

public static boolean validateLetters(String txt) {

    String regx = "[a-zA-Z]+\\.?";
    Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(regx,Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE);
    Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(txt);
    return matcher.find();

}

15 Answers 15

108

What about:

  • Peter Müller
  • François Hollande
  • Patrick O'Brian
  • Silvana Koch-Mehrin

Validating names is a difficult issue, because valid names are not only consisting of the letters A-Z.

At least you should use the Unicode property for letters and add more special characters. A first approach could be e.g.:

String regx = "^[\\p{L} .'-]+$";

\\p{L} is a Unicode Character Property that matches any kind of letter from any language

11
  • 1
    yes thats very true. This regex works perfectly. Smart one.thnx lot
    – amal
    Apr 4, 2013 at 8:31
  • 8
    (based on stema's answer) how about this one: "^\pL+[\pL\pZ\pP]{0,}" now all dash, dot and space are also in unicode Apr 4, 2013 at 10:05
  • What does the "+" stand for?
    – Zen
    Jun 14, 2016 at 7:29
  • @summers plus sign means one or more repetitions
    – slxl
    Jul 8, 2016 at 10:24
  • ^[\\p{L}]+$ appears to mach all types of spaces also. Does spaces also fall under Unicode Character category? Jul 27, 2017 at 8:38
18

try this regex (allowing Alphabets, Dots, Spaces):

"^[A-Za-z\s]{1,}[\.]{0,1}[A-Za-z\s]{0,}$" //regular
"^\pL+[\pL\pZ\pP]{0,}$" //unicode

This will also ensure DOT never comes at the start of the name.

7
  • Do i have to use \\s for Java ?
    – amal
    Apr 4, 2013 at 8:06
  • "\s" Matches a single white space character, including space, tab, form feed, line feed Apr 4, 2013 at 8:08
  • 1
    I trid this. But it returns true even when i enter numbers.
    – amal
    Apr 4, 2013 at 8:10
  • try this: "^[A-Za-z\s]{1,}[\.]{0,1}[A-Za-z\s]{0,}$" Apr 4, 2013 at 8:12
  • it works fine except these cases. Mr.3Steve Collins, Mr.Steve 44Collins, Mr.Steve Collins44
    – amal
    Apr 4, 2013 at 8:25
13

For those who use java/android and struggle with this matter try:

"^\\p{L}+[\\p{L}\\p{Z}\\p{P}]{0,}"

This works with names like

  • José Brasão
1
  • I dont know much about regex but, I want to know is this regex stop numbers too Feb 8, 2017 at 9:25
13

You could even try this expression ^[a-zA-Z\\s]*$ for checking a string with only letters and spaces (nothing else).

For me it worked. Hope it works for you as well.

Or go through this piece of code once:

    CharSequence inputStr = expression;
    Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(new String ("^[a-zA-Z\\s]*$"));
    Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(inputStr);
    if(matcher.matches())
    {
         //if pattern matches
    }
    else
    {
         //if pattern does not matches
    }
0
5

please try this regex (allow only Alphabets and space)

"[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z ]*"

if you want it for IOS then,

NSString *yourstring = @"hello";

NSString *Regex = @"[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z ]*";
NSPredicate *TestResult = [NSPredicate predicateWithFormat:@"SELF MATCHES %@",Regex];

if ([TestResult evaluateWithObject:yourstring] == true)
{
    // validation passed
}
else
{
    // invalid name
}
2
  • whats the difference between [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z ]* and [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z ]+ ? did you know ? Dec 12, 2016 at 5:31
  • 1
    * mean optional(zero or more) and + meaning more then one. so suppose you check with single character then [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z ]* will return true but for [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z ]+ returns false for that you need 2 characters. note: you can use [a-zA-Z]+ instead of [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z ]* both are equivalent. Dec 13, 2016 at 11:12
4

Regex pattern for matching only alphabets and white spaces:

String regexUserName = "^[A-Za-z\\s]+$";
2

Accept only character with space :-

 if (!(Pattern.matches("^[\\p{L} .'-]+$", name.getText()))) {
    JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null, "Please enter a valid character", "Error", JOptionPane.ERROR_MESSAGE);
    name.setFocusable(true);
    }  
2

My personal choice is: ^\p{L}+[\p{L}\p{Pd}\p{Zs}']*\p{L}+$|^\p{L}+$, Where:

^\p{L}+ - It should start with 1 or more letters.

[\p{Pd}\p{Zs}'\p{L}]* - It can have letters, space character (including invisible), dash or hyphen characters and ' in any order 0 or more times.

\p{L}+$ - It should finish with 1 or more letters.

|^\p{L}+$ - Or it just should contain 1 or more letters (It is done to support single letter names).

Support for dots (full stops) was dropped, as in British English it can be dropped in Mr or Mrs, for example.

2
  • Shouldn't it support Hindi names as well? like रोहित शर्मा . Any language character should be accepted right? But it's failing to identify Hindi type script Devanagari as Language character.
    – Rishabh876
    Jul 15, 2019 at 9:22
  • Unfortunately, it works correctly. Devanagari contains zero-width joiner, as it is complex script. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-width_joiner Jul 31, 2019 at 21:07
1

To validate for only letters and spaces, try this

String name1_exp = "^[a-zA-Z]+[\-'\s]?[a-zA-Z ]+$";
1
  • If i want to validate the number of characters what might be the code ?
    – G.Abhisek
    Aug 1, 2016 at 14:28
1

Validates such values as: "", "FIR", "FIR ", "FIR LAST"

/^[A-z]*$|^[A-z]+\s[A-z]*$/
1

check this out.

String name validation only accept alphabets and spaces
public static boolean validateLetters(String txt) {

    String regx = "^[a-zA-Z\\s]+$";
    Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(regx,Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE);
    Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(txt);
    return matcher.find();

}
1
  • How is this better than accepted answer? This doesn't match Peter Müller or François Hollande
    – Toto
    Sep 15, 2018 at 12:19
1

To support language like Hindi which can contain /p{Mark} as well in between language characters. My solution is ^[\p{L}\p{M}]+([\p{L}\p{Pd}\p{Zs}'.]*[\p{L}\p{M}])+$|^[\p{L}\p{M}]+$

You can find all the test cases for this here https://regex101.com/r/3XPOea/1/tests

0

@amal. This code will match your requirement. Only letter and space in between will be allow, no number. The text begin with any letter and could have space in between only. "^" denotes the beginning of the line and "$" denotes end of the line.

public static boolean validateLetters(String txt) {

    String regx = "^[a-zA-Z ]+$";
    Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(regx,Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE);
    Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(txt);
    return matcher.find();

}
0

Try with this:

public static boolean userNameValidation(String name){

return name.matches("(?i)(^[a-z])((?![? .,'-]$)[ .]?[a-z]){3,24}$");
}
0

For Java, you can use below for Name validation which uses Alpha (Letters) + Spaces (Blanks or tabs)

"[^\\\p{Alpha}\\\p{Blank}]"

Can get a reference from Wikipedia for ASCII values also.

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