How can I test the same regex against different regular expression engines?
-
@Lasse: how is this not constructive again?– Dan DascalescuFeb 26, 2014 at 4:43
-
@DanDascalescu This question is far too broad.– chrylis -cautiouslyoptimistic-Feb 26, 2014 at 5:07
-
@chrylis: Edited. I've narrowed it down to testing the same regexp against multiple engines. Please see @Shog9's comments on moderating tool recommendations as well.– Dan DascalescuFeb 26, 2014 at 5:17
-
@DanDascalescu You've completely misunderstood the original intent of the question but since I don't mind the question you're asking I don't see any point in editing it back.– Onorio CatenacciFeb 26, 2014 at 13:47
-
1@DanDascalescu - you're making a fool of yourself here - this question was asked in August 2008 - i.e. the first few days of SO's existence. Running around down-voting answers and resurrecting questions which are now into their second half decade just makes you look slightly unhinged.– Will DeanFeb 26, 2014 at 16:04
30 Answers
The most powerful free online regexp testing tool is by far http://regex101.com/ - lets you select the RE engine (PCRE, JavaScript, Python), has a debugger, colorizes the matches, explains the regexp on the fly, can create permalinks to the regex playground.
Other online tools:
- http://www.rexv.org/ - supports PHP and Perl PCRE, Posix, Python, JavaScript, and Node.js
- http://refiddle.com/ - Inspired by jsfiddle, but for regular expressions. Supports JavaScript, Ruby and .NET expressions.
- http://regexpal.com/ - powered by the XRegExp JavaScript library
- http://www.rubular.com/ - Ruby-based
- Perl Regex Tutor - uses PCRE
Windows desktop tools:
- The Regex Coach - free Windows application
- RegexBuddy recommended by most, costs US$ 39.95
Jeff Atwood [wrote about regular expressions]( post:).
Other tools recommended by SO users include:
- http://www.txt2re.com/ Online free tool to generate regular expressions for multiple language (@palmsey another thread)
- The Added Bytes Regular Expressions Cheat Sheet (@GateKiller another thread)
- http://regexhero.net/ - The Online .NET Regular Expression Tester. Not free.
-
2
-
I love regex coach - it does dynamic searching as you type. The only thing is that it seems like it's gone into hibernation. May 13, 2009 at 22:07
-
1
-
3
-
1
I use Expresso (www.ultrapico.com). It has a lot of nice features for the developer. The Regulator used to be my favorite, but it hasn't been updated in so long and I constantly ran into crashes with complicated RegExs.
-
+1 Its all good now. Theres been an update in 09. Expresso 3.0, its pretty stable.– gideonDec 9, 2010 at 8:40
Here are some for the Mac: (Note: don't judge the tools by their websites)
- RegExhibit - My Favorite, powerful and easy
- Reggy - Simple and Clean
- RegexWidget - A Dashboard Widget for quick testing
-
6I will totally judge tools by their web sites, thank you very much. ;)– KjensenSep 9, 2009 at 16:32
If you are an Emacs user, the command re-builder
lets you type an Emacs regex and shows on the fly the matching strings in the current buffer, with colors to mark groups. It's free as Emacs.
RegexBuddy is a weapon of choice
-
Care to expand on that? What was your experience with the tool? Maybe mention it's Windows only and costs $40? Feb 26, 2014 at 4:51
I use the excellent and free Rad Software Regular Expression Designer.
If you just want to write a regular expression, have a little help with the syntax and test the RE's matching and replacing then this fairly light-footprint tool is ideal.
couple of eclipse plugins for those using eclipse,
http://www.brosinski.com/regex/
http://www.bastian-bergerhoff.com/eclipse/features/web/QuickREx/toc.html
I agree on RegExBuddy, but if you want free or when I'm working somewhere and not on my own system RegExr is a great online (Flash) tool that has lots of pre-built regex segments to work with and does real-time pattern matching for your testing.
-
You could carry around a portable installation of RegexBuddy on a USB stick whenever you're not on your own system. Nov 23, 2009 at 14:32
-
In the standard Python installation there is a "Tools/scripts" directory containing redemo.py.
This creates an interactive Tkinter window in which you can experiment with regexs.
In the past I preferred The Regex Coach for its simplistic layout, instantaneous highlighting and its price (free).
Every once in awhile though I run into an issue with it when trying to test .NET regular expressions. For that, it turns out, it's better to use a tool that actually uses the .NET regular expression engine. That was my whole reason to build Regex Hero last year. It runs in Silverlight, and as such, runs off of the .NET Regex Class library directly.
-
RegexBuddy does not use the .NET regex engine. It uses the JGSoft engine, which is just as good, but with a slightly different feature set. For example, it doesn't have .NET's "balanced matching" feature, but it does support unrestricted, variable-length lookbehind expressions--the only regex flavor besides .NET to do so. As for Regex Hero, it's not really free; the online version is a demo that constantly nags you to buy the "professional" version. Dec 10, 2010 at 22:01
-
@Alan - Thanks for the correction. I wrote this answer a long time ago when Regex Hero was completely free and light on features. I started charging for the professional version last December. Dec 10, 2010 at 22:39
Regexbuddy does all this. http://www.regexbuddy.com/
-
Care to expand on that? What was your experience with the tool? Maybe mention it's Windows only and costs $40? Feb 26, 2014 at 4:53
I'll add to the vote of Reggy for the Mac, gonna try out some of the other ones that Joseph suggested and upvote that post tomorrow when my limit gets reset.
+1 For Regex Coach here. Free and does the job really well.
I am still a big The Regulator fan.
There are some stability problems but these can be fixed by disableing the Intellisense. It gets mad with some expressions and typos in building an expression.
Would love it if Roy Osherove updated, but looks like he is busy with other things.
I like to use this online one: http://www.cuneytyilmaz.com/prog/jrx/ Of course, it'll be javascript regexp, but I've never yet done anything clever enough to notice the difference.
How much is your time worth? Pay the $40 and get RegexBuddy. I did, and I even upgraded from 2.x version to 3.x. It has paid for itself many times over.
I personally like the Regular Expression Tester.
It's a free firefox plugin, so always on!
Check out Regex Master which is free and open source regular expression tester
This regex tester able to test javascript, php and python http://www.piliapp.com/regex-tester/
RegExBuddy so far I concur with and endorse.
-
Care to expand on that? What was your experience with the tool? Maybe mention it's Windows only and costs $40? Feb 26, 2014 at 4:53
http://rgx-extract-replace.appspot.com has the functionality to enlist the captured regex groups formatted in columns and optionally can replace the matched patterns in the input text.