How to put together a regex that will match words that end with "Id" doing a case sensitive match?
6 Answers
Try this regular expression:
\w*Id\b
\w*
allows word characters in front of Id
and the \b
ensures that Id
is at the end of the word (\b
is word boundary assertion).
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@epitka, note that
\w
also matches numbers and the underscore. In short the strings___Id
and12345Id
will also be matched. Feb 12, 2010 at 20:17 -
I gave you an upvote, but epitka doesn't specify if just "Id" is allowable, so I'd be tempted to change the * for a + Feb 12, 2010 at 20:19
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1I found it doesn't match string that end with ID. you need to do \z at the end instead of \b– vitalypSep 2, 2021 at 20:49
Gumbo gets my vote, however, the OP doesn't specify whether just "Id" is an allowable word, which means I'd make a minor modification:
\w+Id\b
1 or more word characters followed by "Id" and a breaking space. The [a-zA-Z] variants don't take into account non-English alphabetic characters. I might also use \s instead of \b as a space rather than a breaking space. It would depend if you need to wrap over multiple lines.
This may do the trick:
\b\p{L}*Id\b
Where \p{L}
matches any (Unicode) letter and \b
matches a word boundary.
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does \p{L} work in C# regex? I've never seen that one before and usually opt for \w Feb 12, 2010 at 20:18
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@BenAlabaster, yes: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… And yes, perhaps
\w
is sufficient for the OP, but it matches more than letters (see my comment under Gumbo's post). Feb 12, 2010 at 20:21
How about \A[a-z]*Id\z
? [This makes characters before Id
optional. Use \A[a-z]+Id\z
if there needs to be one or more characters preceding Id
.]
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Why
\z
worked with me, while the\b
mentioned in all other answers not working? Sep 8, 2019 at 10:05
I would use
\b[A-Za-z]*Id\b
The \b matches the beginning and end of a word i.e. space, tab or newline, or the beginning or end of a string.
The [A-Za-z] will match any letter, and the * means that 0+ get matched. Finally there is the Id.
Note that this will match words that have capital letters in the middle such as 'teStId'.
I use http://www.regular-expressions.info/ for regex reference
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1The set
a-z
excludesé
and other similar characters. Perhaps not an issue, but something epitka may want to know. Feb 12, 2010 at 20:18 -
1[A-Za-z] doesn't match non-English alphabetic characters, so should be avoided in favour of \w unless a guarantee can be made that only English letters will appear. Feb 12, 2010 at 20:20
Regex ids = new Regex(@"\w*Id\b", RegexOptions.None);
\b
means "word break" and \w
means any word character. So \w*Id\b
means "{stuff}Id". By not including RegexOptions.IgnoreCase
, it will be case sensitive.
Id
(starts and ends withId
) andO'HaraId
(do you want to matchO'HaraId
orHaraId
) andfoo-barId
(do you want to matchfoo-barId
orbarId
)? In short: please define what a "word" means (or what you want it to be).