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I need regular expression for validating a hashtag. Each hashtag should starts with hashtag("#").

Valid inputs:

1. #hashtag_abc

2. #simpleHashtag

3. #hashtag123

Invalid inputs:

1. #hashtag#

2. #hashtag@hashtag

I have been trying with this regex /#[a-zA-z0-9]/ but it is accepting invalid inputs also.

Any suggestions for how to do it?

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7 Answers 7

17

The current accepted answer fails in a few places:

  • It accepts hashtags that have no letters in them (i.e. "#11111", "#___" both pass).
  • It will exclude hashtags that are separated by spaces ("hey there #friend" fails to match "#friend").
  • It doesn't allow you to place a min/max length on the hashtag.
  • It doesn't offer a lot of flexibility if you decide to add other symbols/characters to your valid input list.

Try the following regex:

/(^|\B)#(?![0-9_]+\b)([a-zA-Z0-9_]{1,30})(\b|\r)/g

It'll close up the above edge cases, and furthermore:

  • You can change {1,30} to your desired min/max
  • You can add other symbols to the [0-9_] and [a-zA-Z0-9_] blocks if you wish to later

Here's a link to the demo.

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  • I guess nobody cares about the first and last capturing group, so i would change them using a non capturing group: (?:^|\B)
    – Luke
    May 29, 2019 at 8:48
  • this one doesnt handle unicode at all. the world is not nato alphabet... it also doesn't handle cases like #invalid#invalid #invalid@ invalid#invalid ##invalid
    – minusf
    Apr 21, 2023 at 19:12
6

To answer the current question...

There are 2 issues:

Since you are validating the whole string, you also need anchors (^ and $)to ensure a full string match:

/^#\w+$/

See the regex demo.

If you want to extract specific valid hashtags from longer texts...

This is a bonus section as a lot of people seek to extract (not validate) hashtags, so here are a couple of solutions for you. Just mind that \w in JavaScript (and a lot of other regex libraries) equal to [a-zA-Z0-9_]:

  • #\w{1,30}\b - a # char followed with one to thirty word chars followed with a word boundary
  • \B#\w{1,30}\b - a # char that is either at the start of string or right after a non-word char, then one to thirty word (i.e. letter, digit, or underscore) chars followed with one to thirty word chars followed with a word boundary
  • \B#(?![\d_]+\b)(\w{1,30})\b - # that is either at the start of string or right after a non-word char, then one to thirty word (i.e. letter, digit, or underscore) chars (that cannot be just digits/underscores) followed with a word boundary

And last but not least, here is a Twitter hashtag regex from https://github.com/twitter/twitter-text/tree/master/js... Sorry, too long to paste in the SO post, here it is: https://gist.github.com/stribizhev/715ee1ee2dc1439ffd464d81d22f80d1.

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  • Your current expression won't match OP's first valid input as it contains an underscore.
    – Niitaku
    Feb 6, 2017 at 10:51
  • 1
    @Niitaku: Yes, you are right, the pattern should be much simpler then. Feb 6, 2017 at 10:54
  • @WiktorStribiżew here is one more valid input #hashtag123
    – Ashok
    Feb 6, 2017 at 11:04
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    @Ashok: Yes, it will get matched with /^#\w+$/ as # matches a hash symbol, the \w+ matches 1+ ASCII letters, digits or _. And the anchors require a full string match. See this regex demo. Feb 6, 2017 at 11:09
1

Unicode general categories can help with that task:

/^#[\p{L}\p{Nd}_]+$/gu

I use \p{L} and \p{Nd} unicode categories to match any letter or decimal digit number. You can add any necessary category for your regex. The complete list of categories can be found here: https://unicode.org/reports/tr18/#General_Category_Property

Regex live demo: https://regexr.com/5tvmo

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You could try the this : /#[a-zA-Z0-9_]+/

This will only include letters, numbers & underscores.

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  • This regex accept a space just after # or #######
    – Toto
    Mar 7, 2021 at 17:17
  • @Toto I removed the dot(.) before \S not it doesn't accepts the spaces after #. Mar 7, 2021 at 18:29
  • True, but it always matches #*%$£;,, not sure it's a valid hashtag.
    – Toto
    Mar 7, 2021 at 19:23
  • If you want to limit it only for characters use #\w+. Mar 7, 2021 at 19:48
  • OK, but, now, how is it better than other answers?
    – Toto
    Mar 7, 2021 at 19:50
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A regex code that matches any hashtag.

In this approach any character is accepted in hashtags except main signs !@#$%^&*()

(?<=(\s|^))#[^\s\!\@\#\$\%\^\&\*\(\)]+(?=(\s|$))

Usage Notes

Turn on "g" and "m" flags when using!

It is tested for Java and JavaScript languages via https://regex101.com and VSCode tools.

It is available on this repo.

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  • Please, don't give twice the same answer, mark the question as duplicate.
    – Toto
    Apr 10, 2021 at 16:13
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useful and tested regex for detecting hashtags in the text

/(^|\s)(#[a-zA-Z\d_]+)/ig

examples of valid matching hashtag: #abc #ab_c #ABC #aBC

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/\B(?:#|#)((?![\p{N}_]+(?:$|\b|\s))(?:[\p{L}\p{M}\p{N}_]{1,60}))/ug

  • allow any language characters or characters with numbers or _.
  • numbers alone or numbers with _ are not allowed.

It's unicode regex, so if you are using Python, you may need to install regex.

to test it https://regex101.com/r/NLHUQh/1

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