44

In this lesson I don't understand why [^b] is not correct? I understand that [^bog] is correct.

[^b] should match any string that has no b character and don't match any string containing any b character.

Is there anything wrong in my understanding?

1
  • 5
    [^b] matches a character that is not a b. So in your hog / bog / dog example, it matches all of them since all words have a letter in them that is not a b. [^bog] actually matches any character that is neither a b, nor o, nor g, that's why it does not match any letter of bog. Neither would it match gob or ogb etc. The answer to that question, by the way, could just be [dh]og to match dog, hog, but not bog. Commented Apr 28, 2014 at 22:17

5 Answers 5

49

For that specific lesson, the correct regex is:

[^b]og

EXPLANATION:

/[^b]og/

[^b] match a single character not present in the list below
b the literal character b (case sensitive)
og matches the characters og literally (case sensitive)

NOTES:

Negated Character Classes

Typing a caret after the opening square bracket negates the character class. The result is that the character class matches any character that is not in the character class. Unlike the dot, negated character classes also match (invisible) line break characters. If you don't want a negated character class to match line breaks, you need to include the line break characters in the class. [^0-9\r\n] matches any character that is not a digit or a line break.

It is important to remember that a negated character class still must match a character. q[^u] does not mean: "a q not followed by a u". It means: "a q followed by a character that is not a u". It does not match the q in the string Iraq. It does match the q and the space after the q in Iraq is a country. Indeed: the space becomes part of the overall match, because it is the "character that is not a u" that is matched by the negated character class in the above regexp. If you want the regex to match the q, and only the q, in both strings, you need to use negative lookahead.

3
  • I +1'ed yours because some reason I didn't think of the expression they were actually looking for. However, I think you could answer OP's direct question better.
    – Sam
    Commented Apr 28, 2014 at 22:33
  • @sam I think the explanation is self explanatory. Commented Apr 28, 2014 at 22:37
  • I think the explanation section is good, but OP's question is why doesn't [^b] work. That isn't addressed in the explanation.
    – Sam
    Commented Apr 28, 2014 at 22:38
12

[^b] will only match one character that is not 'b'.
[^b]+ will specify that RegEx group to match one or more characters that are not 'b'.
[^b]* will specify that RegEx group to match zero or more characters that are not 'b'.

11

^[^b] works.

The ^ OUTSIDE the []s indicates "the beginning of the string"

6

You are fundamentally correct, but [^b] will still match o and g in bog -- meaning it is a successful match, even though it didn't match the whole string. [^bog] will only match h in hog, d in dog, and nothing in bog -- meaning it doesn't match bog.

I think this will make more sense if you look at ^[^b]+$. This will match 1+ non-b characters, anchored at the beginning (^) and end ($) of the string. Comparing that to your initial expression of [^b] or [^bog], you can see the difference. I suggest using a GUI RegEx tester (the previously linked one is my favorite), which will really help illustrate the logic.

-2

You can use this with inputFormatter in flutter language

This will exclude emoji and this special character. If you want to add number also you can put into this.

 inputFormatter: <TextInputFormatter>[
          FilteringTextInputFormatter.deny(r'[¬¦्«»ΩΠμ§¡¿±·£%,!#$%&*+";:/=?^`{|}~₹)(•√π÷׶∆€¥¢°©®™✓><\[\]\\’|‘|”|“|]\u00a9|\u00ae|[\u2000-\u3300]|\ud83c[\ud000-\udfff]|\ud83d[\ud000-\udfff]|\ud83e[\ud000-\udfff]')
]

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