Constructs for Defining Regular Expressions
There are various categories of characters, operators, and constructs that lets you to define regular expressions. Click the follwoing links to find these constructs.- Character escapes
- Character classes
- Anchors
- Grouping constructs
- Quantifiers
- Backreference constructs
- Alternation constructs
- Substitutions
- Miscellaneous constructs
The Regex Class
The Regex class is used for representing a regular expression.The Regex class has the following commonly used methods:
| S.N | Methods & Description |
|---|---|
| 1 |
Public Function IsMatch (input As String) As Boolean Indicates whether the regular expression specified in the Regex constructor finds a match in a specified input string. |
| 2 |
Public Function IsMatch (input As String, startat As Integer ) As Boolean Indicates whether the regular expression specified in the Regex constructor finds a match in the specified input string, beginning at the specified starting position in the string. |
| 3 |
Public Shared Function IsMatch (input As String, pattern As String ) As Boolean Indicates whether the specified regular expression finds a match in the specified input string. |
| 4 |
Public Function Matches (input As String) As MatchCollection Searches the specified input string for all occurrences of a regular expression. |
| 5 |
Public Function Replace (input As String, replacement As String) As String In a specified input string, replaces all strings that match a regular expression pattern with a specified replacement string. |
| 6 |
Public Function Split (input As String) As String() Splits an input string into an array of substrings at the positions defined by a regular expression pattern specified in the Regex constructor. |
Example 1
The following example matches words that start with 'S':Imports System.Text.RegularExpressions Module regexProg Sub showMatch(ByVal text As String, ByVal expr As String) Console.WriteLine("The Expression: " + expr) Dim mc As MatchCollection = Regex.Matches(text, expr) Dim m As Match For Each m In mc Console.WriteLine(m) Next m End Sub Sub Main() Dim str As String = "A Thousand Splendid Suns" Console.WriteLine("Matching words that start with 'S': ") showMatch(str, "\bS\S*") Console.ReadKey() End Sub End ModuleWhen the above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result:
Matching words that start with 'S': The Expression: \bS\S* Splendid Suns
Example 2
The following example matches words that start with 'm' and ends with 'e':Imports System.Text.RegularExpressions Module regexProg Sub showMatch(ByVal text As String, ByVal expr As String) Console.WriteLine("The Expression: " + expr) Dim mc As MatchCollection = Regex.Matches(text, expr) Dim m As Match For Each m In mc Console.WriteLine(m) Next m End Sub Sub Main() Dim str As String = "make a maze and manage to measure it" Console.WriteLine("Matching words that start with 'm' and ends with 'e': ") showMatch(str, "\bm\S*e\b") Console.ReadKey() End Sub End ModuleWhen the above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result:
Matching words start with 'm' and ends with 'e': The Expression: \bm\S*e\b make maze manage measure
Example 3
This example replaces extra white space:Imports System.Text.RegularExpressions Module regexProg Sub Main() Dim input As String = "Hello World " Dim pattern As String = "\\s+" Dim replacement As String = " " Dim rgx As Regex = New Regex(pattern) Dim result As String = rgx.Replace(input, replacement) Console.WriteLine("Original String: {0}", input) Console.WriteLine("Replacement String: {0}", result) Console.ReadKey() End Sub End ModuleWhen the above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result:
Original String: Hello World Replacement String: Hello World
No comments:
Post a Comment