What am I doing wrong here?
string q = "john s!";
string clean = Regex.Replace(q, @"([^a-zA-Z0-9]|^\s)", string.Empty);
// clean == "johns". I want "john s";
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What am I doing wrong here?
string q = "john s!";
string clean = Regex.Replace(q, @"([^a-zA-Z0-9]|^\s)", string.Empty);
// clean == "johns". I want "john s";
just a FYI
string clean = Regex.Replace(q, @"[^a-zA-Z0-9\s]", string.Empty);
would actually be better like
string clean = Regex.Replace(q, @"[^\w\s]", string.Empty);
This:
string clean = Regex.Replace(dirty, "[^a-zA-Z0-9\x20]", String.Empty);
\x20 is ascii hex for 'space' character
you can add more individual characters that you want to be allowed. If you want for example "?" to be ok in the return string add \x3f.
[^A-Za-z0-9 ?]
etc.
– ChrisF
Oct 12 '14 at 20:40
I got it:
string clean = Regex.Replace(q, @"[^a-zA-Z0-9\s]", string.Empty);
Didn't know you could put \s in the brackets
I suspect ^ doesn't work the way you think it does outside of a character class.
What you're telling it to do is replace everything that isn't an alphanumeric with an empty string, OR any leading space. I think what you mean to say is that spaces are ok to not replace - try moving the \s into the [] class.
The following regex is for space inclusion in textbox.
Regex r = new Regex("^[a-zA-Z\\s]+");
r.IsMatch(textbox1.text);
This works fine for me.
There appear to be two problems.
I think you want the following regex @"([^a-zA-Z0-9\s])+"
bottom regex with space, supports all keyboard letters from different culture
string input = "78-selim güzel667.,?";
Regex regex = new Regex(@"[^\w\x20]|[\d]");
var result= regex.Replace(input,"");
//selim güzel
The circumflex inside the square brackets means all characters except the subsequent range. You want a circumflex outside of square brackets.