36

I'm trying to find a good way to split a string using a regular expression instead of a string. Thanks

http://nsf.github.io/go/strings.html?f:Split!

6 Answers 6

40

You can use regexp.Split to split a string into a slice of strings with the regex pattern as the delimiter.

package main

import (
    "fmt"
    "regexp"
)

func main() {
    re := regexp.MustCompile("[0-9]+")
    txt := "Have9834a908123great10891819081day!"

    split := re.Split(txt, -1)
    set := []string{}

    for i := range split {
        set = append(set, split[i])
    }

    fmt.Println(set) // ["Have", "a", "great", "day!"]
}
1
18

I made a regex-split function based on the behavior of regex split function in java, c#, php.... It returns only an array of strings, without the index information.

func RegSplit(text string, delimeter string) []string {
    reg := regexp.MustCompile(delimeter)
    indexes := reg.FindAllStringIndex(text, -1)
    laststart := 0
    result := make([]string, len(indexes) + 1)
    for i, element := range indexes {
            result[i] = text[laststart:element[0]]
            laststart = element[1]
    }
    result[len(indexes)] = text[laststart:len(text)]
    return result
}

example:

fmt.Println(RegSplit("a1b22c333d", "[0-9]+"))

result:

[a b c d]
14

If you just want to split on certain characters, you can use strings.FieldsFunc, otherwise I'd go with regexp.FindAllString.

2
  • I tried this, but it overwrites the character I want to split on. I don't want to lose the character, just insert a space. I used a for loop to get to my goal. Thanks. PS - your answer didn't include regex, maybe that's why there's a down vote?
    – Brenden
    Nov 15, 2013 at 9:45
  • Nothing is getting "overwritten", it's just a question of what was returned. If you like, you can always use a different regexp function to get the indices and use those. Jan 24, 2014 at 23:33
12

The regexp.Split() function would be the best way to do this.

1
2

You should be able to create your own split function that loops over the results of RegExp.FindAllString, placing the intervening substrings into a new array.

http://nsf.github.com/go/regexp.html?m:Regexp.FindAllString!

1
  • 1
    Not sure where you got RegExp from, but the correct package name is regexp. Go is case-sensitive! Feb 25, 2011 at 17:52
2

I found this old post while looking for an answer. I'm new to Go but these answers seem overly complex for the current version of Go. The simple function below returns the same result as those above.

package main

import (
    "fmt"
    "regexp"
)

func goReSplit(text string, pattern string) []string {
    regex := regexp.MustCompile(pattern)
    result := regex.Split(text, -1)
    return result
}

func main() {
    fmt.Printf("%#v\n", goReSplit("Have9834a908123great10891819081day!", "[0-9]+"))
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.