I need to extract from a string a set of characters which are included between two delimiters, without returning the delimiters themselves.
A simple example should be helpful:
Target: extract the substring between square brackets, without returning the brackets themselves.
Base string: This is a test string [more or less]
If I use the following reg. ex.
\[.*?\]
The match is [more or less]
. I need to get only more or less
(without the brackets).
Is it possible to do it?
Easy done:
(?<=\[)(.*?)(?=\])
Technically that's using lookaheads and lookbehinds. See Lookahead and Lookbehind Zero-Width Assertions. The pattern consists of:
is preceded by a [ that is not captured (lookbehind);
a non-greedy captured group. It's non-greedy to stop at the first ]; and
is followed by a ] that is not captured (lookahead).
Alternatively you can just capture what's between the square brackets:
\[(.*?)\]
and return the first captured group instead of the entire match.
If you are using JavaScript, the solution provided by cletus, (?<=\[)(.*?)(?=\])
won't work because JavaScript doesn't support the lookbehind operator.
Edit: actually, now (ES2018) it's possible to use the lookbehind operator. Just add / to define the regex string, like this:
var regex = /(?<=\[)(.*?)(?=\])/;
Old answer:
Solution:
var regex = /\[(.*?)\]/;
var strToMatch = "This is a test string [more or less]";
var matched = regex.exec(strToMatch);
It will return:
["[more or less]", "more or less"]
So, what you need is the second value. Use:
var matched = regex.exec(strToMatch)[1];
To return:
"more or less"
You just need to 'capture' the bit between the brackets.
\[(.*?)\]
To capture you put it inside parentheses. You do not say which language this is using. In Perl for example, you would access this using the $1 variable.
my $string ='This is the match [more or less]';
$string =~ /\[(.*?)\]/;
print "match:$1\n";
Other languages will have different mechanisms. C#, for example, uses the Match collection class, I believe.
Here's a general example with obvious delimiters (X
and Y
):
(?<=X)(.*?)(?=Y)
Here it's used to find the string between X
and Y
. Rubular example here, or see image:
https://i.stack.imgur.com/jE62L.png
[^\[]
Match any character that is not [.
+
Match 1 or more of the anything that is not [
. Creates groups of these matches.
(?=\])
Positive lookahead ]
. Matches a group ending with ]
without including it in the result.
Done.
[^\[]+(?=\])
Proof.
Similar to the solution proposed by null. But the additional \]
is not required. As an additional note, it appears \
is not required to escape the [
after the ^
. For readability, I would leave it in.
Does not work in the situation in which the delimiters are identical. "more or less"
for example.
[^\[\]]+(?=\])
PHP:
$string ='This is the match [more or less]';
preg_match('#\[(.*)\]#', $string, $match);
var_dump($match[1]);
Most updated solution
If you are using Javascript, the best solution that I came up with is using match
instead of exec
method. Then, iterate matches and remove the delimiters with the result of the first group using $1
const text = "This is a test string [more or less], [more] and [less]";
const regex = /\[(.*?)\]/gi;
const resultMatchGroup = text.match(regex); // [ '[more or less]', '[more]', '[less]' ]
const desiredRes = resultMatchGroup.map(match => match.replace(regex, "$1"))
console.log("desiredRes", desiredRes); // [ 'more or less', 'more', 'less' ]
As you can see, this is useful for multiple delimiters in the text as well
This one specifically works for javascript's regular expression parser /[^[\]]+(?=])/g
just run this in the console
var regex = /[^[\]]+(?=])/g;
var str = "This is a test string [more or less]";
var match = regex.exec(str);
match;
To remove also the [] use:
\[.+\]
I had the same problem using regex with bash scripting. I used a 2-step solution using pipes with grep -o applying
'\[(.*?)\]'
first, then
'\b.*\b'
Obviously not as efficient at the other answers, but an alternative.
I wanted to find a string between / and #, but # is sometimes optional. Here is the regex I use:
(?<=\/)([^#]+)(?=#*)
Here is how I got without '['
and ']'
in C#:
var text = "This is a test string [more or less]";
// Getting only string between '[' and ']'
Regex regex = new Regex(@"\[(.+?)\]");
var matchGroups = regex.Matches(text);
for (int i = 0; i < matchGroups.Count; i++)
{
Console.WriteLine(matchGroups[i].Groups[1]);
}
The output is:
more or less
If you need extract the text without the brackets, you can use bash awk
echo " [hola mundo] " | awk -F'[][]' '{print $2}'
result:
hola mundo
Success story sharing
This is a test string [more [or] less]
would this returnmore [or] less
?