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I need a Regular Expressions to get the text within 2 tags.

Lets say I want an array returned containing any text within <data> and </data> tags. Or any text within "(" and ")" tags.

How can I do that with RegEx's in C#?


An advanced question would be:

  1. The input string is "color=rgb(50,20,30)"
  2. How can I get the 3 numbers in 3 seperate array slots as returned by the RegEx processor in C#?
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5 Answers 5

4

Perl regexp would be

$string =~ /color=rgb\((\d+),(\d+),(\d+)\)/;
@array = ($1,$2,$3);

But you probably need more information that this.

0
3

Since you specifically mentioned C#, here's how I'm doing that exact parsing:

private static readonly Regex RgbValuePattern = new Regex(@"(?<r>\d{1,3}) ?, ?(?<g>\d{1,3}) ?, ?(?<b>\d{1,3})",
                                                          RegexOptions.Compiled | RegexOptions.ExplicitCapture);

Then later on...

var match = RgbValuePattern.Match(value);

if (match.Success)
{
    int r = Int32.Parse(match.Groups["r"].Value, NumberFormatInfo.InvariantInfo);
    int g = Int32.Parse(match.Groups["g"].Value, NumberFormatInfo.InvariantInfo);
    int b = Int32.Parse(match.Groups["b"].Value, NumberFormatInfo.InvariantInfo);
    return Color.FromArgb(r, g, b);
}
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  • Gah! This reminds me why I avoid regexps in C++ - extremely awkward to work with! Perl is still the best language for that...
    – user3458
    Dec 9, 2008 at 18:43
1

This similar question has answers that will help:

1

Using Regex to parse XML is usually a really bad idea. See this answer.

0
0

I believe real problems will arise when you want to parse nesting constructs. For example, when you want to examine XML like this <data><data>123</data><data>456</data></data> to extract data included in outermost <data> tags one RegEx alone would not be enough. Just warn you to not use RegEx where some more (powerful and specific) methods exist. Real XML parsers should be considered when doing more complex tasks on XML. My 2 cents...

3
  • Yeah, regexps are famous for not dealing with recursive data. Theoretically incapable of it, in fact.
    – user3458
    Dec 9, 2008 at 16:41
  • Yeah, you are right. You can match finite recursion (e.g. 3 and no more nested tags) but can't solve problem for arbitrary level of recursion. Finite automaton just can't track infinite number of steps needed to get to any recursion level.
    – IgorK
    Dec 10, 2008 at 11:51
  • Recently found an interesting feature of .NET regex - balanced matching (see blogs.msdn.com/bclteam/archive/2005/03/15/396452.aspx ). So with such feature you actually can match brackets. Was a bit of surprise to me...
    – IgorK
    Jan 23, 2010 at 17:56

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