30

Is there a simple way to match all characters in a class except a certain set of them? For example if in a lanaguage where I can use \w to match the set of all unicode word characters, is there a way to just exclude a character like an underscore "_" from that match?

Only idea that came to mind was to use negative lookahead/behind around each character but that seems more complex than necessary when I effectively just want to match a character against a positive match AND negative match. For example if & was an AND operator I could do this...

^(\w&[^_])+$
6
  • 4
    Which flavor of regex are you using? (e.g. Perl, Java, etc.) Jun 26, 2013 at 18:30
  • What regex flavor/language? stackoverflow.com/q/3201689/139010
    – Matt Ball
    Jun 26, 2013 at 18:30
  • 1
    In .NET you could use [\w-[_]] to exclude the underscore.
    – HamZa
    Jun 26, 2013 at 18:33
  • The regex engine I use most frequently is java based though an old implementation (whatever CF8 uses under the hood). However I also have this need in javascript and python. Jun 26, 2013 at 18:44
  • You mean ColdFusion? That's based on JavaScript, not Java. And its \w only recognizes the ASCII word characters ([A-Za-z0-9_]), not the full Unicode set. Same goes for Python's built-in re flavor.
    – Alan Moore
    Jun 26, 2013 at 20:26

5 Answers 5

32

It really depends on your regex flavor.

.NET

... provides only one simple character class set operation: subtraction. This is enough for your example, so you can simply use

[\w-[_]]

If a - is followed by a nested character class, it's subtracted. Simple as that...

Java

... provides a much richer set of character class set operations. In particular you can get the intersection of two sets like [[abc]&&[cde]] (which would give c in this case). Intersection and negation together give you subtraction:

[\w&&[^_]]

Perl

... supports set operations on extended character classes as an experimental feature (available since Perl 5.18). In particular, you can directly subtract arbitrary character classes:

(?[ \w - [_] ])

All other flavors

... (that support lookaheads) allow you to mimic the subtraction by using a negative lookahead:

(?!_)\w

This first checks that the next character is not a _ and then matches any \w (which can't be _ due to the negative lookahead).

Note that each of these approaches is completely general in that you can subtract two arbitrarily complex character classes.

14

You can use a negation of the \w class (--> \W) and exclude it:

^([^\W_]+)$
9
  • Creative, but I don't think the OP expected this kind of answer, he wants to exclude a character in a general case. Nice idea though
    – HamZa
    Jun 26, 2013 at 18:40
  • @CasimiretHippolyte I should have thought of this. HamZa is right that I was looking for a more general case, but woah... \p... thank you for pointing that out as I have never used it. Jun 26, 2013 at 18:50
  • @CasimiretHippolyte not all cases. This cannot be used to exclude a character from a range ;). Jun 26, 2013 at 18:52
  • Not all RE engines support that. Jun 26, 2013 at 19:43
  • @DonalFellows what do you mean by "that"? Negated character classes? Jun 26, 2013 at 19:52
11

A negative lookahead is the correct way to go insofar as I understand your question:

^((?!_)\w)+$
8

This can be done in python with the regex module. Something like:

import regex as re
pattern = re.compile(r'[\W_--[ ]]+')
cleanString = pattern.sub('', rawString)

You'd typically install the regex module with pip:

pip install regex

EDIT:

The regex module has two behaviours, version 0 and version 1. Set substraction (as above) is a version 1 behaviour. The pypi docs claim version 1 is the default behaviour, but you may find this is not the case. You can check with

import regex
if regex.DEFAULT_VERSION == regex.VERSION1:
  print("version 1")

To set it to version 1:

regex.DEFAULT_VERSION = regex.VERSION1

or to use version one in a single expression:

pattern = re.compile(r'(?V1)[\W_--[ ]]+')
1
  • Lifesaver on the VERSION1 bit. I would have gone crazy otherwise. May 20, 2020 at 12:56
6

Try using subtraction:

[\w&&[^_]]+

Note: This will work in Java, but might not in some other Regex engine.

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