2

I have addresses in two formats:

SomeHouse,
Holbrook,
Belper,
Derbyshire,
DE56 0RR

and

SomeHouse,
Holbrook,
Belper,
Derbyshire,
DE56 0RR(123123123123)

The number only ever appears right at the end, is always in brackets and always 12 digits.

I am trying to get a regex to match two groups ... the address and the number (if it is there).

It is a head banger (for my inregexperienced self) since i cant get my expression to work on both types of address.

I have

(?<address>.*)(?<bracketsandnum>\((?<num>[0-9]{12})\))$

which also uses a group to match the brackets - not so sure i need that bit :) certainly not as a named group anyway.

Please advise!

Cheers, James.


Update

I have used the answer provided by Martinho, Qtax. Many thanks to them. Now i understand a bit more, i see my question is similar to the following:

Ignoring an optional suffix with a greedy regex

1 Answer 1

4

Make the second group optional with ?, and use a non-greedy match in the first group (by modifying * with ?). Something like this:

^(?<address>.*?)(?:\((?<num>\d{12})\))?$
4
  • @Martinho, Qtax, may i officially upgrade 'something like' to 'exactly like'! It works ... thankyou very much.
    – user597118
    Jul 12, 2011 at 11:17
  • Please could you explain what the ?: bit means?
    – user597118
    Jul 12, 2011 at 11:19
  • @user: it makes a non-capturing group. It means that there won't be a Group in the Match for the portion it captures. I think @Qtax assumed you didn't care about capturing the parenthesis, only the numbers. If you do want them, go ahead an make a named group like you did in your original regex. Jul 12, 2011 at 11:24
  • @Martinho, thank you again. I actually understand the little fecker now. Qtax was right, those brackets are unwanted.
    – user597118
    Jul 12, 2011 at 11:29

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