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I have a string of semicolon-separated elements and I want to find if a pattern matchs with any of the elements in the string:

string <- "CPT1B;CPT1B;CPT1B;CHKB-CPT1B;CPT1B;CPT1B;CPT1B;CPT1B"

I want to know which regex use to match any of these elements, I mean, I want to get TRUE if any of the elements match with, for example, "CPT1B", to do so I use:

grepl(paste("[^;]","CPT1B,"[$;]",sep = ""),string)
TRUE

I used "[^;]" and "[$;]" because I want to get TRUE if any of the elements match.

My problem came when I try to match with "CHKB-CPT1B", because if I use the same expression:

grepl(paste("[^;]","CHKB-CPT1B","[$;]",sep = ""),string)
FALSE

I get FALSE, I think it's due to the hyphen in the word, and I'd like to know how to make grepl read the word with the hyphen as one word.

I don't want to use "CHKB\-CPT1B", because this pattern would came from an iterator that could be both hyphenated and non-hyphenated words. And I would also like not to split the original string by ";"

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You need to use alternation groups:

grepl(paste0("(?:^|;)", "CPT1B", "(?:$|;)"),string)
[1] TRUE

The (?:^|;) non-capturing group matches start of string or ; and (?:$|;) matches either the end of string or ;.

You also may use lookarounds with perl=TRUE (i.e. a PCRE pattern):

grepl(paste0("(?<![^;])", "CPT1B", "(?![^;])"),string, perl=TRUE)

Here, the negative lookbehind (?<![^;]) matches any location that is immediately preceded with ; or start of string, and the negative lookahead (?![^;]) requires the next char to be ; or end of string location.

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