string s = "if     (  \"ch\"  ==   \"os\"  ) ";
            string pattern = @"if\s*\(\s*""(?<LHS>[\w\d_]+)""\s*==\s*""(?<RHS>[\w\d_]+)""\s*\)";
            ////string pattern = @"if\s*\(\s*""[\w\d_]+""\s*==\s*""[\w\d_]+""\s*\)";
            Match m = Regex.Match(s, pattern);

 

What does the underscore mean in the following regex?

[a-zA-Z0-9_]

It means to match the underscore character in addition to lowercase letters, uppercase letters, and numbers.

 

例子: 提取黄色标注的数字和bool值

RESULT - Id:0, (694,518), HiM(0,0), TS:1/1/0001 00:00:00, O:0, P:0, PF:None, IP:True, IR:False

            string s = @"RESULT - Id:0, (694,518), HiM(0,0), TS:1/1/0001 00:00:00, O:0, P:0, PF:None, IP:True, IR:False";
            string pattern = @"Id:\d+,\s*\((?<a>\d+),(?<b>\d+)\),.*IP:(?<c>(True|False))";
            Match m = Regex.Match(s, pattern);
       if(m.Success) {
          Console.WriteLine(
"a:{0}, b:{1}, c:{2}", m.Groups["a"].Value, m.Groups["b"].Value, m.Groups["c"].Value);
}

 解释:

\d+     匹配数字一次以上

\s*      匹配空字符一次以上

(?<a>\d+)     数字变量 a

(?<c>(True|False)   Bool变量 c

.*       匹配任意字符 

 

例子: 验证字符串是否符合要求。(Regex to validate logical && || operators in string

判断字符串是否是一个包含 “与(&&)", ”或 (||)" 逻辑表达式。

 

例子:判断指定的序列号字符串是否有效。

序列号:"A10644T60051843A" :首位和末尾固定,第七位为数字或大写字母

 

        public bool ValidatePcbaSerialNumber(string serialnumber)
        {
            string pattern = @"A\d{5}[A-Z0-9]\d{8}A";
            bool isMatch = Regex.IsMatch(serialnumber, pattern);
            return isMatch; 
        }

 

+

+

+

+

+

+

Character Escapes

+

Escaped character Description Pattern Matches
\a Matches a bell character, \u0007. \a "\u0007" in "Error!" + '\u0007'
\b In a character class, matches a backspace, \u0008. [\b]{3,} "\b\b\b\b" in "\b\b\b\b"
\t Matches a tab, \u0009. (\w+)\t "item1\t", "item2\t" in "item1\titem2\t"
\r Matches a carriage return, \u000D. (\r is not equivalent to the newline character, \n.) \r\n(\w+) "\r\nThese" in "\r\nThese are\ntwo lines."
\v Matches a vertical tab, \u000B. [\v]{2,} "\v\v\v" in "\v\v\v"
\f Matches a form feed, \u000C. [\f]{2,} "\f\f\f" in "\f\f\f"
\n Matches a new line, \u000A. \r\n(\w+) "\r\nThese" in "\r\nThese are\ntwo lines."
\e Matches an escape, \u001B. \e "\x001B" in "\x001B"
\ nnn Uses octal representation to specify a character (nnn consists of two or three digits). \w\040\w "a b", "c d" in

"a bc d"
\x nn Uses hexadecimal representation to specify a character (nn consists of exactly two digits). \w\x20\w "a b", "c d" in

"a bc d"
\c X

\c x
Matches the ASCII control character that is specified by X or x, where X or x is the letter of the control character. \cC "\x0003" in "\x0003" (Ctrl-C)
\u nnnn Matches a Unicode character by using hexadecimal representation (exactly four digits, as represented by nnnn). \w\u0020\w "a b", "c d" in

"a bc d"
\ When followed by a character that is not recognized as an escaped character in this and other tables in this topic, matches that character. For example, \* is the same as \x2A, and \. is the same as \x2E. This allows the regular expression engine to disambiguate language elements (such as * or ?) and character literals (represented by \* or \?). \d+[\+-x\*]\d+ "2+2" and "3*9" in "(2+2) * 3*9"

+

+

Character Classes

+

Character class Description Pattern Matches
[ character_group ] Matches any single character in character_group. By default, the match is case-sensitive. [ae] "a" in "gray"

"a", "e" in "lane"
[^ character_group ] Negation: Matches any single character that is not in character_group. By default, characters in character_group are case-sensitive. [^aei] "r", "g", "n" in "reign"
[ first - last ] Character range: Matches any single character in the range from first to last. [A-Z] "A", "B" in "AB123"
. Wildcard: Matches any single character except \n.

To match a literal period character (. or \u002E), you must precede it with the escape character (\.).
a.e "ave" in "nave"

"ate" in "water"
\p{ name } Matches any single character in the Unicode general category or named block specified by name. \p{Lu}

\p{IsCyrillic}
"C", "L" in "City Lights"

"Д", "Ж" in "ДЖem"
\P{ name } Matches any single character that is not in the Unicode general category or named block specified by name. \P{Lu}

\P{IsCyrillic}
"i", "t", "y" in "City"

"e", "m" in "ДЖem"
\w Matches any word character. \w "I", "D", "A", "1", "3" in "ID A1.3"
\W Matches any non-word character. \W " ", "." in "ID A1.3"
\s Matches any white-space character. \w\s "D " in "ID A1.3"
\S Matches any non-white-space character. \s\S " _" in "int __ctr"
\d Matches any decimal digit. \d "4" in "4 = IV"
\D Matches any character other than a decimal digit. \D " ", "=", " ", "I", "V" in "4 = IV"

+

+

Anchors

+

Assertion Description Pattern Matches
^ The match must start at the beginning of the string or line. ^\d{3} "901" in

"901-333-"
$ The match must occur at the end of the string or before \n at the end of the line or string. -\d{3}$ "-333" in

"-901-333"
\A The match must occur at the start of the string. \A\d{3} "901" in

"901-333-"
\Z The match must occur at the end of the string or before \n at the end of the string. -\d{3}\Z "-333" in

"-901-333"
\z The match must occur at the end of the string. -\d{3}\z "-333" in

"-901-333"
\G The match must occur at the point where the previous match ended. \G\(\d\) "(1)", "(3)", "(5)" in "(1)(3)(5)[7](9)"
\b The match must occur on a boundary between a \w (alphanumeric) and a \W (nonalphanumeric) character. \b\w+\s\w+\b "them theme", "them them" in "them theme them them"
\B The match must not occur on a \b boundary. \Bend\w*\b "ends", "ender" in "end sends endure lender"

+

+

Grouping Constructs

+

Grouping construct Description Pattern Matches
( subexpression ) Captures the matched subexpression and assigns it a one-based ordinal number. (\w)\1 "ee" in "deep"
(?< name > subexpression ) Captures the matched subexpression into a named group. (?<double>\w)\k<double> "ee" in "deep"
(?< name1 - name2 > subexpression ) Defines a balancing group definition. For more information, see the "Balancing Group Definition" section in Grouping Constructs. (((?'Open'\()[^\(\)]*)+((?'Close-Open'\))[^\(\)]*)+)*(?(Open)(?!))$ "((1-3)*(3-1))" in "3+2^((1-3)*(3-1))"
(?: subexpression ) Defines a noncapturing group. Write(?:Line)? "WriteLine" in "Console.WriteLine()"

"Write" in "Console.Write(value)"
(?imnsx-imnsx: subexpression ) Applies or disables the specified options within subexpression. For more information, see Regular Expression Options. A\d{2}(?i:\w+)\b "A12xl", "A12XL" in "A12xl A12XL a12xl"
(?= subexpression ) Zero-width positive lookahead assertion. \w+(?=\.) "is", "ran", and "out" in "He is. The dog ran. The sun is out."
(?! subexpression ) Zero-width negative lookahead assertion. \b(?!un)\w+\b "sure", "used" in "unsure sure unity used"
(?<= subexpression ) Zero-width positive lookbehind assertion. (?<=19)\d{2}\b "99", "50", "05" in "1851 1999 1950 1905 2003"
(?<! subexpression ) Zero-width negative lookbehind assertion. (?<!19)\d{2}\b "51", "03" in "1851 1999 1950 1905 2003"
(?> subexpression ) Nonbacktracking (or "greedy") subexpression. [13579](?>A+B+) "1ABB", "3ABB", and "5AB" in "1ABB 3ABBC 5AB 5AC"

+

+

Quantifiers

+

Quantifier Description Pattern Matches
* Matches the previous element zero or more times. \d*\.\d ".0", "19.9", "219.9"
+ Matches the previous element one or more times. "be+" "bee" in "been", "be" in "bent"
? Matches the previous element zero or one time. "rai?n" "ran", "rain"
{ n } Matches the previous element exactly n times. ",\d{3}" ",043" in "1,043.6", ",876", ",543", and ",210" in "9,876,543,210"
{ n ,} Matches the previous element at least n times. "\d{2,}" "166", "29", "1930"
{ n , m } Matches the previous element at least n times, but no more than m times. "\d{3,5}" "166", "17668"

"19302" in "193024"
*? Matches the previous element zero or more times, but as few times as possible. \d*?\.\d ".0", "19.9", "219.9"
+? Matches the previous element one or more times, but as few times as possible. "be+?" "be" in "been", "be" in "bent"
?? Matches the previous element zero or one time, but as few times as possible. "rai??n" "ran", "rain"
{ n }? Matches the preceding element exactly n times. ",\d{3}?" ",043" in "1,043.6", ",876", ",543", and ",210" in "9,876,543,210"
{ n ,}? Matches the previous element at least n times, but as few times as possible. "\d{2,}?" "166", "29", "1930"
{ n , m }? Matches the previous element between n and m times, but as few times as possible. "\d{3,5}?" "166", "17668"

"193", "024" in "193024"

+

+

Backreference Constructs

+

Backreference construct Description Pattern Matches
\ number Backreference. Matches the value of a numbered subexpression. (\w)\1 "ee" in "seek"
\k< name > Named backreference. Matches the value of a named expression. (?<char>\w)\k<char> "ee" in "seek"

+

+

Alternation Constructs

+

Alternation construct Description Pattern Matches
&#124; Matches any one element separated by the vertical bar (|) character. th(e&#124;is&#124;at) "the", "this" in "this is the day. "
(?( expression ) yes &#124; no ) Matches yes if the regular expression pattern designated by expression matches; otherwise, matches the optional no part. expression is interpreted as a zero-width assertion. (?(A)A\d{2}\b&#124;\b\d{3}\b) "A10", "910" in "A10 C103 910"
(?( name ) yes &#124; no ) Matches yes if name, a named or numbered capturing group, has a match; otherwise, matches the optional no. (?<quoted>")?(?(quoted).+?"&#124;\S+\s) Dogs.jpg, "Yiska playing.jpg" in "Dogs.jpg "Yiska playing.jpg""

+

+

Substitutions

+

Character Description Pattern Replacement pattern Input string Result string
$ number Substitutes the substring matched by group number. \b(\w+)(\s)(\w+)\b $3$2$1 "one two" "two one"
${ name } Substitutes the substring matched by the named group name. \b(?<word1>\w+)(\s)(?<word2>\w+)\b ${word2} ${word1} "one two" "two one"
$$ Substitutes a literal "$". \b(\d+)\s?USD $$$1 "103 USD" "$103"
$& Substitutes a copy of the whole match. \$?\d*\.?\d+ **$&** "$1.30" "**$1.30**"
$` Substitutes all the text of the input string before the match. B+ $` "AABBCC" "AAAACC"
$' Substitutes all the text of the input string after the match. B+ $' "AABBCC" "AACCCC"
$+ Substitutes the last group that was captured. B+(C+) $+ "AABBCCDD" AACCDD
$_ Substitutes the entire input string. B+ $_ "AABBCC" "AAAABBCCCC"

+

+

Regular Expression Options

+

+

  • By using the miscellaneous construct (?imnsx-imnsx), where a minus sign (-) before an option or set of options turns those options off. For example, (?i-mn) turns case-insensitive matching (i) on, turns multiline mode (m) off, and turns unnamed group captures (n) off. The option applies to the regular expression pattern from the point at which the option is defined, and is effective either to the end of the pattern or to the point where another construct reverses the option.

  • By using the grouping construct(?imnsx-imnsx:subexpression), which defines options for the specified group only.

+

+

Option Description Pattern Matches
i Use case-insensitive matching. \b(?i)a(?-i)a\w+\b "aardvark", "aaaAuto" in "aardvark AAAuto aaaAuto Adam breakfast"
m Use multiline mode. ^ and $ match the beginning and end of a line, instead of the beginning and end of a string. For an example, see the "Multiline Mode" section in Regular Expression Options.  
n Do not capture unnamed groups. For an example, see the "Explicit Captures Only" section in Regular Expression Options.  
s Use single-line mode. For an example, see the "Single-line Mode" section in Regular Expression Options.  
x Ignore unescaped white space in the regular expression pattern. \b(?x) \d+ \s \w+ "1 aardvark", "2 cats" in "1 aardvark 2 cats IV centurions"

+

+

Miscellaneous Constructs

+

Construct Definition Example
(?imnsx-imnsx) Sets or disables options such as case insensitivity in the middle of a pattern.For more information, see Regular Expression Options. \bA(?i)b\w+\b matches "ABA", "Able" in "ABA Able Act"
(?# comment ) Inline comment. The comment ends at the first closing parenthesis. \bA(?#Matches words starting with A)\w+\b
# [to end of line] X-mode comment. The comment starts at an unescaped # and continues to the end of the line.

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