19

I need to check to see if a string contains at least one number in it using Ruby (and I assume some sort of regex?).

How would I do that?

1

5 Answers 5

40

You can use the String class's =~ method with the regex /\d/ as the argument.

Here's an example:

s = 'abc123'

if s =~ /\d/         # Calling String's =~ method.
  puts "The String #{s} has a number in it."
else
  puts "The String #{s} does not have a number in it."
end
13

Alternatively, without using a regex:

def has_digits?(str)
  str.count("0-9") > 0
end
2
  • 3
    that's probably less efficient, if you ignore the overhead of compiling the regular expression (which is fair if the test is being done in a large loop or the string to check is very long). For a degenerative case, your solution must traverse the entire string whereas a proper regular expression will stop as soon as a digit is found. Feb 9, 2010 at 15:30
  • 2
    while this one may not be maximally efficient, it is very readable which can be better for certain situations. Apr 4, 2014 at 9:29
5
if /\d/.match( theStringImChecking ) then
   #yep, there's a number in the string
end
4
!s[/\d/].nil?

Can be a standalone function -

def has_digits?(s)
  return !s[/\d/].nil?
end

or ... adding it to the String class makes it even more convenient -

class String
  def has_digits?
    return !self[/\d/].nil?
  end
end
3

Rather than use something like "s =~ /\d/", I go for the shorter s[/\d/] which returns nil for a miss (AKA false in a conditional test) or the index of the hit (AKA true in a conditional test). If you need the actual value use s[/(\d)/, 1]

It should all work out the same and is largely a programmer's choice.

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