Algorithm: Regex character intersection - java

I have two regular expressions in Java and I would like to know whether the last character of a string (successfully) matched by the first regex can be the same as the first character of a string (successfully) matched by the second one.
These expression are complex, not just character restrictions, but length or form restricted too.
I was looking into https://code.google.com/archive/p/xeger/ but that is just half of the way.
(I am solving a problem whether there is a separator needed in between two consecutive strings restricted by these regexes or whether a parser would be able to tell them apart without a separator)
Examples:
Regex1 = <
Regex2 = [:a-zA-Z]([:a-zA-Z]|-|_|\.|[0-9])*
Regex3 = Regex2
[Regex1][Regex2] would need no separator, because parser would parse string <xml into 2 tokens safely (< and xml).
[Regex2][Regex3] share a lot of characters and parser would have several possibilities on how to parse lets say string table.
I know the theory behind regex evaluation (automata...), however I would like to avoid implementing DFA generation on my own.

I have an open source library on github that can build DFAs for you: http://mtimmerm.github.io/dfalex/
Note that your question seems to be formulated incorrectly. If you want to know whether or not a delimiter is required between strings that match two regexes, you probably need to know whether any character that can "extend" a successful match of the first regex can also start a match of the second regex. In a DFA, the characters that can extend a match are the ones on transitions out of accepting states.
I should add that you don't necessarily need to build DFAs to answer these questions. First + last characters, extending characters, and whether or not it matches the empty string, are questions that can be answered with simple recursive operations on the regex AST.
For example (using | and & for both Boolean and set operations):
Let NULLABLE(X) be true iff a regex matches the empty string. Then:
NULLABLE(AB) = NULLABLE(A) & NULLABLE(B)
NULLABLE(A|B) = NULLABLE(A) | NULLABLE(B)
NULLABLE(A+) = NULLABLE(A)
NULLABLE(A?) = true
Let FIRST(X) be the set of characters that can start a regex:
FIRST(AB) = NULLABLE(A) ? FIRST(A)|FIRST(B) : FIRST(A)
FIRST(A|B) = FIRST(A)|FIRST(B)
FIRST(A+) = FIRST(A?) = FIRST(A)
Let EXT(X) be the set of characters that can extend a regex:
EXT(AB) = NULLABLE(B) ? EXT(A)|EXT(B) : EXT(B)
EXT(A|B) = EXT(A) | EXT(B)
EXT(A+) = EXT(A?) = EXT(A)|FIRST(A)

Rather an abstract answer, but maybe you are able to turn this into code:
Regular expressions can always be turned into NFAs (Thompson) and therefore into DFAs (Subset Construction). See this interactive website for examples. And this particular problem might be easier to analyze in a DFA:
If and only if there is an edge that leads to a final state in the first DFA that is marked with a character, for which there is an outgoing edge of the initial state in the second DFA, then your condition is met.
See this example for the expressions aa+b* and ba+. The edges circled in blue are the edges reaching the final state in the first expression, so the final character can be a or b. The edges circled in red are the outgoing edges in the second DFA, so the first character can be only b. In this case, there can be an overlap.

Related

Regular expression to match whole list as well as its parts [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Java Regex: repetitive groups?
(3 answers)
Closed 2 years ago.
In Java I have a string like +aba,biba,-miba, which is a list to sort orders. There might be any number of parts. "aba" "biba", "miba" are just examples.
I would like to make a regular expression, which finds +/- and aba, biba, miba.
I would also like to check if a full string matches the syntax. Which means, that I need to find +aba,biba,-miba as well.
I managed to write regex for the first part:
([+-]?)([^,]*)[,]?
How should I complete the expression that I can get 2nd part out of it as well?
Depending on the complexity of the list, i.e. what could be part of it, a regex to check the entire list would be quite straight forward. This regex could contain a group that represents each part as well as a quantifier but you wouldn't be able to extract the all the parts from a single regex as Java's implementation isn't built that way. Thus you'd need to either use a simple split() to get the parts or a second regex to extract them.
Assuming your list is separated by comma, doesn't contain whitespace and only allows +/- as well as lower-case characters you could use the following expression to check the format of the list:
boolean listMatches = list.matches("^([+-]?[a-z]+(,(?!$))?)*$");
Note that String.matches() makes ^ and $ superfluous but I added them for completeness in case you use another method to apply the expression. This basically checks for any number ob lower-case "names" preceded by an optional + or - and followed by a comma if it isn't the last character in the string.
Note that this would allow for a empty lists as well. If the list must contain at least one element you might use something like this:
boolean listMatches = list.matches("^[+-]?[a-z]+(,[+-]?[a-z]+)*$");
Looking for the parts could then look like this:
Pattern partPattern = Pattern.compile("([+-]?)([a-z]+)");
Matcher partMatcher = partPattern.matcher(list);
while( partMatcher.find() ) {
String direction = partMatcher.group(1);
String name = partMatcher.group(2);
}
Note that this could also be done with a combination of list.split(","), list.charAt(0) and list.subString(1,list.length()) - it's up to you :)

java 8 regular expression for meta characters [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
What special characters must be escaped in regular expressions?
(13 answers)
Closed 3 years ago.
Trying to write a regular expression to check if the sentence as metacharacters "I need to make payment of $50 for the purchase, should i use CASH|CC". In this sentence i need to identify if metacharacters are present.
\\\\$ or ^(\\\\$)\\$. What is the right syntax for Pattern.matches("^([\\\\$]$)", text); to identify the special characters. I don't need to replace just identify if the sentence contains these characters.
If you want to know whether a string contains meta characters, you can use some like this:
boolean hasIt = sentence.chars().anyMatch(c -> "\\.[]{}()*+?^$|".indexOf(c) >= 0);
By not using the Regex engine, you don’t need to quote the characters which have a special meaning to it.
Using Pattern.matches creates three unnecessary obstacles to the task. First, you have to quote all characters correctly, then, you need a regex construct to turn the characters into alternatives, e.g. [abc] or a|b|c, third, matches checks whether the entire string matches the pattern, rather than contains an occurrences, so you’d need something like .*pattern.* to make matches to behave like find, if you insist on it.
Which leads to the xy-problem of this task. It’s not clear which metacharacters you actually want to check and why you need this information in the first place.
If you want to search for this sentence within another text, just use Pattern.compile(sentence, Pattern.LITERAL) to disable interpretation of meta characters. Or Pattern.quote(sentence) when you want to assemble a pattern containing the sentence.
But if you don’t want to search for it, this information has no relevance. Note that “Is this a meta character?” may lead to a different answer than “Does it need quoting?”. Even this tutorial combines these questions in a misleading way. At two close places it names the metacharacters and describes the quoting syntax, leading to the wrong impression that all of these characters need quoting.
For example, - only has a special meaning within a character class, so if there is no character class, which you detect by the presence of [, the - does not imply the presence of metacharacters. But while - truly needs quoting within the character class, the characters = and ! are metacharacters only in a certain context, which requires a metacharacter, so they never require quoting.
But if you are trying to check for a metacharacter to decide whether to use the Regex engine or to perform a plain text search, e.g. via String.indexOf, you are performing premature optimization. This is not only a waste of development effort, optimizing before you even have an actual code you could measure often leads to the opposite result. Performing a pattern matching using the Regex engine with a string containing no metacharacters can lead to a more efficient search than a plain indexOf on the String. In the reference implementation, the Regex engine uses the Boyer Moore algorithm while the plaintext search methods on String use a naive search.
Edit: As mentioned by commenters Andreas and Holger, the meta characters used by regular expressions are sometimes depending on a syntactical subdefinition, like character classes, specific sequences (lookahead, lookbehind,...) and are therefore not intrinsically metacaracters per se. Some are only meta characters in a specific context. However the answer provided here will include all possible meta characters, with the exception of the operators that only become meta characters when prefixed by \. However, this means, that sometimes characters will be matched, in locations where they are not actually meta characters.
This question has half the answer: List of all special characters that need to be escaped in a regex
You can look at the javadoc of the Pattern class: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html
The Java regular expression system exposes no character class for it's own special characters (regrettably).
Special constructs (named-capturing and non-capturing)
(?X) X, as a named-capturing group
(?:X) X, as a non-capturing group
(?idmsuxU-idmsuxU) Nothing, but turns match flags i d m s u x U on - off
(?idmsux-idmsux:X) X, as a non-capturing group with the given flags i d m s u x on - off
(?=X) X, via zero-width positive lookahead
(?!X) X, via zero-width negative lookahead
This block alone contains a lot (though not all) of the meta characters. The last two rows of the citation I had ot leave out, because the character sequences confused the parser of this page.
I would suggest the following:
public static final Pattern META_CHARS = Pattern.compile("[\\\\\\]\\[(){}\\-!$?*+<>\\:\\.\\=\\,\\|^]");
But be aware, that this list might very well be incomplete, and that this contains typical characters such as , and . which are part of the regex syntax. So you probably got a lot of escaping to do...
From there you can:
Matcher metaDetector = META_CHARS.matcher(stringToTest);
if (metaDetector.find()) {
// this is the found meta character...
String metaCharacter = metaDetector.group(0);
System.out.print(metaCharacter);
}
And if you want to find all meta characters, then make a while out of if in the above code snippet. If you do, for the line "I need to make \\payment{[ of $50 for !!the purc\"hase, sh###ould i use CASH|CC." you receive \{[$!!,|., which is correct, as # and " are not meta characters in regex.
As Andreas correctly mentions, the exact pattern can be reduced to "[\\\\\\]\\[(){}^$?*+.|]", because this will tell you, whether or not at least one meta character is present. However this might miss some meta characters, if multiple are present. If this is not important, then the shorter chain is sufficient.

inverse match regex AND Space or end of string, AND space or start of string [duplicate]

I know it's possible to match a word and then reverse the matches using other tools (e.g. grep -v). However, is it possible to match lines that do not contain a specific word, e.g. hede, using a regular expression?
Input:
hoho
hihi
haha
hede
Code:
grep "<Regex for 'doesn't contain hede'>" input
Desired output:
hoho
hihi
haha
The notion that regex doesn't support inverse matching is not entirely true. You can mimic this behavior by using negative look-arounds:
^((?!hede).)*$
The regex above will match any string, or line without a line break, not containing the (sub)string 'hede'. As mentioned, this is not something regex is "good" at (or should do), but still, it is possible.
And if you need to match line break chars as well, use the DOT-ALL modifier (the trailing s in the following pattern):
/^((?!hede).)*$/s
or use it inline:
/(?s)^((?!hede).)*$/
(where the /.../ are the regex delimiters, i.e., not part of the pattern)
If the DOT-ALL modifier is not available, you can mimic the same behavior with the character class [\s\S]:
/^((?!hede)[\s\S])*$/
Explanation
A string is just a list of n characters. Before, and after each character, there's an empty string. So a list of n characters will have n+1 empty strings. Consider the string "ABhedeCD":
┌──┬───┬──┬───┬──┬───┬──┬───┬──┬───┬──┬───┬──┬───┬──┬───┬──┐
S = │e1│ A │e2│ B │e3│ h │e4│ e │e5│ d │e6│ e │e7│ C │e8│ D │e9│
└──┴───┴──┴───┴──┴───┴──┴───┴──┴───┴──┴───┴──┴───┴──┴───┴──┘
index 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
where the e's are the empty strings. The regex (?!hede). looks ahead to see if there's no substring "hede" to be seen, and if that is the case (so something else is seen), then the . (dot) will match any character except a line break. Look-arounds are also called zero-width-assertions because they don't consume any characters. They only assert/validate something.
So, in my example, every empty string is first validated to see if there's no "hede" up ahead, before a character is consumed by the . (dot). The regex (?!hede). will do that only once, so it is wrapped in a group, and repeated zero or more times: ((?!hede).)*. Finally, the start- and end-of-input are anchored to make sure the entire input is consumed: ^((?!hede).)*$
As you can see, the input "ABhedeCD" will fail because on e3, the regex (?!hede) fails (there is "hede" up ahead!).
Note that the solution to does not start with “hede”:
^(?!hede).*$
is generally much more efficient than the solution to does not contain “hede”:
^((?!hede).)*$
The former checks for “hede” only at the input string’s first position, rather than at every position.
If you're just using it for grep, you can use grep -v hede to get all lines which do not contain hede.
ETA Oh, rereading the question, grep -v is probably what you meant by "tools options".
Answer:
^((?!hede).)*$
Explanation:
^the beginning of the string,
( group and capture to \1 (0 or more times (matching the most amount possible)),
(?! look ahead to see if there is not,
hede your string,
) end of look-ahead,
. any character except \n,
)* end of \1 (Note: because you are using a quantifier on this capture, only the LAST repetition of the captured pattern will be stored in \1)
$ before an optional \n, and the end of the string
The given answers are perfectly fine, just an academic point:
Regular Expressions in the meaning of theoretical computer sciences ARE NOT ABLE do it like this. For them it had to look something like this:
^([^h].*$)|(h([^e].*$|$))|(he([^h].*$|$))|(heh([^e].*$|$))|(hehe.+$)
This only does a FULL match. Doing it for sub-matches would even be more awkward.
If you want the regex test to only fail if the entire string matches, the following will work:
^(?!hede$).*
e.g. -- If you want to allow all values except "foo" (i.e. "foofoo", "barfoo", and "foobar" will pass, but "foo" will fail), use: ^(?!foo$).*
Of course, if you're checking for exact equality, a better general solution in this case is to check for string equality, i.e.
myStr !== 'foo'
You could even put the negation outside the test if you need any regex features (here, case insensitivity and range matching):
!/^[a-f]oo$/i.test(myStr)
The regex solution at the top of this answer may be helpful, however, in situations where a positive regex test is required (perhaps by an API).
FWIW, since regular languages (aka rational languages) are closed under complementation, it's always possible to find a regular expression (aka rational expression) that negates another expression. But not many tools implement this.
Vcsn supports this operator (which it denotes {c}, postfix).
You first define the type of your expressions: labels are letter (lal_char) to pick from a to z for instance (defining the alphabet when working with complementation is, of course, very important), and the "value" computed for each word is just a Boolean: true the word is accepted, false, rejected.
In Python:
In [5]: import vcsn
c = vcsn.context('lal_char(a-z), b')
c
Out[5]: {a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,i,j,k,l,m,n,o,p,q,r,s,t,u,v,w,x,y,z} → 𝔹
then you enter your expression:
In [6]: e = c.expression('(hede){c}'); e
Out[6]: (hede)^c
convert this expression to an automaton:
In [7]: a = e.automaton(); a
finally, convert this automaton back to a simple expression.
In [8]: print(a.expression())
\e+h(\e+e(\e+d))+([^h]+h([^e]+e([^d]+d([^e]+e[^]))))[^]*
where + is usually denoted |, \e denotes the empty word, and [^] is usually written . (any character). So, with a bit of rewriting ()|h(ed?)?|([^h]|h([^e]|e([^d]|d([^e]|e.)))).*.
You can see this example here, and try Vcsn online there.
Here's a good explanation of why it's not easy to negate an arbitrary regex. I have to agree with the other answers, though: if this is anything other than a hypothetical question, then a regex is not the right choice here.
With negative lookahead, regular expression can match something not contains specific pattern. This is answered and explained by Bart Kiers. Great explanation!
However, with Bart Kiers' answer, the lookahead part will test 1 to 4 characters ahead while matching any single character. We can avoid this and let the lookahead part check out the whole text, ensure there is no 'hede', and then the normal part (.*) can eat the whole text all at one time.
Here is the improved regex:
/^(?!.*?hede).*$/
Note the (*?) lazy quantifier in the negative lookahead part is optional, you can use (*) greedy quantifier instead, depending on your data: if 'hede' does present and in the beginning half of the text, the lazy quantifier can be faster; otherwise, the greedy quantifier be faster. However if 'hede' does not present, both would be equal slow.
Here is the demo code.
For more information about lookahead, please check out the great article: Mastering Lookahead and Lookbehind.
Also, please check out RegexGen.js, a JavaScript Regular Expression Generator that helps to construct complex regular expressions. With RegexGen.js, you can construct the regex in a more readable way:
var _ = regexGen;
var regex = _(
_.startOfLine(),
_.anything().notContains( // match anything that not contains:
_.anything().lazy(), 'hede' // zero or more chars that followed by 'hede',
// i.e., anything contains 'hede'
),
_.endOfLine()
);
Benchmarks
I decided to evaluate some of the presented Options and compare their performance, as well as use some new Features.
Benchmarking on .NET Regex Engine: http://regexhero.net/tester/
Benchmark Text:
The first 7 lines should not match, since they contain the searched Expression, while the lower 7 lines should match!
Regex Hero is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.
XRegex Hero is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.
Regex HeroRegex HeroRegex HeroRegex HeroRegex Hero is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.
Regex Her Regex Her Regex Her Regex Her Regex Her Regex Her Regex Hero is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.
Regex Her is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.Regex Hero
egex Hero egex Hero egex Hero egex Hero egex Hero egex Hero Regex Hero is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.
RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRegex Hero is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.
Regex Her
egex Hero
egex Hero is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.
Regex Her is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.
Regex Her Regex Her Regex Her Regex Her Regex Her Regex Her is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.
Nobody is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.
Regex Her o egex Hero Regex Hero Reg ex Hero is a real-time online Silverlight Regular Expression Tester.
Results:
Results are Iterations per second as the median of 3 runs - Bigger Number = Better
01: ^((?!Regex Hero).)*$ 3.914 // Accepted Answer
02: ^(?:(?!Regex Hero).)*$ 5.034 // With Non-Capturing group
03: ^(?!.*?Regex Hero).* 7.356 // Lookahead at the beginning, if not found match everything
04: ^(?>[^R]+|R(?!egex Hero))*$ 6.137 // Lookahead only on the right first letter
05: ^(?>(?:.*?Regex Hero)?)^.*$ 7.426 // Match the word and check if you're still at linestart
06: ^(?(?=.*?Regex Hero)(?#fail)|.*)$ 7.371 // Logic Branch: Find Regex Hero? match nothing, else anything
P1: ^(?(?=.*?Regex Hero)(*FAIL)|(*ACCEPT)) ????? // Logic Branch in Perl - Quick FAIL
P2: .*?Regex Hero(*COMMIT)(*FAIL)|(*ACCEPT) ????? // Direct COMMIT & FAIL in Perl
Since .NET doesn't support action Verbs (*FAIL, etc.) I couldn't test the solutions P1 and P2.
Summary:
The overall most readable and performance-wise fastest solution seems to be 03 with a simple negative lookahead. This is also the fastest solution for JavaScript, since JS does not support the more advanced Regex Features for the other solutions.
Not regex, but I've found it logical and useful to use serial greps with pipe to eliminate noise.
eg. search an apache config file without all the comments-
grep -v '\#' /opt/lampp/etc/httpd.conf # this gives all the non-comment lines
and
grep -v '\#' /opt/lampp/etc/httpd.conf | grep -i dir
The logic of serial grep's is (not a comment) and (matches dir)
Since no one else has given a direct answer to the question that was asked, I'll do it.
The answer is that with POSIX grep, it's impossible to literally satisfy this request:
grep "<Regex for 'doesn't contain hede'>" input
The reason is that with no flags, POSIX grep is only required to work with Basic Regular Expressions (BREs), which are simply not powerful enough for accomplishing that task, because of lack of alternation in subexpressions. The only kind of alternation it supports involves providing multiple regular expressions separated by newlines, and that doesn't cover all regular languages, e.g. there's no finite collection of BREs that matches the same regular language as the extended regular expression (ERE) ^(ab|cd)*$.
However, GNU grep implements extensions that allow it. In particular, \| is the alternation operator in GNU's implementation of BREs. If your regular expression engine supports alternation, parentheses and the Kleene star, and is able to anchor to the beginning and end of the string, that's all you need for this approach. Note however that negative sets [^ ... ] are very convenient in addition to those, because otherwise, you need to replace them with an expression of the form (a|b|c| ... ) that lists every character that is not in the set, which is extremely tedious and overly long, even more so if the whole character set is Unicode.
Thanks to formal language theory, we get to see how such an expression looks like. With GNU grep, the answer would be something like:
grep "^\([^h]\|h\(h\|eh\|edh\)*\([^eh]\|e[^dh]\|ed[^eh]\)\)*\(\|h\(h\|eh\|edh\)*\(\|e\|ed\)\)$" input
(found with Grail and some further optimizations made by hand).
You can also use a tool that implements EREs, like egrep, to get rid of the backslashes, or equivalently, pass the -E flag to POSIX grep (although I was under the impression that the question required avoiding any flags to grep whatsoever):
egrep "^([^h]|h(h|eh|edh)*([^eh]|e[^dh]|ed[^eh]))*(|h(h|eh|edh)*(|e|ed))$" input
Here's a script to test it (note it generates a file testinput.txt in the current directory). Several of the expressions presented in other answers fail this test.
#!/bin/bash
REGEX="^\([^h]\|h\(h\|eh\|edh\)*\([^eh]\|e[^dh]\|ed[^eh]\)\)*\(\|h\(h\|eh\|edh\)*\(\|e\|ed\)\)$"
# First four lines as in OP's testcase.
cat > testinput.txt <<EOF
hoho
hihi
haha
hede
h
he
ah
head
ahead
ahed
aheda
ahede
hhede
hehede
hedhede
hehehehehehedehehe
hedecidedthat
EOF
diff -s -u <(grep -v hede testinput.txt) <(grep "$REGEX" testinput.txt)
In my system it prints:
Files /dev/fd/63 and /dev/fd/62 are identical
as expected.
For those interested in the details, the technique employed is to convert the regular expression that matches the word into a finite automaton, then invert the automaton by changing every acceptance state to non-acceptance and vice versa, and then converting the resulting FA back to a regular expression.
As everyone has noted, if your regular expression engine supports negative lookahead, the regular expression is much simpler. For example, with GNU grep:
grep -P '^((?!hede).)*$' input
However, this approach has the disadvantage that it requires a backtracking regular expression engine. This makes it unsuitable in installations that are using secure regular expression engines like RE2, which is one reason to prefer the generated approach in some circumstances.
Using Kendall Hopkins' excellent FormalTheory library, written in PHP, which provides a functionality similar to Grail, and a simplifier written by myself, I've been able to write an online generator of negative regular expressions given an input phrase (only alphanumeric and space characters currently supported, and the length is limited): http://www.formauri.es/personal/pgimeno/misc/non-match-regex/
For hede it outputs:
^([^h]|h(h|e(h|dh))*([^eh]|e([^dh]|d[^eh])))*(h(h|e(h|dh))*(ed?)?)?$
which is equivalent to the above.
with this, you avoid to test a lookahead on each positions:
/^(?:[^h]+|h++(?!ede))*+$/
equivalent to (for .net):
^(?>(?:[^h]+|h+(?!ede))*)$
Old answer:
/^(?>[^h]+|h+(?!ede))*$/
Aforementioned (?:(?!hede).)* is great because it can be anchored.
^(?:(?!hede).)*$ # A line without hede
foo(?:(?!hede).)*bar # foo followed by bar, without hede between them
But the following would suffice in this case:
^(?!.*hede) # A line without hede
This simplification is ready to have "AND" clauses added:
^(?!.*hede)(?=.*foo)(?=.*bar) # A line with foo and bar, but without hede
^(?!.*hede)(?=.*foo).*bar # Same
An, in my opinon, more readable variant of the top answer:
^(?!.*hede)
Basically, "match at the beginning of the line if and only if it does not have 'hede' in it" - so the requirement translated almost directly into regex.
Of course, it's possible to have multiple failure requirements:
^(?!.*(hede|hodo|hada))
Details: The ^ anchor ensures the regex engine doesn't retry the match at every location in the string, which would match every string.
The ^ anchor in the beginning is meant to represent the beginning of the line. The grep tool matches each line one at a time, in contexts where you're working with a multiline string, you can use the "m" flag:
/^(?!.*hede)/m # JavaScript syntax
or
(?m)^(?!.*hede) # Inline flag
Here's how I'd do it:
^[^h]*(h(?!ede)[^h]*)*$
Accurate and more efficient than the other answers. It implements Friedl's "unrolling-the-loop" efficiency technique and requires much less backtracking.
Another option is that to add a positive look-ahead and check if hede is anywhere in the input line, then we would negate that, with an expression similar to:
^(?!(?=.*\bhede\b)).*$
with word boundaries.
The expression is explained on the top right panel of regex101.com, if you wish to explore/simplify/modify it, and in this link, you can watch how it would match against some sample inputs, if you like.
RegEx Circuit
jex.im visualizes regular expressions:
If you want to match a character to negate a word similar to negate character class:
For example, a string:
<?
$str="aaa bbb4 aaa bbb7";
?>
Do not use:
<?
preg_match('/aaa[^bbb]+?bbb7/s', $str, $matches);
?>
Use:
<?
preg_match('/aaa(?:(?!bbb).)+?bbb7/s', $str, $matches);
?>
Notice "(?!bbb)." is neither lookbehind nor lookahead, it's lookcurrent, for example:
"(?=abc)abcde", "(?!abc)abcde"
The OP did not specify or Tag the post to indicate the context (programming language, editor, tool) the Regex will be used within.
For me, I sometimes need to do this while editing a file using Textpad.
Textpad supports some Regex, but does not support lookahead or lookbehind, so it takes a few steps.
If I am looking to retain all lines that Do NOT contain the string hede, I would do it like this:
1. Search/replace the entire file to add a unique "Tag" to the beginning of each line containing any text.
Search string:^(.)
Replace string:<##-unique-##>\1
Replace-all
2. Delete all lines that contain the string hede (replacement string is empty):
Search string:<##-unique-##>.*hede.*\n
Replace string:<nothing>
Replace-all
3. At this point, all remaining lines Do NOT contain the string hede. Remove the unique "Tag" from all lines (replacement string is empty):
Search string:<##-unique-##>
Replace string:<nothing>
Replace-all
Now you have the original text with all lines containing the string hede removed.
If I am looking to Do Something Else to only lines that Do NOT contain the string hede, I would do it like this:
1. Search/replace the entire file to add a unique "Tag" to the beginning of each line containing any text.
Search string:^(.)
Replace string:<##-unique-##>\1
Replace-all
2. For all lines that contain the string hede, remove the unique "Tag":
Search string:<##-unique-##>(.*hede)
Replace string:\1
Replace-all
3. At this point, all lines that begin with the unique "Tag", Do NOT contain the string hede. I can now do my Something Else to only those lines.
4. When I am done, I remove the unique "Tag" from all lines (replacement string is empty):
Search string:<##-unique-##>
Replace string:<nothing>
Replace-all
Since the introduction of ruby-2.4.1, we can use the new Absent Operator in Ruby’s Regular Expressions
from the official doc
(?~abc) matches: "", "ab", "aab", "cccc", etc.
It doesn't match: "abc", "aabc", "ccccabc", etc.
Thus, in your case ^(?~hede)$ does the job for you
2.4.1 :016 > ["hoho", "hihi", "haha", "hede"].select{|s| /^(?~hede)$/.match(s)}
=> ["hoho", "hihi", "haha"]
Through PCRE verb (*SKIP)(*F)
^hede$(*SKIP)(*F)|^.*$
This would completely skips the line which contains the exact string hede and matches all the remaining lines.
DEMO
Execution of the parts:
Let us consider the above regex by splitting it into two parts.
Part before the | symbol. Part shouldn't be matched.
^hede$(*SKIP)(*F)
Part after the | symbol. Part should be matched.
^.*$
PART 1
Regex engine will start its execution from the first part.
^hede$(*SKIP)(*F)
Explanation:
^ Asserts that we are at the start.
hede Matches the string hede
$ Asserts that we are at the line end.
So the line which contains the string hede would be matched. Once the regex engine sees the following (*SKIP)(*F) (Note: You could write (*F) as (*FAIL)) verb, it skips and make the match to fail. | called alteration or logical OR operator added next to the PCRE verb which inturn matches all the boundaries exists between each and every character on all the lines except the line contains the exact string hede. See the demo here. That is, it tries to match the characters from the remaining string. Now the regex in the second part would be executed.
PART 2
^.*$
Explanation:
^ Asserts that we are at the start. ie, it matches all the line starts except the one in the hede line. See the demo here.
.* In the Multiline mode, . would match any character except newline or carriage return characters. And * would repeat the previous character zero or more times. So .* would match the whole line. See the demo here.
Hey why you added .* instead of .+ ?
Because .* would match a blank line but .+ won't match a blank. We want to match all the lines except hede , there may be a possibility of blank lines also in the input . so you must use .* instead of .+ . .+ would repeat the previous character one or more times. See .* matches a blank line here.
$ End of the line anchor is not necessary here.
The TXR Language supports regex negation.
$ txr -c '#(repeat)
#{nothede /~hede/}
#(do (put-line nothede))
#(end)' Input
A more complicated example: match all lines that start with a and end with z, but do not contain the substring hede:
$ txr -c '#(repeat)
#{nothede /a.*z&~.*hede.*/}
#(do (put-line nothede))
#(end)' -
az <- echoed
az
abcz <- echoed
abcz
abhederz <- not echoed; contains hede
ahedez <- not echoed; contains hede
ace <- not echoed; does not end in z
ahedz <- echoed
ahedz
Regex negation is not particularly useful on its own but when you also have intersection, things get interesting, since you have a full set of boolean set operations: you can express "the set which matches this, except for things which match that".
It may be more maintainable to two regexes in your code, one to do the first match, and then if it matches run the second regex to check for outlier cases you wish to block for example ^.*(hede).* then have appropriate logic in your code.
OK, I admit this is not really an answer to the posted question posted and it may also use slightly more processing than a single regex. But for developers who came here looking for a fast emergency fix for an outlier case then this solution should not be overlooked.
The below function will help you get your desired output
<?PHP
function removePrepositions($text){
$propositions=array('/\bfor\b/i','/\bthe\b/i');
if( count($propositions) > 0 ) {
foreach($propositions as $exceptionPhrase) {
$text = preg_replace($exceptionPhrase, '', trim($text));
}
$retval = trim($text);
}
return $retval;
}
?>
I wanted to add another example for if you are trying to match an entire line that contains string X, but does not also contain string Y.
For example, let's say we want to check if our URL / string contains "tasty-treats", so long as it does not also contain "chocolate" anywhere.
This regex pattern would work (works in JavaScript too)
^(?=.*?tasty-treats)((?!chocolate).)*$
(global, multiline flags in example)
Interactive Example: https://regexr.com/53gv4
Matches
(These urls contain "tasty-treats" and also do not contain "chocolate")
example.com/tasty-treats/strawberry-ice-cream
example.com/desserts/tasty-treats/banana-pudding
example.com/tasty-treats-overview
Does Not Match
(These urls contain "chocolate" somewhere - so they won't match even though they contain "tasty-treats")
example.com/tasty-treats/chocolate-cake
example.com/home-cooking/oven-roasted-chicken
example.com/tasty-treats/banana-chocolate-fudge
example.com/desserts/chocolate/tasty-treats
example.com/chocolate/tasty-treats/desserts
As long as you are dealing with lines, simply mark the negative matches and target the rest.
In fact, I use this trick with sed because ^((?!hede).)*$ looks not supported by it.
For the desired output
Mark the negative match: (e.g. lines with hede), using a character not included in the whole text at all. An emoji could probably be a good choice for this purpose.
s/(.*hede)/🔒\1/g
Target the rest (the unmarked strings: e.g. lines without hede). Suppose you want to keep only the target and delete the rest (as you want):
s/^🔒.*//g
For a better understanding
Suppose you want to delete the target:
Mark the negative match: (e.g. lines with hede), using a character not included in the whole text at all. An emoji could probably be a good choice for this purpose.
s/(.*hede)/🔒\1/g
Target the rest (the unmarked strings: e.g. lines without hede). Suppose you want to delete the target:
s/^[^🔒].*//g
Remove the mark:
s/🔒//g
^((?!hede).)*$ is an elegant solution, except since it consumes characters you won't be able to combine it with other criteria. For instance, say you wanted to check for the non-presence of "hede" and the presence of "haha." This solution would work because it won't consume characters:
^(?!.*\bhede\b)(?=.*\bhaha\b)
How to use PCRE's backtracking control verbs to match a line not containing a word
Here's a method that I haven't seen used before:
/.*hede(*COMMIT)^|/
How it works
First, it tries to find "hede" somewhere in the line. If successful, at this point, (*COMMIT) tells the engine to, not only not backtrack in the event of a failure, but also not to attempt any further matching in that case. Then, we try to match something that cannot possibly match (in this case, ^).
If a line does not contain "hede" then the second alternative, an empty subpattern, successfully matches the subject string.
This method is no more efficient than a negative lookahead, but I figured I'd just throw it on here in case someone finds it nifty and finds a use for it for other, more interesting applications.
Simplest thing that I could find would be
[^(hede)]
Tested at https://regex101.com/
You can also add unit-test cases on that site
A simpler solution is to use the not operator !
Your if statement will need to match "contains" and not match "excludes".
var contains = /abc/;
var excludes =/hede/;
if(string.match(contains) && !(string.match(excludes))){ //proceed...
I believe the designers of RegEx anticipated the use of not operators.

Java Pattern What is the issue with these pattern match?

I would like a java pattern match a series of non-whitespace character followed or not by a series of whitespace character, the followed by a pair of parenthesis containing anything within with this code:
Pattern p1 = Pattern.compile("[^\\s+][\\s*]\\({1}[.*]\\){1}");
however, when I tried to match it with "a (a)", false is returned.
Maybe similar problems:
two websites saparated by white spaces:
Pattern p4 = Pattern.compile("([^\\s+]([\\.]{1}[^\\s+])+)[\\s+]([^\\s+]([\\.]{1}[^\\s+])+)");
Two strings of non-whitespace character separated by certain list of punctuation or words present in the code below (ex. and, or, aka...) (it could start with the list of words).
Pattern p2 = Pattern.compile(
"([^\\s+][\\s+])?([and|or|aka|&|Related to|moved from|now|formerly|and by the same host|and any address starting with]{1}[\\s+][^\\s+])+");
Pattern p3 = Pattern.compile("[^\\s]+[\\s*][,|&|;|\\s+/|/\\s+]{1}[\\s*][^\\s+]");
I think reading the docs on patterns in java might be helpful
Particular issue is that you put + and * to wrong place but I think the reason is that you don't understand what [something] means. The following code
Pattern p1 = Pattern.compile("[^\\s]+[\\s]*\\({1}.*\\){1}");
//Pattern p1 = Pattern.compile("[^\\s]+[\\s]*\\(.*\\)"); //simplified same pattern
String t = "a (a)";
Matcher matcher = p1.matcher(t);
System.out.println(matcher.matches());
prints true.
[^\\s]+[\\s]*\\(.*?\\)
Will do what you want. Move the asterisk and plus sign outside the character class brackets. Both instances of {1} do nothing. With no other quantifier, tokens are repeated one time and finally [.*] in the case of those two characters literally means permit one of these two characters
[test] means one of t, e, or s. The second t is irrelevant. Most characters inside character classes mean their literal counterpart, but the exceptions involve a lot more explaining than should be done in an S/O answer.
Not that while this will succeed for say a (b), this will give unexpected results if you have two occurences to match in the same sentence and is generally just a messy expression.
For a realistic expression, you need to provide realistic sample data.
An exceptional resource, after learning the basics, is the realtime testing environments provided by sites like http://regex101.com with syntax highlighting, match highlighting, match breakdown, and tooltips on mouseover of tokens, it's a great way to take the second step. While it only supports a few (commonly used) flavors, most mature programming/scripting languages share the same basic/intermediate capabilities in regex.

Conditional Regex searches

I'm attempting to create a Regular Expressions code in Java that will have a conditional search term.
What I mean by this is let's say I have 5 words; tree, car, dog, cat, bird. Now I would like the expression to search for these terms, however is only required to match 3 out of the five, and it could be any of the 5 it chooses to match.
I thought perhaps a using a back reference ?(3) would work but doesn't seem to do the trick.
A standard optional search (?) wouldn't work either because all terms are optional, however the number of matches required is not. Essentially is there a way to create a string that must be 50% (or any percent) correct to provide a match?
Would anyone happen to know or could point me in the right direction?
(I would hopefully like it working client side if possible)
Does it have to be a free-standing regular expression without any further code? A simple loop testing for each word and counting matches should do this perfectly. Pseudocode assuming you want N unique matches (you can also swap the substring test with a regex, doesn't matter how you determine matches as long as you keep the counting of unique matches out of the regex):
bool has_N_words(int n, string[] words, string text) {
int matches = 0;
foreach word in words {
if (word.substringOf(text)) counter++
if (counter >= n) return true
}
return false
}
It seems to me the only (save mind-blowing uses of obscure regex extensions - not that I have something in mind, I've just been surprised again and again what modern regex implementations allow) way to do this with an regular expression goes like this:
Enumerate all unique (ignoring order or not depending on implementation, see below) permutations of words
For each permutation, build a sub-regex that matches a string containing those words, either by
joining the first three words with .*? (this requires all unique permutations)
using three lookahead assertions like (?=.*word) (this allows dropping word combinations that occured before in a different order)
Combine all sub-regexes in a giant or.
That's impractical to do by hand, ugly and complex (as in computational complexity, not in programming effort) to do automatically, and inefficient as well as quite hacky either way.
I don't see why you would want to do this with a regext but if you really need it to be a regex:
/(tree|car|dog|cat|bird)/
Then count the matches you get from that...
(?i)(?s)(.*(tree|car|dog|cat|bird)){3,}?.*
The (?i) is for case insensitive and the (?s) to match new lines with .* also, since you are looking at emails.
The ? at the end is the reluctant quantifier.
I haven't actually tried it.

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