C Regex Cheat Sheet



characters — what to seek
ring matches ring, springboard, ringtone, etc.

Outiter regexreplace(outiter, firstiter, lastiter, const& regex, const& formatstr, flags) outstr regexreplace(const& input, const& regex, const& formatstr, flags) Replace substrings matching the regex according to the formatting string Regex flags affecting regexreplace formatnocopy Don't output the parts of the input string before and after the match. Regular Expressions Cheat Sheet. Anchors ^ Start of string, or start of line in multi-line pattern A. Start of string $ End of string, or end of line in multi-line. Cheat Sheet of Regular Expressions. Visit the post for more. Article by Xavier Ding. Regular Expression Infographic B Words Web Development Design Web Programming.

. matches almost any character

h.o matches hoo, h2o, h/o, etc.

Use to search for these special characters:

[ ^ $ . | ? * + ( ) { }

ring? matches ring?

(quiet) matches (quiet)

c:windows matches c:windows

alternatives — | (OR)
cat|dog match cat or dog
order matters if short alternative is part of longer

Regular Expression Cheat Sheet Python

id|identity matches id or identity

regex engine is 'eager', stops comparing
as soon as 1st alternative matches

identity|id matches id or identity
order longer to shorter when alternatives overlap
(To match whole words, see scope and groups.)
character classes — [allowed] or [^NOT allowed]
[aeiou] match any vowel
[^aeiou] match a NON vowel
r[iau]ng match ring, wrangle, sprung, etc.
gr[ae]y match gray or grey
[a-zA-Z0-9] match any letter or digit
(In [ ] always escape . ] and sometimes ^ - .)
shorthand classes
w 'word' character (letter, digit, or underscore)
d digit
s whitespace (space, tab, vtab, newline)
W, D, or SC Regex Cheat SheetC Regex Cheat Sheet, (NOT word, digit, or whitespace)

[DS] means not digit OR whitespace, both match

[^ds] disallow digit AND whitespace

occurrences — ? * + {n} {n,} {n,n}
? 0 or 1

colou?r match color or colour

* 0 or more

[BW]ill[ieamy's]* match Bill, Willy, William's etc.

Regex Cheat Sheet Powershell

+ 1 or more

[a-zA-Z]+ match 1 or more letters

{n} require n occurrences

d{3}-d{2}-d{4} match a SSN

{n,} require n or more

[a-zA-Z]{2,} 2 or more letters

{n,m} require n - m

[a-z]w{1,7} match a UW NetID

* greedy versus *? lazy
* + and {n,} are greedy — match as much as possible
<.+> finds 1 big match in <b>bold</b>
*? +? and {n,}? are lazy — match as little as possible
<.+?> finds 2 matches in <b>bold</b>
comments — (?#comment)
(?#year)(19|20)dd embedded comment
(?x)Regex(19|20)dd #year free spacing & EOL comment

(see modifiers)

scope — b B ^ $
b 'word' edge (next to non 'word' character)

bring word starts with 'ring', ex ringtone

ringb word ends with 'ring', ex spring

b9b match single digit 9, not 19, 91, 99, etc..

b[a-zA-Z]{6}b match 6-letter words

B NOT word edge

BringB match springs and wringer

^ start of string $ end of string

^d*$ entire string must be digits

Regex cheat sheet powershell

^[a-zA-Z]{4,20}$ string must have 4-20 letters

^[A-Z] string must begin with capital letter

[.!?')]$ string must end with terminal puncutation

groups — ( )
(in|out)put match input or output
d{5}(-d{4})? US zip code ('+ 4' optional)
Locate all PHP input variables:

$_(GET|POST|REQUEST|COOKIE|SESSION|SERVER)[.+]

NB: parser tries EACH alternative if match fails after group.
Can lead to catastrophic backtracking.
back references — n
each ( ) creates a numbered 'back reference'
(to) (be) or not 1 2 match to be or not to be
([^s])1{2} match non-space, then same twice more aaa, ...
b(w+)s+1b match doubled words
non-capturing group — (?: ) prevent back reference
on(?:click|load) is faster than on(click|load)
use non-capturing or atomic groups when possible
atomic groups — (?>a|b) (no capture, no backtrack)
(?>red|green|blue)
faster than non-capturing
alternatives parsed left to right without return
(?>id|identity)b matches id, but not identity

'id' matches, but 'b' fails after atomic group,
parser doesn't backtrack into group to retry 'identity'

If alternatives overlap, order longer to shorter.
lookahead — (?= ) (?! ) lookbehind — (?<= ) (?<! )

C Sharp Regex Cheat Sheet

bw+?(?=ingb) match warbling, string, fishing, ...
b(?!w+ingb)w+b words NOT ending in 'ing'
(?<=bpre).*?b match pretend, present, prefix, ...
bw{3}(?<!pre)w*?b words NOT starting with 'pre'

(lookbehind needs 3 chars, w{3}, to compare w/'pre')

bw+(?<!ing)b match words NOT ending in 'ing'
(see LOOKAROUND notes below)
if-then-else — (?ifthen|else)
match 'Mr.' or 'Ms.' if word 'her' is later in string
M(?(?=.*?bherb)s|r). lookahead for word 'her'
(requires lookaround for IF condition)
modifiers — i s m x
ignore case, single-line, multi-line, free spacing
(?i)[a-z]*(?-i) ignore case ON / OFF
(?s).*(?-s) match multiple lines (causes . to match newline)
(?m)^.*;$(?-m)^ & $ match lines not whole string
(?x) #free-spacing mode, this EOL comment ignored
d{3} #3 digits (new line but same pattern)
-d{4} #literal hyphen, then 4 digits
(?-x) (?#free-spacing mode OFF)
/regex/ismx modify mode for entire string

A few examples:

  • (?s)<p(?(?=s) .*?)>(.*?)</p> span multiple lines
  • (?s)<p(?(?=s) .*?)>(.*?)</p> locate opening '<p'
  • (?s)<p(?(?=s) .*?)>(.*?)</p> create an if-then-else
  • (?s)<p(?(?=s) .*?)>(.*?)</p> lookahead for a whitespace character
  • (?s)<p(?(?=s) .*?)>(.*?)</p> if found, attempt lazy match of any characters until ...
  • (?s)<p(?(?=s) .*?)>(.*?)</p> closing angle brace
  • (?s)<p(?(?=s) .*?)>(.*?)</p> capture lazy match of all characters until ...
  • (?s)<p(?(?=s) .*?)>(.*?)</p> closing '</p>'

The lookahead prevents matches on PRE, PARAM, and PROGRESS tags by only allowing more characters in the opening tag if P is followed by whitespace. Otherwise, '>' must follow '<p'.

LOOKAROUND notes

  • (?= ) if you can find ahead
  • (?! ) if you can NOT find ahead
  • (?<= ) if you can find behind
  • (?<! ) if you can NOT find behind
convert Firstname Lastname to Lastname, Firstname (& visa versa)
Pattern below uses lookahead to capture everything up to a space, characters, and a newline.
The 2nd capture group collects the characters between the space and the newline.
This allows for any number of names/initials prior to lastname, provided lastname is at the end of the line. C sharp regex cheat sheet

Find: (.*)(?= .*n) (.*)n

Repl: 2, 1n — insert 2nd capture (lastname) in front of first capture (all preceding names/initials)

Reverse the conversion.

Find: (.*?), (.*?)n — group 1 gets everything up to ', ' — group 2 gets everything after ', '

Repl: 2 1n

lookaround groups are non-capturing
If you need to capture the characters that match the lookaround condition, you can insert a capture group inside the lookaround.

(?=(sometext)) the inner () captures the lookahead

This would NOT work: ((?=sometext)) Because lookaround groups are zero-width, the outer () capture nothing.

lookaround groups are zero-width
They establish a condition for a match, but are not part of it.
Compare these patterns: re?d vs r(?=e)d
re?d — match an 'r', an optional 'e', then 'd' — matches red or rd
r(?=e)d — match 'r' (IF FOLLOWED BY 'e') then see if 'd' comes after 'r'
  • The lookahead seeks 'e' only for the sake of matching 'r'.
  • Because the lookahead condition is ZERO-width, the expression is logically impossible.
  • It requires the 2nd character to be both 'e' and 'd'.
  • For looking ahead, 'e' must follow 'r'.
  • For matching, 'd' must follow 'r'.
fixed-width lookbehind
Most regex engines depend on knowing the width of lookbehind patterns. Ex: (?<=h1) or (?<=w{4}) look behind for 'h1' or for 4 'word' characters.
This limits lookbehind patterns when matching HTML tags, since the width of tag names and their potential attributes can't be known in advance.
variable-width lookbehind
.NET and JGSoft support variable-width lookbehind patterns. Ex: (?<=w+) look behind for 1 or more word characters.
The first few examples below rely on this ability.

Lookaround groups define the context for a match. Here, we're seeking .* ie., 0 or more characters.
A positive lookbehind group (?<= . . . ) preceeds. A positive lookahead group (?= . . . ) follows.
These set the boundaries of the match this way:

  • (?<=<(w+)>).*(?=</1>) look behind current location
  • (?<=<(w+)>).*(?=</1>) for < > surrounding ...
  • (?<=<(w+)>).*(?=</1>) one or more 'word' characters. The ( ) create a capture group to preserve the name of the presumed tag: DIV, H1, P, A, etc.
  • (?<=<(w+)>).*(?=</1>) match anything until
  • (?<=<(w+)>).*(?=</1>) looking ahead from the current character
  • (?<=<(w+)>).*(?=</1>) these characters surround
  • (?<=<(w+)>).*(?=</1>) the contents of the first capture group

In other words, advance along string until an opening HTML tag preceeds. Match chars until its closing HTML tag follows.
The tags themselves are not matched, only the text between them.

To span multiple lines, use the (?s) modifier. (?s)(?<=<cite>).*(?=</cite>) Match <cite> tag contents, regardless of line breaks.

As in example above, the first group (w+) captures the presumed tag name, then an optional space and other characters ?.*? allow for attributes before the closing >.

  • class='.*?bredb.*?' this new part looks for class=' and red and ' somewhere in the opening tag
  • b ensures 'red' is a single word
  • .*? allow for other characters on either side of 'red' so pattern matches class='red' and class='blue red green' etc.

Here, the first group captures only the tag name. The tag's potential attributes are outside the group.

  • (?i)<([a-z][a-z0-9]*)[^>]*>.*?</1> set ignore case ON
  • (?i)<([a-z][a-z0-9]*)[^>]*>.*?</1> find an opening tag by matching 1 letter after <
  • (?i)<([a-z][a-z0-9]*)[^>]*>.*?</1> then match 0 or more letters or digits
  • (?i)<([a-z][a-z0-9]*)[^>]*>.*?</1> make this tag a capture group
  • (?i)<([a-z][a-z0-9]*)[^>]*>.*?</1> match 0 or more characters that aren't > — this allows attributes in opening tag
  • (?i)<([a-z][a-z0-9]*)[^>]*>.*?</1> match the presumed end of the opening tag

    (NB: This markup <a> would end the match early. Doesn't matter here. Subsequent < pulls match to closing tag. But if you attempted to match only the opening tag, it might be truncated in rare cases.)

  • (?i)<([a-z][a-z0-9]*)[^>]*>.*?</1> lazy match of all of tag's contents
  • (?i)<([a-z][a-z0-9]*)[^>]*>.*?</1> match the closing tag — 1 refers to first capture group

The IF condition can be set by a backreference (as here) or by a lookaround group.

(()?d{3} optional group ( )? matches '(' prior to 3-digit area code d{3} — group creates back reference #1
(?(1)) ?|[-/ .]) (1) refers to group 1, so if '(' exists, match ')' followed by optional space, else match one of these: '- / . '
d{3}[- .]d{4} rest of phone number

For a quick overview: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/dotnet/regextutorial.aspx.

For a good tutorial: http://www.regular-expressions.info.

When it comes to extracting information or pattern from a string there we use regular expressing. In a regular expression, we use the ASCII code to perform the matching sting operation. Many form validation operations are made by using regular expression when a user enters some information at the same time form validate that data using a regular expression. Apart from validation, there are many other applications of regular Expression such as parsing, replacing strings, passing through translating data to different formats and extracting information from the web.

Many high-level programming languages also support Regular expression, and syntax of regular expressing is similar for each programming language.

What is Regex?

regex stands for the regular expression, and it is a technique to search string patterns from a string. It is used by many text editors such as Sublime, Notepad++, Brackets, Microsoft word, etc for search and replaces operations.

Regular Expression Cheat Sheet

Anchor:

C# Regex Cheat Sheet

ExpressionDescriptionExample:Output Match
^To check the starting point of a string.^Techany string starting with “Tech”

Output:

TechGeekbuzz

$To check the end of a string$buzzTechGeekbuzz

Characters:

ExpressionDescriptionExample:Output Match
dA digit from 0 to 9“TechGeekbuzz dddd”TechGeekbuzz2020
wAny ASCII letter, digit and underscore“TechwGeekbuww”Tech_Geekbuzz
swhitespace“TechsGeekbuzz”Tech Geekbuzz
DA character but not a digit“TechDeekbuzz”TechGeekbuzz
WA character which is not a word.“WTechGeekbuzz”+TechGeekbuzz
.Any Character exclude line breakT.BTGB;

TAB;

TBB;

..

Escape next special characterTGBTGB

Quantifiers:

ExpressionDescriptionExample:Output Match
*Zero or More times;TGB*match a string which has TG followed by zero or more G

Output:

TG;

TGB

TGBBB;

+One or moreTGB+match a string which has TG followed by one or more G

Output:

TGB;

TGBB;

{d }ExactlyTGB{5}Match a string TG followed by exactly 5 B’s;

Output:

TGBBBBB

{d,d}In betweenTGB{3,5}Match a string TG followed by 3 up to 5 B’s;

Output:

TGBBB;

TGBBBB;

TGBBBBB;

?Once or noneTGBs?Output:

TGBs;

TGB;

Logic:

ExpressionDescriptionExample:Output Match
|Or operator1|2Either be 1 or 2
()GroupT(echGeekBuzz|GB)TechGeekBuzz;

TGB;

1Group the content by 1G(w)1gleGoogle;

Gaagle;

Gbbgle;

….

2Group the Content by 2“(dd) (ww) = 2 1”12 aa = aa 12;

11 bb = bb 11;

….;

Brackets:

ExpressionDescriptionExample:Output Match
[ ]Any character from the bracket“P[ae]n”Pan;

Pen;

Set a range[a-z]a;

b;

c;

…;

[^]Any character except those ones which are in brackets.[^a-z]A;

B;

C;

…;

1;

2;

[dD]Any character whether it is a digit or a non-digit